Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Trinidad declares crime emergency

23 August 2011 Last updated at 12:23 GMT map A limited state of emergency is in force in several areas of Trinidad and Tobago, as the government moves to tackle a recent spike in violent crime.

The measures, announced on Sunday by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, include an overnight curfew.

Ms Persad-Bissessar said they were taking action in what she called "hot spots" as part of a wider effort to tackle "wanton acts of lawlessness".

The opposition said it was a "panic response" by the government.

The declaration of emergency rule in six areas, which will last 15 days, came after the country saw 11 murders in just a couple of days.

Ms Persad-Bissessar said the killings were a reaction by drug gangs to recent major seizures by the police of consignments worth millions of dollars.

"These large sums of money simply do not disappear from the drug trade without consequences," she said.

'Thugs'

The aim of emergency rule was to halt the current spike in gang activity and crime in general in the shortest possible time, the prime minister said in a televised address.

"The nation will not be held to ransom by marauding gangs of thugs bent on creating havoc on our society. The limited state of emergency in hot spots across Trinidad and Tobago is merely part of a larger aggressive reaction response by the government."

The measures include a 21:00 to 05:00 overnight curfew, as well as increased powers for police to conduct searches and make arrests.

Opposition leader Keith Rowley said the measure showed that the government had no plans to deal with rising crime.

"Our initial thought is that this is a panic response which has not been the product of any serious deliberations," he told local radio.

The measures took effect after being approved by President George Maxwell Richards..


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Monday, April 25, 2011

Japan announces emergency budget


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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Syria state of emergency 'to end'

16 April 2011 Last updated at 16:48 GMT Bashar al-Assad said he thought the law would be lifted within a week

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad says he expects a state of emergency to be lifted next week, after weeks of anti-government protests.

He made the comments in a televised speech to his newly formed cabinet.

The lifting of the 48-year-old emergency law has been a key demand of the protesters.

On Friday, tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied in the capital, Damascus, in one of the biggest turnouts since protests began.

While he repeated his view that his country was facing a conspiracy, Mr Assad said he did not believe the lifting of the state of emergency would destabilise Syria.

The Syrian leader told the cabinet a legal commission asked to examine the lifting of the law had come to its conclusions.

"I think the commission has finished its work, on Thursday, and the recommendations will be given to the government so that they become law immediately. I don't know how many days it will take you and I think that the maximum deadline for the lifting of the state of emergency will be next week," he said.

The law bans public gatherings of more than five people.

Continue reading the main story image of Owen Bennett Jones Owen Bennett Jones BBC News, Beirut

This is new language, but it's only language at this point. It sounds like the emergency law will be lifted - that's a very clear commitment President Assad has made - but it has taken quite a long time to get here.

So when you think of much more far-reaching measures, like multi-party democracy - which, as he said, would completely transform the political situation in Syria - then surely that is going to be a much more difficult pill for the regime to swallow.

And you would imagine that while he is asking the government to study the proposal, it is the sort of thing that would be extremely difficult for them to do.

The question now is whether the protesters think they've achieved something by getting rid of the emergency law and head home, or whether they see that their time on the streets has forced this change from the government, and decide to stay on the streets to get more.

New security legislation would be introduced in place of the emergency law, he said, adding that the new government should also study ideas for a multi-party system and greater press freedom.

The question now is whether the measures will be enough to persuade the demonstrators to go back to their homes, says the BBC's Owen Bennett Jones in neighbouring Lebanon, or whether they will simply encourage more protests in the hope of securing more reforms.

Batons and tear gas

Friday's protests in Damascus and other cities were among the largest in a month of unrest that has reportedly seen some 200 people killed.

The unrest is the biggest challenge to the rule of Mr Assad, who inherited power from his father in 2000.

Security forces used tear gas and batons to disperse tens of thousands of protesters - some calling for reform, others calling demanding the overthrow of Mr Assad - in Damascus.

Thousands of people reportedly demonstrated in a number of other Syrian cities - including Deraa, Latakia, Baniyas and Qamishli - where violence has been previously reported.

Mr Assad formed a new government on Thursday and pronounced amnesty for an undisclosed number of people detained in the last month.

Map of Syria

He has also sacked some local officials and granted Syrian citizenship to thousands of the country's Kurdish minority - satisfying a long-held demand.

The United Nations and a number of Western governments have decried President Assad's use of force to try to quash the protests.

Human rights campaigners say hundreds of people across Syria have been arrested, including opposition figures, bloggers and activists.

Mr Assad blames the violence in recent weeks on armed gangs rather than reform-seekers and has vowed to put down further unrest.

US officials have said Iran is helping Syria to crack down on the protests, a charge both Tehran and Damascus have denied.

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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Mau Mau emergency

12 April 2011 Last updated at 00:04 GMT By Dominic Casciani BBC News home affairs correspondent Mau Mau suspects in a prison camp in Kenya in 1952. Rounded up: Mau Mau suspects in camps The first series of documents have been released by the High Court in the legal challenge by Kenyans for abuses and torture more than 50 years ago.

The documents give further details of what ministers in London knew about how the colony was attempting to crush the rebellion that paved the way to independence.

The papers - the first of more than 17,000 pages - contain reports of British officers implicated in atrocities including the murder of suspected Mau Mau rebels.

One document sent to a cabinet minister says an officer was involved in burning alive a suspect held at a detention and interrogation camp.

Others detail the shock of a senior police commander sent from London to investigate.

Many of the documents released by the High Court on Monday evening were only recently found at the Foreign Office's own archives after years of investigations by academics.

The papers were brought to the UK when Kenya became independent - but unlike other papers, they were never made public in the National Archives. Until weeks ago, they were in boxes at the Hanslope Park archives near Milton Keynes.

The four Kenyans who are suing the UK say the documents form a paper trail proving that London knew about and approved torture and abuse in Kenya.

The government denies the claim, saying London cannot be held responsible for the actions of a former colonial administration.

The documents, many of which have yet to be reviewed, cover the eight years of the May Mau uprising and emergency and the response in Kenya and London.

State of emergency Left to right: Ndiku Mutua, Jane Muthoni Mara and Wambugu wa Nyingi, three of the four claimants L-R: Ndiku Mutua, Jane Muthoni Mara and Wambugu wa Nyingi, three of the Kenyans suing the UK

In 1952, Sir Evelyn Baring, Kenya's governor, declared a state of emergency amid the growth of the Mau Mau movement. It was dedicated to overthrowing the colonial regime.

London sent troops to crush the rebellion, and the Kenyan administration built a series of "screening" or interrogation camps which were designed to break the will of suspects.

Some 150,000 Kenyans were subjected to screening. During the fighting, at least 11,000 rebels were killed - although academics think the true death toll could be more than twice that.

Many suspects taken into the "Pipeline" camps were treated increasingly harshly until they recanted. Others were put on trial in special courts and more than 1,000 were sent to the gallows.

According to the documents, officials were telling ministers as early as 1953 about forced labour in the camps and that "if therefore we are going to sin, we must sin quietly".

Continue reading the main story The Mau Mau, a guerrilla group, began a violent campaign against white settlers in 1952The uprising was put down by the British colonial government by 1960The Kenya Human Rights Commission says 90,000 Kenyans were executed, tortured or maimedIt says 160,000 people were detained in appalling conditionsKenya gained independence in 1963But not all officials supported the policies.

Colonel Arthur Young, sent by London to run Kenya's police, complained to Governor Baring about the "inhumanity" of various parts of the security forces amid his investigations of wrongdoing.

"The other lamentable aspect of this case is the horror of some of the so-called screening camps which, in my judgement, now present a state of affairs so deplorable that they should be investigated without delay," said Col Young.

"An African who is unfortunate enough to suffer from the brutalities which are clearly evident has no-one to whom he can complain," he wrote.

"I do not consider that in the present circumstances government have taken all the necessary steps to ensure that in its screening camps the elementary principles of justice and humanity are observed."

He later quit over what he saw - but the documents show that reports were reaching the highest levels of Whitehall.

Telegram to London

In January 1955, Baring sent a telegram to Alan Lennox-Boyd, the Secretary of State for the Colonies and a cabinet minister.

British soldiers check identity papers of suspected Mau Mau members State of emergency: Documents only recently uncovered

Baring told the cabinet minister that eight European [meaning white] officers had been accused of serious crimes, including accessory to murder. They would be given immunity from prosecution.

One district officer was accused of the "beating up and roasting alive of one African".

A Kenyan Regiment Sergeant and a field intelligence assistance had been implicated in the burning of two further suspects "during screening operations".

"I had not myself realised until today that the extension of the principle of clemency to all members of the security forces involved so many cases with Europeans as principals," wrote Baring.

Dilution technique

The military element of the uprising was effectively crushed in 1956 - but the Kenyan administration still had to deal with thousands held in camps.

Continue reading the main story
Main criticism we shall have to meet is that [the plan] which was approved by Government contained instructions which in effect authorised unlawful use of violence against detainees”

End Quote Alan Lennox-Boyd, Colonial Secretary Baring's administration devised the "dilution technique" - a system of assaults and psychological shocks to detainees, to force the compliance of the toughest Mau Mau supporters.

Baring telegrammed the Colonial Secretary in London asking for his approval to use "overpowering" force.

Lennox-Boyd was told that one commander, Terrence Gavaghan, had developed the techniques at the Mwea camps in central Kenya - and he needed permission to treat the worst detainees in a "rough way".

The cabinet minister's approval came within weeks, according to court documents.

The papers show that a ministerial delegation saw firsthand prisoners beaten for refusing to don camp clothes. Ringleaders of the "Mau Mau moan" - a chant of defiance - were singled out for special punishment.

They were beaten and forced to the ground. Once there, a boot was placed on their throat while mud was forced into their mouths.

"European officers themselves carried out the violence necessary, the senior ones leading and directing," said the document.

One Hanslope Park document is a letter between Kenyan Special Branch police officers about treatment of "fanatical" detainees at the Mwea camps.

"If they deny having taken an oath they are given summary punishment which usually consists of a good beating up," says the report. "This treatment usually breaks a large proportion.

"If this treatment does not bear fruit the detainee is taken to the far end of the camp where buckets of stone are waiting. These buckets are placed on the detainee's head and he is made to run around in circles until he agrees to confess the oath."

Another minister said that Gavaghan had explained how difficult detainees would be subjected to the "third degree".

"The measures adopted were to be kept awake all night, having water thrown at him and to be beaten up on a variety of pretexts," he wrote.

By 1959, parliamentarians in London were demanding an investigation after 11 detainees were beaten to death for refusing to work.

Alan Lennox-Boyd asked Governor Baring for details of the so-called "Hola incident". He said he would face questions over the "Cowan Plan", the regime of forced labour under threat of beatings.

"Main criticism we shall have to meet is that 'Cowan plan' which was approved by Government contained instructions which in effect authorised unlawful use of violence against detainees," he wrote.

A later telegram from Lennox-Boyd underlined that London would stand by the governor.

"There will be full defence of rehabilitation policy and use of legal force as necessary," he said.


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Thursday, April 7, 2011

Medics urge emergency op shake-up

7 April 2011 Last updated at 06:14 GMT operating theatre The RCS claim patients "frequently wait far too long for a space on an emergency operating list" A report from the Royal College of Surgeons says lives are being put at risk because some hospitals focus too much on waiting lists for routine surgery rather than on emergency operations.

It claims emergency patients account for up to half the NHS surgical workload in Wales and England, but that deaths rates and complications vary widely between hospitals

Local health boards are looking at centralised specialist centres. They say the RCS report endorses the plans.

The RCS has published a list of new standards to help hospitals in Wales and England "to get things right".

It says priority is often given to routine surgery in order to meet "arbitrary targets" and which delays vital surgery, resulting in "poor outcomes for patients".

Colin Ferguson, RCS director of professional affairs for Wales, said it is common in every branch of surgery to see patients with serious conditions given a lower priority than they deserve.

Continue reading the main story
Because perhaps patients are not managed as patients but rather to accommodate targets, that's why we are seeing these anomalies in the system”

End Quote Prof Ceri Phillips Health economist He claimed patients are often placed in inappropriate wards and frequently wait far too long for a space on an emergency operating list.

"These patients should be treated in centres that can offer the highest quality of care," he said.

"Sadly, this is currently often not the case."

The RCS say while detailed performance statistics are gathered for routine, pre-planned operations, there is currently little gathered on timeliness of emergency surgery.

Among its recommendations it calls for better monitoring of emergency patients, and dedicated wards and access to critical care.

Professor Ceri Phillips, health economist at Swansea University, said the report was warning that not properly managing emergency patients was actually increasing the cost to the NHS.

He said targets for emergency and A&E admissions puts pressure on other parts of the system.

"Because perhaps patients are not managed as patients but rather to accommodate targets, that's why we are seeing these anomalies in the system," he told BBC Radio Wales.

"What we probably need to think about, and it has been suggested, is that we see a clear demarcation between emergency surgical procedures and elective procedures.

"For example, it has been suggested that over the Christmas period, we do not plan any routine surgery because of the pressure on beds in hospital.

'Highly-equipped'

"Obviously this goes against some of the things we've been talking about in terms of waiting times, but it does mean patients with emergency needs can be dealt with in an appropriate and effective and efficient manner rather than an ad hoc basis."

Kate Watkins, acting director of the Welsh NHS Confederation, which represents local health boards, said it would be considering the recommendations to see what improvements they could make.

She said the report backs the argument that it was crucial to have fully staffed and equipped emergency facilities, which currently can't be safely provided in all hospitals across Wales because the expertise would be spread too thinly.

"That is why some health boards in Wales are looking to provide all emergency surgery in one central, highly-equipped and staffed centre of excellence, supported by very effective emergency transport," she said.

Wales' chief medical officer Dr Tony Jewell said it is for NHS organisations to "ensure they have the appropriate skill mix of staff to meet fluctuating demand".

"Emergency departments aim to stabilise patients ready for surgery, usually at the same hospital, but where specialised surgery is required, we would expect patients to be transferred to the appropriate hospital to ensure they receive the best care," he said.


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