Tag: United States News

  • Nadhim Zahawi claims error with his taxes ‘careless not deliberate’

    Nadhim Zahawi claims error with his taxes ‘careless not deliberate’

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    The Tory party chair, Nadhim Zahawi, has said HMRC concluded his tax errors were “careless and not deliberate” after reports that he paid a penalty as part of a multimillion-pound settlement.

    The former chancellor, who still attends Rishi Sunak’s cabinet, released a statement to “address some of the confusion about my finances” after it emerged he had agreed to pay millions to the tax agency in December.

    Zahawi’s comments came after the Guardian reported he had paid a 30% penalty as part of an estimated total tax bill of almost £5m.

    He said: “As a senior politician I know that scrutiny and propriety are important parts of public life. Twenty-two years ago I co-founded a company called YouGov.

    “I’m incredibly proud of what we achieved. It is an amazing business that has employed thousands of people and provides a world-beating service.

    “When we set it up, I didn’t have the money or the expertise to go it alone. So I asked my father to help. In the process, he took founder shares in the business in exchange for some capital and his invaluable guidance.

    “Twenty-one years later, when I was being appointed chancellor of the exchequer, questions were being raised about my tax affairs. I discussed this with the Cabinet Office at the time.

    “Following discussions with HMRC, they agreed that my father was entitled to founder shares in YouGov, though they disagreed about the exact allocation. They concluded that this was a ‘careless and not deliberate’ error.”

    Penalties are applied if someone does not pay the correct tax at the right time.

    “So that I could focus on my life as a public servant, I chose to settle the matter and pay what they said was due, which was the right thing to do,” he said.

    “Additionally, HMRC agreed with my accountants that I have never set up an offshore structure, including Balshore Investments, and that I am not the beneficiary of Balshore Investments.

    “This matter was resolved prior to my appointments as chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster and subsequently chairman of the party I love so much. When I was appointed by the prime minister, all my tax affairs were up to date.”

    Labour’s deputy leader, Angela Rayner, called for an explanation earlier on Saturday. “I believe his position is untenable,” she said. “If he’s lied and misled the public and HMRC regarding his tax affairs then I think his position is untenable.”

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    #Nadhim #Zahawi #claims #error #taxes #careless #deliberate
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Kashmir’s FastBeetle Bags Big at Shark Tank India

    Kashmir’s FastBeetle Bags Big at Shark Tank India

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    by Fahd Khan

    SRINAGAR: In a first of its kind, the promoters of the Srinagar-based logistic start-up FastBeetle participated and pitched their business proposal before the Shark Tank India Judges, which was aired on the Sony Television channel. Shark Tank India is a business reality TV series that is in its second season in 2023.

    The combined deal from Lenskart CEO Piyush Bansal and Boat CEO Aman Gupta to invest 90 lakhs for 7.5 per cent equity was fixed with the Srinagar-based start-up at Rs 12 crore valuation.

    FastBeetle, a start-up promoted by Sheikh Samiullah and Abid Rashid started their courier and logistic services in October 2019 from Srinagar and later to the international shipments within months and went on to become the fastest-growing logistics company from Jammu and Kashmir.

    “After watching the show last year, we never thought we would be standing on that carpet pitching our business idea to renowned sharks,” Sheikh Samiullah said in a Tweet.

    It is pertinent to mention here that FastBeetle had become the first Kashmiri start-up to raise US $100,000 in a pre-series. A funding round led by investors including Sandeep Patel from Nepra, Saurabh Mittal, Vikram Sanghvi, Rohit Qamra, and a few non-resident Kashmiris.

    “Our pitch clearly states that we need to create a start-up ecosystem in the Jammu and Kashmir. We had gone to Shark Tank not to present FastBeetle but to represent the aspiration of the 1.5 crore population of Jammu and Kashmir” added Samiullah in his tweet.

    FastBeetle has a empowered more than 1200 start-ups and delivered more than 10 lakh orders to 55+ countries. Giant e-commerce sites like Flipkart, Jiomart has tied up with the FastBeetle to deliver parcels to the remotest areas of Jammu and Kashmir.

    They said that their company wants to deliver parcels to the far-flung areas of the India where no one has reached till now.

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    #Kashmirs #FastBeetle #Bags #Big #Shark #Tank #India

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • ‘Ritual humiliations’: African music stars struggle to get visas to Europe

    ‘Ritual humiliations’: African music stars struggle to get visas to Europe

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    Emma Nzioka, a Kenyan performer and DJ known as Coco Em, was looking forward to the Terra Sagrada festival in Cape Verde for nearly a year. Some of her favourite African artists, such as Boddhi Satva, would be playing.

    But Nzioka did not make it to the festival last month, or out of the country, for that matter. At the check-in counter in Kenya, she was told she could not board her flight unless she bought a return ticket with the same airline (she had one with another airline) to “prove” she would return home. Although Nzioka was going to Cape Verde, she was transiting through Amsterdam.

    “The airline staff say many people have gone to ‘cause problems’ in Europe, they have torn their documents, refused to leave and have had to be deported,” Nzioka tweeted, adding that the airline officials had openly expressed scepticism over her “relationship” with her country of transit.

    Her post went viral and generated a flood of similar stories that suggest Africans often face unfair travel restrictions and “ritual humiliations” when travelling abroad.

    Earlier this year, Nigerian Afropop star Yemi Alade’s requests for a Schengen visa reportedly went unanswered. The artist, who has several world tours under her belt, was also denied a Canadian visa for the International Africa Nights festival. The co-founder of the festival, Suzanne Rousseau, told CTV news in Canada she understood that the refusal was due to “financial reasons” and fears that the artist would “not want to leave Canada”.

    Travel to, and transit through, Europe is difficult for Africans. The top three countries with the highest Schengen visa rejection rates are from the continent: Guinea-Bissau had 53% of its applications rejected, Senegal 52% and Nigeria 51%. Most African countries are in the bottom half of the global passports ranking, and with few exceptions, people from African countries need to obtain visas for more than 100 countries.

    To get a Schengen visa, a host of documents is required, and can include bank statements, return flights, addresses while abroad and travel insurance policies. “The threshold gets higher and higher and changes so dramatically,” says Nanjala Nyabola, author of Travelling While Black.

    Stories of Africans being subjected to travel indignities, or being required to meet opaque requirements are common, and travellers like Nzioka know their ability to travel rests on more than just their documents. The artist, who travels often for tours and performances, had previously met similar barriers to those she faced last month. When traveling to Tunisia through Italy for another festival in 2019, her passport was seized. She claims she was questioned for three hours by five different people about her visa, and why she did not take a direct route.

    She believes that the officials stereotyped her, a dark-skinned woman with long braids. “We know what kind of things girls like you go to do there,” she recalls them saying, as they recounted instances where women had eloped with foreign men, or settled illegally in Europe.

    “The perception is that certain travellers with different racial backgrounds are inherently more risky because of who they are,” says Nyabola

    African nationals looking to visit the UK for professional or business reasons experience more than twice the refusal rate of other nationalities. Nzioka has missed shows in the UK because of stringent visa requirements, which include proof of property ownership in one’s home country.

    “It’s not enough to say I live here. I’m married here. I have kids here,” says Nzioka. “They’re like: ‘Do you have assets back at home’?”

    Such requirements can limit the visibility of African artists, Nzioka said. “You can count the African female DJs who are touring in Europe on one hand.”



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    #Ritual #humiliations #African #music #stars #struggle #visas #Europe
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Pádraig Harrington’s remarkable round makes him a contender in Abu Dhabi

    Pádraig Harrington’s remarkable round makes him a contender in Abu Dhabi

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    The sentiment of Pádraig Harrington should serve as much of a warning to the remainder of the Abu Dhabi Championship field as the golf produced by the Irishman while en route to a third round of 64. Harrington, a three-times major winner, believes his game has never been in better shape.

    Success for Harrington would turn heads. And no wonder; at 51, he would become the oldest winner in DP World, once European, Tour history. Harrington will begin round four sitting two from the 54-hole lead, held by Shane Lowry, Min Woo Lee and a resurgent Francesco Molinari at 13 under par. There will be little stress attached to Harrington’s fourth-round buildup. He is loving life in this environment.

    “This afternoon will involve eating chocolate, drinking my Diet Coke, sitting on my bed watching Netflix or something,” he said. “I’m different at this age. I have a much better handle on experience, who I am and what I need to do. I am in a good place.

    “Before everybody did stats, I did stats. Now that everybody does their own stats, I’m refusing to do stats because I don’t want to be one of the masses. I have to be different, so I’m trying the opposite.”

    Harrington’s competitive desire seems to have been sharpened by qualification for the Champions Tour, for over 50s, in the United States. But if he wins on Yas Links, he will undoubtedly place more focus on mainstream tours. A back-nine run of six birdies in a row emphasised his ability to mix it with the best. “When I did that in my heyday I would have been quite hyped up and stressed about it,” he said, “Today it was ‘ho-hum, this is what I do’.

    “There’s a lot of players who will get to 50 years of age fitter, stronger. The biggest problem is burnout. I was burnt out five years ago, no doubt about it. I’m here because I had nothing else to do. I figured out this is what I like doing and I’m pretty good at it and there’s no point in trying to be good at something else. I’ll never be as good as I am at golf, so why not find a way of going out there and loving golf again??”

    There promises to be a frantic finale. At one point on Saturday, 22 players sat within three of the lead. By close of play, Lee and Lowry had signed for 66s with Molinari producing a fine birdie at the 18th for a 69. Grant Forrest’s 65 put him with Sebastian Söderberg and Victor Perez at minus 12. Antoine Rozner, Adrian Meronk and Guido Migliozzi are with Harrington at 11 under. Two strokes separate the top 10.

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    Lowry’s highlight involved holing out for an eagle from 162 yards at the 6th. “It was a Brucie bonus because I had given myself a few chances earlier and didn’t really hole much,” he said. “First tournament of the year, you don’t know what’s going to happen. My thing would be I try and give myself as many chances to win as I can and at some stage, hopefully it happens.”

    Lowry won this tournament in 2019, when it was staged at Abu Dhabi Golf Club. Six months later, he was the Open champion. Strong winds forecast for day four should be in Lowry’s favour. “When it’s breezy out there it’s very tricky, and I’ll be able to deal with that,” he said.

    The morning had delivered a bruising experience for Tom McKibbin. With two holes to complete of his second round – he had been removed from the course on Friday evening because of fading light – he sat inside the cut line. McKibbin made a par on the 17th but found water at the last. A double bogey meant he missed the cut by one.

    McKibbin’s mood may just have improved by Tuesday, when Harrington revealed he and Lowry fancy taking on the 20-year-old and a certain Rory McIlroy in a practice round before the Dubai Desert Classic.

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    #Pádraig #Harringtons #remarkable #contender #Abu #Dhabi
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘Didn’t read it, will not read it’: Harry and Meghan of little interest to Montecito neighbours

    ‘Didn’t read it, will not read it’: Harry and Meghan of little interest to Montecito neighbours

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    On the day Prince Harry’s controversial, headline-grabbing memoir Spare officially became the fastest-selling non-fiction book in history, the bookstore in his adoptive hometown in California did not move a single copy.

    Indifference wasn’t the problem, although Montecito, the wealthy hillside community outside Santa Barbara where the Sussexes have made their home, is known for keeping its opinions of the royal couple close to its chest.

    The much bigger issue was the weather.

    The previous afternoon, a massive storm had dumped a foot of rain on California, the beginning of a week of dramatic “atmospheric rivers” and flooding across the state, and everyone was ordered to leave. With memories still fresh of a lethal storm exactly five years earlier, when mud and boulders sliding down from the mountains devastated areas of the town close to the creek and killed 23 people, it was perhaps understandable that locals had other things on their mind.

    “I got a call from a reporter in England,” the owner of Montecito’s Tecolote bookshop, Mary Sheldon, recalled. “He asked me how many books we’d sold, and I said, ‘None – zero. We’re under evacuation.’”

    The town’s bookshop has so far shifted only about 30 copies of Harry’s book, Spare.
    The town’s bookshop has so far shifted only about 30 copies of Harry’s book, Spare. Photograph: AKGS/BACKGRID

    More than a week later, the rain has stopped, the risk of mudslides has abated, but sales are still far from robust. Sheldon said she’d sold about 30 copies, with a few more reserved for customers who’d promised to fetch them in person. Even in a town that refuses to fuss over its many celebrity residents, the lack of buzz over a book that is flying off the shelves and dominating conversation just about everywhere else on the planet is remarkable.

    Asked for her own thoughts on Spare, Sheldon said, simply: “It’s a book.”

    And its celebrated local author? “He took time to gather his thoughts and wanted to publish it,” she observed, “so I am here to sell it.”

    Sheldon was equally unmoved by the controversies surrounding the memoir. “I think most people up here think of it as a soap opera,” she remarked.

    Spare’s underwhelming performance in Montecito, a town of 10,000 mostly well-read residents, is not necessarily a rebuke of the royal couple. It conforms, rather, to the unspoken code of silence that the town maintains around its celebrity residents, who also include Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres, Gwyneth Paltrow and the power couple Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom.

    What they and Montecito’s other well-heeled residents prize most about the place is its privacy. Its sprawling estates, including the Riven Rock property where Harry and Meghan live, are hidden behind walls and two-storey-high hedgerows that keep the paparazzi out while still preserving picture-book ocean views.

    Even in the more public areas of town – the rows of village shops and restaurants – the imperative is to leave everyone be regardless of who they are. The person standing in line at Pierre Lafond café or quaffing a pint at the Plow & Angel pub could be a retired Fortune 500 chief executive, a Texas oil baron visiting his second home, or the dissolute scion of a storied Scottish clan, but nobody will say a word about it.

    The commercial centre of Montecito, outside Santa Barbara.
    The commercial centre of Montecito, outside Santa Barbara, where people like to live under the radar. Photograph: David McNew/AFP/Getty Images

    “It’s a perfect place to live under the radar,” said Kelly Mahan Herrick, a real estate agent specialising in luxury properties.

    Press the locals about Harry and Meghan and they will respond with platitudes, if they respond at all. “They’re mostly out walking their dog,” was as much as one neighbour would offer and still did not want to be identified by name. “They’re very quiet, lovely people.”

    Scratch the surface a little and you might find out a little more. Locals say that Meghan has been spotted shopping at the Wendy Foster boutique, and the couple recently spent a night with friends at the Santa Barbara Bowl, an outdoor amphitheatre, to see Jack Johnson. More commonly, Harry is spotted on his own or with a bodyguard, riding his bike to the beach, or playing polo at the Santa Barbara Polo Club, or hiking one of the many mountain trails above the town.

    The president of the Montecito Trails Foundation, Ashlee Mayfield, said one of her board members bumped into Harry in the mountains recently and the prince helped him move a tree that had fallen on to the trail. “I think he really wants to be a normal guy in town,” Mayfield said.

    Mayfield said she wasn’t surprised that most residents preferred to keep quiet about the Sussexes and argued that the extreme weather of the past few years has only reinforced local resistance to the celebrity publicity machine that many come to Montecito to escape, however temporarily. “Life up here isn’t all about gates and money and celebrity,” Mayfield said. “There is a mutual respect and consideration because of what can happen and what we have lived through as a community.”

    Les Firestein, a former Hollywood comedy writer turned local magazine editor, said many residents think of the royal family’s feuding as a remote curiosity, and having Harry and Meghan in their midst has done nothing to change that.

    “For most Montecitans, if not most Americans, royal watching is like bangers and mash – it’s something we’ve heard of but isn’t really our culture,” Firestein said. “We don’t really notice Harry and Meghan, though sometimes the locals get rankled by the British tabloids trying to get to them.”

    Finding a local who owns a copy of Spare is challenging – much less one who has finished it. “Didn’t read it, will not read it,” said TC Boyle, the short-story writer and novelist who is also Montecito’s most distinguished literary luminary.

    The one person willing to discuss the book in detail was a British expatriate, Richard Mineards, who writes a gossip column for a local newspaper. His take after reading Spare from cover to cover?

    “I think the whole thing is reprehensible,” he said, sounding a lot like the British tabloid newspapers he used to work for. “It is doing enormous harm not only to the royal family but to his own family, he and his wife… If he really does want to reconcile with his family in due course, why does he keep throwing bombs at them? Where do they go from here?”

    It’s a poignant question. But if Harry and Meghan’s goal is to live a quiet life, maybe they’re just fine where they are in Montecito. Like many who end up here, they may never feel the need to go anywhere else at all.

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    #Didnt #read #read #Harry #Meghan #interest #Montecito #neighbours
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Lt Governor chairs Jammu University Council meeting

    Lt Governor chairs Jammu University Council meeting

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    The vision document, which highlights the values and aspirations will take JU to greater heights: LG

    Council accords in-principle approval for various agendas put forth in the meeting to bring a paradigm shift in overall functioning of the University

    JAMMU, JANUARY 21: Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha chaired the 87th meeting of the University Council of the University of Jammu at Raj Bhavan today.

    During the meeting, deliberations were held on various agenda items to bring a paradigm shift in overall functioning of the university.

    Prof. Umesh Rai, Vice Chancellor, University of Jammu presented the vision document of the University highlighting the new initiatives for building a Culture of Start-ups & Innovation, dissolving boundaries evolving education, promoting Trans-disciplinary & Holistic Education, establishing Skill Incubation Innovation and Entrepreneurship Centre, promoting quality research and education for societal relevance & engagement, introducing new academic programmes, transferring knowledge into action, promoting National Integration and sports, Alumni/Student Recognitions, Good Practices and enhancing Global visibility of the University.

    The Lt Governor said, the vision document presented by the Vice Chancellor Jammu University outlines the values and aspiration and it will take the Jammu University to greater heights and realize the ultimate goal of academic excellence.

    The Lt Governor emphasized on outcome assessment and increasing graduate employability. He also called for a study based on the vision document’s objective to assess the impact on economic growth and social progress.

    We are moving ahead with new resolve in education sector. We have high expectations from the Higher Education Council in developing a roadmap to restore the ancient glory of Jammu Kashmir in the education sector and using knowledge to enhance its growth and development, observed the Lt Governor.

    The Lt Governor, who is the Chancellor of the University, also reviewed the measures taken for effective implementation of National Education Policy-2020.

    The Lt Governor directed the University administration to ensure that the reservation policy of the UT Government is fully implemented.

    The Lt Governor sought active participation of Universities and reputed educational institutions in the successful conduct of the ensuing G20 event in Jammu Kashmir. He further asked the universities to conduct seminars and discussions on G20 conference.

    The Lt Governor also invited valuable suggestions from the members of the council for effective and result-oriented execution of the vision document.

    A threadbare discussion was held on Digital & Green Initiatives; reforms in examinations; promotion of Regional Languages, Culture, Art & Heritage; Capacity Building of Faculty; strengthening Industry Academia Society Interface; promoting Experiential Learning; Curriculum Development as per requirement of the market; hand-holding in Skill Development & Entrepreneurship and future requirements of the University.

    Empowering Women by way of establishing the ‘Non-Collegiate Women’s Education Board’ to promote capacity building, literacy and employment among the young girls/women and developing University of Jammu as a vibrant & thriving hub of cultural & co-curricular activities were also discussed.

    The Council further held discussion on a common admission portal for all the universities of the J&K UT; sharing of human resources between universities; 360 degree feedback system; identifying gaps in implementation of NEP-2020; creation of digital database of universities; sharing of resources; adherence to the biometric attendance; Nasha Mukti Abhiyaan etc.

    Sh Rajeev Rai Bhatnagar, Advisor to Lt Governor; Dr Arun Kumar Mehta; Chief Secretary; Sh Alok Kumar, Principal Secretary, Higher Education Department; Prof Umesh Rai, Vice Chancellor, Jammu University and all the Council Members were present in the meeting.

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    #Governor #chairs #Jammu #University #Council #meeting

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • ‘I hope this triggers outrage’: surprise Brett Kavanaugh documentary premieres at Sundance

    ‘I hope this triggers outrage’: surprise Brett Kavanaugh documentary premieres at Sundance

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    A secretly made documentary expanding on allegations of sexual assault against supreme court justice Brett Kavanaugh has premiered at this year’s Sundance film festival.

    Justice, a last-minute addition to the schedule, aims to shine a light not only on the women who have accused Kavanaugh, a Donald Trump nominee, but also the failed FBI investigation into the allegations.

    “I do hope this triggers outrage,” said producer Amy Herdy in a Q&A after the premiere in Park City, Utah. “I do hope that this triggers action, I do hope that this triggers additional investigation with real subpoena powers.”

    The film provides a timeline of the allegations, initially that Kavanaugh was accused by Christine Blasey Ford of sexual assault when she was 15 and he 17. She alleged that he held her down on a bed and groped her, and tried to rip her clothes off before she got away. Kavanaugh was also accused of sexual misconduct by Deborah Ramirez, who alleged that he exposed himself and thrust his penis at her face without her consent at a college party.

    Kavanaugh denies the allegations. He turned down requests to take part in the documentary.

    The first scene features Ford, half off-camera, interviewed by the film’s director Doug Liman, whose credits include Mr and Mrs Smith and The Bourne Identity. Justice features a number of interviews with journalists, lawyers, psychologists and those who knew Ford and Ramirez.

    “This was the kind of movie where people are terrified,” Liman said. “The people that chose to participate in the movie are heroes.”

    In the film, Ramirez, who previously told her story to Ronan Farrow in the New Yorker, also shares her story on-camera. Ramirez is referred to as someone “they worked hard for people not to know”, her story never given the space it deserved until long after Kavanaugh was confirmed to the court in October 2018.

    Ramirez details a Catholic upbringing, before explaining that her high grades got her into Yale when the university was slowly diversifying its student body in the mid-80s. As well as being admitted only 15 years after women were allowed in, Ramirez was also biracial and working class. “My mum was concerned,” she recounts, emotionally, in the documentary.

    Friends at the time refer to her as “sweet and Bambi-like” and “innocent to a fault”, but Ramirez tried to fit in by becoming a cheerleader and by drinking with her peers. This, she says, brought her into the orbit of Kavanaugh, who came from a privileged family and was known as a heavy drinker at the time (he is referred to in the film as someone who was usually “more drunk than everyone else”). Ramirez recounts the alleged event, when she was intoxicated and, she says, made, without her consent, to touch Kavanaugh’s penis, which he had placed near her face.

    Deborah Ramirez
    Deborah Ramirez. Photograph: AP

    The film then details how the circles around Ramirez and Kavanaugh responded, showing text messages of a discussion when Ramirez’s allegations were about to go public, of a mutual friend being asked by Kavanaugh to go on record to defend him. Another friend refers to it as “a cover-up”.

    The New Yorker included a statement from a group of students at the time in support of Kavanaugh. A year later, the film shows that two of them emailed the New Yorker to remove their names from the statement.

    Ramirez’s lawyers claim they contacted Republican senator Jeff Flake, who was involved in Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings, to explain what happened to her. The next day Flake called to delay the confirmation and insist on a week-long FBI investigation.

    But the film details how the FBI failed to call on the many witnesses recommended by Ramirez’s lawyers. Footage is shown of the film-makers meeting with a confidential source who plays tape of Kavanaugh’s classmate Max Stier, now a prominent figure in Washington running a non-profit, who allegedly witnessed Kavanaugh involved in a similar act of alleged drunken exposure with a female student at a dorm party at Yale. The woman has chosen to remain anonymous and this is the first time this recording has been heard.

    It was made during the week the FBI investigated Kavanaugh, and despite Stier notifying them, they failed to speak to him. “You don’t talk to that guy, you’re not talking to anybody,” Liman said during the Q&A.

    The FBI tip line that was set up is referred to as “a graveyard”, with 4,500 tips sent straight to the White House rather than being investigated. It’s referred to as another “cover-up”.

    The film-makers also spoke to other accuser who alleged misconduct but could not be included in the film. “We did speak to people who had other allegations, and we were very careful and thorough, and it’s not for disbelieving them – but the stories you see here are the ones you are able to corroborate,” Herdy said to the audience.

    Justice was made in secrecy over the last year, with NDAs signed by everyone involved. The project was self-funded by Liman, making his documentary debut. He told the Hollywood Reporter that the supreme court holds “special meaning” to him, his father having been a lawyer and activist and his brother a federal judge. He was frustrated by the FBI investigation into Kavanaugh that “never happened”, and sought the help of renowned documentary producers Liz Garbus and Herdy, both with specialised experience of films about sexual assault allegations, to do the work that he saw as unfinished, if barely started at all.

    At the Q&A, he expressed the importance of secrecy, speaking about “the machinery that’s put into place against anyone who dared to speak up” and an awareness that this machinery would be turned on the film if it was made public.

    “There would have been some kind of injunction,” he said. “This film wouldn’t have been showing here.”

    It was only screened to Sundance high-ups on Wednesday before being officially announced on Thursday. It premiered to a sold-out cinema on Friday.

    In the past few years, the festival has become a regular home to a number of investigative documentaries about alleged sexual predators in the public eye. Figures such as Michael Jackson, Bill Cosby, Russell Simmons and former Sundance mainstay Harvey Weinstein have all been spotlighted.

    Since the announcement of Justice, Herdy confirmed they have been “getting more tips”, which started arriving just 30 minutes after the press release went out. Liman added that the film, which is seeking a distributor, will now possibly need to be extended and re-edited.

    Herdy added: “It’s not over.”

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    #hope #triggers #outrage #surprise #Brett #Kavanaugh #documentary #premieres #Sundance
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Rosie Birkett’s recipe for how to turn leftover cheese into a delicious tart

    Rosie Birkett’s recipe for how to turn leftover cheese into a delicious tart

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    This tart is a brilliant way of transforming any cheese you might have in the fridge into a delicious meal. The salad and potatoes make it a more substantial spread, and are two elevated side dishes to have up your sleeve for when you’re having friends round – both would be equally great with a lemony roast chicken.

    Lazy cheeseboard tart

    Prep 30 min
    Cook 1 hr 15 min
    Serves 4-6

    You can use any combination of cheese you fancy here; I like to have something that melts really well, such as a cheddar or comté, as well as a soft cheese such as brie, while blue cheese brings some edge. The cornichons and pickled onions add a lovely crunch and acidity. If you make the tart ahead, it’s worth reheating it, so the cheese oozes out when you slice it.

    350g shortcrust pastry, from 1 x 500g block (use the rest for cheese biscuits, or freeze)
    1 large onion, peeled and sliced
    1 celery stick, leaves included, sliced
    1 tbsp thyme leaves
    Salt and black pepper
    2 tbsp olive oil
    1 tbsp salted butter

    A dash of Worcestershire sauce
    3 eggs

    A pinch of dried tarragon
    (optional)
    Nutmeg, for grating
    225ml double cream
    250g mixed cheese (comté, cheddar, stilton, brie) – half the hard cheese cut into 2cm cubes, the rest grated; soft cheese torn into chunks
    95g mixed cornichons and pickled onions, drained, cornichons chopped, onions quartered

    On a lightly floured surface, roll the pastry into a circle that’s big enough to line a 20cm, loose-bottomed tart tin, making sure it’s no thicker than a £1 coin. Gently lower the pastry into the tin and press it into the base and edges – I use a little piece of excess pastry to press it into the edges. Lightly prick the base all over with a fork, but without piercing all the way through, then chill for 30 minutes.

    Meanwhile, fry the onion, celery, thyme and a pinch of salt in the olive oil and butter on a medium heat for eight to 10 minutes, until soft and aromatic, but not coloured. Stir in a splash of Worcestershire sauce, take off the heat and leave to cool. Heat the oven to 190C (170C fan)/375F/gas 5, and put in a baking sheet to warm up.

    Tear off a sheet of baking paper big enough to line the tin and scrumple it up. Unfurl it, line the chilled pastry with it and fill with baking beans. Blind bake for 25 minutes, then remove the beans and paper. If the pastry has puffed up a bit, don’t panic – just gently pierce it with a fork to let the air out, again taking care not to pierce all the way through. Brush the pastry all over with one beaten egg and bake for eight minutes more, until golden.

    Crack the other two eggs into a bowl, add any residual eggwash, and season with a little salt, pepper, dried tarragon and nutmeg. Whisk in the cream, then stir in the grated hard cheese, reserving a little for the top. Spread the onion mix across the base of the tart case, scatter the cornichons and pickled onions on top, followed by the chunks of the hard and the torn soft cheese. Pour over the cheesy custard mix, top with the reserved grated hard cheese and bake on a middle shelf for 25-30 minutes, until golden and just set.

    Raw kale, parsley and garlic crouton salad

    Prep 10 min
    Cook 6 min
    Serves 4-6

    You can leave out the sultanas, but I love the sweetness they bring.

    1 bunch cavolo nero, or other kale, leaves stripped off and roughly torn

    For the dressing
    2 tsp golden sultanas
    4 tbsp
    sweet white-wine or rice vinegar
    A dash of Worcestershire sauce
    A big pinch of chilli flakes
    (I like aleppo pepper)
    1 garlic clove, peeled and minced
    50g parmesan
    , grated
    4 tbsp olive oil

    For the garlic croutons
    2 tbsp olive oil
    1 tbsp butter
    3 slices sourdough
    , cut into 2-3cm chunks
    1 garlic clove, peeled and minced
    1 tbsp finely chopped parsley
    Juice of
    ½ lemon
    Flaky sea salt
    , to taste

    Combine the sultanas and half the vinegar in a small pan and bring to a boil. Turn off the heat and leave to steep while you make the croutons.

    Heat the olive oil and half the butter in a frying pan on a medium heat. Once the butter has melted, toss in the bread and fry for a few minutes on one side, until crisp and golden. Turn and fry on the other side, until the croutons are crisp and golden all over. Turn down the heat, add the remaining butter, garlic, parsley and lemon juice, and cook for a couple of minutes, basting the croutons as you go, until coated and the garlic is cooked. Use a slotted spoon to transfer to a plate lined with kitchen towel and season well with salt flakes.

    To assemble, pour the steeped sultanas into a large salad bowl and add the rest of the vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, chilli flakes, garlic and half the parmesan, then season. Whisk to combine, then add the olive oil and whisk to emulsify. Add the kale and toss, massaging the dressing into the leaves until the greens are noticeably limper and their structure has been broken down a bit by the dressing. Scatter the croutons and remaining parmesan on top, and serve.

    Brown butter potatoes with oregano, lemon, chilli and frazzled capers

    Prep 5 min
    Cook 20 min
    Serves 4-6

    500g waxy new or pink fir potatoes, scrubbed
    Salt and black pepper
    2 tbsp
    butter
    1 tbsp olive oil
    1 tbsp capers
    ½ tsp dried oregano
    Zest and juice of ½ lemon

    1 garlic clove
    , peeled and grated
    A pinch of red chilli flakes

    Boil the potatoes in well-salted water for about 12 minutes, until tender. Drain, leave to cool slightly, then cut in half.

    Melt the butter in a frying pan big enough to hold all the potatoes, allow it to bubble up, die back and then brown slightly as the milk solids caramelise, until it’s smelling deliciously nutty, then add the oil and fry the capers until crisp and frazzled. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the capers to a plate lined with kitchen towel.

    Add lemon juice to the pan, then the potatoes, and saute them in the hot lemony butter for about five minutes, until coloured and caramelising at the edges. Add the oregano, lemon zest, garlic and chilli, and swirl around for a minute or two, until fragrant, then return the capers to the pan and stir to coat everything in the delicious butter. Transfer to a warmed bowl and serve.

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    #Rosie #Birketts #recipe #turn #leftover #cheese #delicious #tart
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Jacinda Ardern proved a true leader knows when to step back. If only US politicians could do the same | Arwa Mahdawi

    Jacinda Ardern proved a true leader knows when to step back. If only US politicians could do the same | Arwa Mahdawi

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    Sign up for the Week in Patriarchy, a newsletter​ on feminism and sexism sent every Saturday.

    ‘Can women have it all?’

    It was inevitable that someone was going to ask that most cliched of questions and, voilà, they did. Shortly after Jacinda Ardern’s shock resignation as New Zealand prime minister this week, the BBC tweeted out a story about Ardern balancing motherhood with politics, with a headline asking if women can really have it all. After being accused of “staggering sexism”, the BBC deleted the headline and apologised.

    Having it all. Please, someone, ban that stupid phrase already. It is 2023! I’m pretty sure we’ve spent at least a decade talking about the fact that nobody ever asks whether working dads can have it all. When Boris Johnson had two new kids during his tenure as prime minister of Britain there wasn’t a lot of handwringing about how he’d balance life with a newborn, and the responsibilities of being a father of seven with his job. When Elon Musk became a dad for the umpteenth time the BBC didn’t ask how he was going to balance fatherhood with colonizing Mars. Or, if they did, I must have missed that article.

    Forget “having it all”, Ardern showed us all a powerful new model of leadership. Our current model of leadership (which, shameless plug, I’ve written an entire book called Strong Female Lead about) often treats empathy as a weakness. Ardern showed us all that kindness and compassion aren’t weaknesses, they’re strengths. Our current model of leadership prioritizes confidence over competence and tends to reward arrogance. Ardern, meanwhile, has spoken about the importance of self-doubt. “Some of the people I admire the most have that self-consciousness and that slight gnawing lack of confidence,” the politician said in a 2020 interview. When impostor syndrome creeps in, she explained, she thinks about how to use it constructively. “Does [that self-doubt] mean I need to do a bit more prep, do I need to think more about my decision making?” Wouldn’t it be nice if more politicians went through that exercise?!

    For a long time, women have been told to “lean in” to a patriarchal model of leadership. They’ve been told that, in order to be successful, they have to mold themselves into the image of a leader dictated by men. Ardern didn’t do that. She led on her own terms. And, perhaps, most powerfully, she stopped leading on her own terms. “I know what this job takes,” Ardern said when she announced her resignation. “And I know that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice.”

    We tend to equate leadership with being the loudest voice in the room. But true leadership means knowing when it’s time to pass the mic. True leadership means knowing when it’s time to step back. Unfortunately most lawmakers, particularly in the US, seem desperate to hold on to power for as long as humanly possible even if it’s not for the greater good. I mean, do you know how old the average senator in the US is? 64.3 years old. That’s over 20 years older than Ardern. Joe Biden, the oldest president in American history, is 80 and is expected to run again in the 2024 election. Senator Chuck Grassley is 89 as is Senator Dianne Feinstein of California. There have been a lot of concerns about Feinstein’s cognitive health and yet she still refuses to say whether she’s going to run for another term or not. Does it really serve her constituents for her to have another term, or does it serve it her ego?

    I’m not saying that there should be an age limit in politics, by the way. Experience is important. But there’s a real problem when the same people cling to power for decades and refuse to make room for new blood. Ardern, 42, says she no longer has enough in the tank to do her job justice. I’ve got to wonder what on earth some long-serving politicians in the US have in their tanks. I’ve got a feeling it may be narcissism.

    Is Milf Manor the queasiest new dating show on TV?

    Betteridge’s law states that: “Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no.” But having read this Guardian piece on a horrifying new reality show called MILF Manor I think I’ve found the exception to that law.

    The Taliban bought a ‘verified’ check mark on Twitter

    It now appears to have been removed after some understandable outrage.

    Sierra Leone passes landmark law on women’s rights

    Under the new Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment Act 30% of public and private jobs must be reserved for women. The law also requires some employers to give at least 14-weeks of maternity leave.

    The ‘virgin speculum’: proof that medicine is still rife with outrageous myths about women

    Out of the 16 million women in the UK who were eligible for a cervical screening test in 2022, only 11.2 million took one. That’s the lowest level in a decade. As Jenny Halpern Prince writes in the Guardian, women might feel more comfortable taking the test if it were updated a little bit. As it is, the speculum that is used for the examination is called a “virgin speculum”. Prince is calling for it to be renamed the “extra-small speculum” or for its medical name, the Pederson speculum, to be used. “The term virgin speculum should be removed from use by medical device advertisers and the medical profession (it is currently taught in medical schools),” writes Prince. That does seem a little bit like a no-brainer.

    The Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) is having a #MeToo moment

    Top athletes have accused the WFI’s president and several coaches of sexual misconduct. This goes beyond wrestling because the WFI president, Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, is also a lawmaker for the ruling Bharatiya Janata party.

    The week in passwordarchy

    Netflix has been threatening to crack down on password sharing for a while and now it looks like it’s finally happening. During its recent earnings report the streaming service announced that it will enforce password-sharing rules “more broadly” in the next few months. Not sure this is a great idea, Netflix. You’re going to find yourself quite literally cancelled.

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    #Jacinda #Ardern #proved #true #leader #step #politicians #Arwa #Mahdawi
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Baz Luhrmann: ‘I need freedom above all else’

    Baz Luhrmann: ‘I need freedom above all else’

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    I grew up in a tiny country town in New South Wales, about 180 miles north of Sydney. It was like living on an island. There were 11 or so houses, and a gas station, and a farm. For a while we ran the local cinema.

    When my father came out of the Vietnam war we were forced to have extremely short hair. This was the 70s, when if you didn’t have long hair you were a dead person, so it was a big problem. My parents broke up, I got estranged from my dad, and ended up in Sydney with the freedom to grow my hair. I’ve got really curly hair, and all the mean kids at the Christian Brothers’ College I went to started calling me Basil Brush, which then became Baz, which I then painted on the side of my school bag. When I was 19 I changed my name by deed poll to Bazmark. I’d always thought Mark was a boring name.

    I was paradoxically rebellious. My greatest act of rebellion was running away. I was about 15 – my folks had had a very acrimonious divorce. Some people are lucky in that their parents stick together – mine didn’t. At some point when Dad started another relationship the pillar of my moral universe was suddenly shattered and I lost faith. Also, I was always going to go. I was never going to stick around in Heron’s Creek. Not for a second did I think, ‘This is going to be my lot.’

    I’ve always created stories. Growing up I had to think the story out, get my friends together, shoot it on a camera or make a play. Even though I wasn’t too bad in front of the camera, I soon recognised that I was sitting there as an actor wanting to be in control of the storytelling.

    I don’t feel any different today than I did in Heron’s Creek. I might be a globally recognised figure now, but I probably thought I was a globally recognised figure then, on my own little island.

    When I started filmmaking it was like exploring the Amazon. I was like, ‘Why don’t we get the camera and do this?’ ‘Why don’t we go down the creek and weave it in?’ I’ve always found it incredibly empowering to have that ‘why don’t we?’ attitude.

    Saying I’m a control freak is too simplistic. I’m not just a film director or an actor. I’m not an opera maker, or a magazine publisher, though I’ve been those, or a guy who does election campaigns, though I’ve done them, or makes hotels, though I’ve done that, or makes a lot of music. I just deal in ideas and stories. That’s my currency.

    I need freedom above all else. I can’t do things any other way. I have to feel free enough to say, ‘I want to do it like that.’

    I turned 60 in September. I don’t feel any different, but intellectually I recognise that there are now things I’m less able to control. I see the number on a piece of paper – ‘60’ – and I think, ‘What?’ But I don’t freak out about it. I’m going to have to die at some point.

    The first time I met my wife, Catherine, the one-hour meeting we were supposed to have took three hours. I was running a theatre company in the 80s and looking for young designers. We talked about everything from Brecht to Madonna. It was a big conversation, and that conversation is still going today. She knows me more than any person on the planet.

    I don’t like to look back. I don’t want to look back on my work. I’m no longer me doing Moulin Rouge! at 40, or Strictly Ballroom at 28. I want to be the me of today or tomorrow. I only really want to look forward.

    Baz Luhrmann is a creative ambassador for Bombay Sapphire

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    #Baz #Luhrmann #freedom
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )