Three people were wounded during an armed robbery on a jewellery store in Ängelholm, southern Sweden on Saturday, with the robbers escaping on a yellow moped. … Read More
Man wounded in schoolyard shooting
Panic broke out at a Gothenburg school on Friday evening as one man was wounded in a shooting which could be linked to a violent robbery that took place in the area on the same day. … Read More
Royal regalia heist shocks Swedish church
A sceptre and crown used in the sixteenth-century funeral of King Johan III were stolen during an overnight robbery at the Västerås Cathedral in central Sweden. … Read More
Margaret Thatcher, and the man in the shadows
As the nickname suggests, she had a fearsome reputation round the world for hitting hard for Britain, but at home it was a different story. In the industrial North most knew several families who lost their livelihood on her watch. Londoners saw ominous shifting sands, homeless youngsters begging on the streets whom her regime had turned it’s back on.The taboo not a single commentator has broached though is the shadowy ‘advisory’ role played throughout her premiership by European banking fraternity’s Labour peer Lord Victor Rothschild. He was revealed in the book the Thatcher government tried to suppress, Peter Wright’s Spycatcher, to be behind London’s top secret service appointments. In 1986 Rothschild penned ‘Paying for Local Government’ the policy paper that led to the notorious Poll Tax that fell hardest on the poorest, and which brought Britons onto the streets of London in their hundreds of thousands in 1990, riots echoing London’s Poll Tax revolt of 1381.And according to the then BBC Chairman Marmaduke Hussey, Lord Victor also initiated the sacking in 1987 of the last independent-minded Director General of the BBC, a castration from which the corporation never quite recovered.One word captures the essence of the Thatcher legacy; ‘privatisation’. As an exasperated former Tory Prime Minster Harold Macmillan put it “she’s selling off the family silver!”. And so tens of mind-boggling billions of pounds of silver were auctioned off to the highest bidders, mostly to Rothschild’s kith and kin. From shipyards and public housing to telephones, steel, oil, gas and water, anyone in the world was free to own the infrastructure and manufacturing heart of Britain that was once collectively ‘ours’.Was this to pay the USA Lend-Lease second world war debts? To repay Britain’s humiliating 1976 IMF loan? Or simply to fill the hole left in the national accounts after Thatcher dropped income tax on Britain’s richest by more than half from 83% to 40%? Or was it just daylight robbery? When she refused to join the EMU, the forerunner to the vice-like Euro, she was promptly knifed in the back by those who sing her praises today.Since Thatcher, City institutions have bought up much of our politics and mass media, leaving a post-industrial wasteland ‘museum’ of a nation where the Joseph Rowntree Foundation recently estimated six-and-a-half million British adults are being cruelly blamed, punished and made destitute for ‘not wanting’ full-time jobs, that don’t exist.Today the cracks that Margaret and Victor’s turbo-charged crowbar opened up have become a chasm which is reawakening this nation’s anger at injustice. The £10 million of taxpayers money being spent on Lady Thatcher’s state funeral, by the millionaires for the millionaires, is rubbing salt in the wounds. Hundreds of thousands of Britons who know right from wrong will turn away and raise a solemn glass to the damnation of Margaret Thatcher and her ‘rehabilitation of greed’ this week, demanding better. The sleeping giant of the British public is rousing from its slumber.As millionaire Prime Minister David Cameron reads the Christian eulogy at Lady Thatcher’s lavish funeral, those of Britain’s ruling class who still have something resembling a conscience will do well to heed them.Britain’s first woman Prime Minister – the Margaret Thatcher timeline1925 October 13 – Margaret Thatcher is born in the market town of Grantham, Lincolnshire1947 – Thatcher graduates from Oxford with a Chemistry degree1954 June 1 – Qualifies as a lawyer1970 – Enters the Cabinet as Education Secretary1975 February 11 - Elected Conservative Party leader, beating Edward Heath.1975-9 – Leader of the Opposition1979 May 4 – The Conservative Party wins the general election, Thatcher succeeds James Callaghan as PM1979 December 13 – Abolition of Exchange Controls1980 – Buses deregulated and bus routes privatised1980 – British Aerospace partly privatised1980 – April – Local Government stopped from building council homes and tenants given the right to buy1981 – March Prisoners at Northern Ireland’s Maze Prison go on hunger strike to regain status as political prisoners1981 – April-July Urban rioting in Brixton in London, Toxteth in Liverpool and St. Pauls in Bristol.1982 – January Unemployment tops 3 million1982 – April-June Falklands War1983 – Associated British Ports (ABP) privatised1983 – British Shipbuilding privatised1983 June 9 – Second term as PM begins; the Conservatives secure a landslide election victory1984-5 – Miners strike, amid the closure and privatisation of coal mines1984 – British Leyland car manufacturers privatised1984 October 12 – Narrowly escapes death after the IRA bombs the Conservative party conference in Brighton, killing 51984 November – British Telecom (BT) the old Post Office Telecommunications is privatised1985 – Attempted suppression of former MI5 officer Peter Wright’s autobiography ‘Spycatcher’ which is then published in Australia & Scotland.1985 June 1 – Battle Of The Beanfield, Britain’s traveller peace convoy destroyed near Stonehenge, Wiltshire by violent police action as recorded in the ‘Operation Solstice’ documentary1986 – January Wapping dispute as Rupert Murdoch embraces electronic publishing and breaks the power of print unions, depicted in the documentary ‘Despite The Sun’1986 – British Airports Authority (BAA) privatised1986 – March Abolition of Ken Livingstone’s opposition Labour controlled Greater London Council or GLC1986 October 27 – Big Bang deregulation of the City of London financial sector which many believe contributed to the 2008 financial crisis1986 December – British Gas privatised1987 January – After several TV and radio programmes critical of the Thatcher government Victor Rothschild & Marmaduke Hussey sack BBC Director General Alasdair Milne1987 February – British Airways privatised1987 – Majority share in British Petroleum (BP) privatised1987 – Rolls Royce aero engines privatised1987 June 11 – Wins third term as Prime Minister1988 – British Steel privatised1989 – British Aerospace fully privatised1989 – Water Boards privatised1990 – The Electricity Act began the complex privatisation of electricity (except nuclear)1990 March 31 – Poll tax riots culminate in a 200,000 strong march on central London, as portrayed in The Battle Of Trafalgar documentary1990 October 30 – Thatcher No!, No!, No! speech in Commons makes it clear she is set against European Monetary and Political Union1990 November 13 – Geoffrey Howe resigns in protest at Thatcher’s refusal to agree a timetable for European Monetary Union1990 November 14 – Former cabinet minister Michael Heseltine challenges Margaret Thatcher for the party leadership1990 November 28 – Thatcher resigns, despite having won the first ballot. She is succeeded by John Major1992 – Thatcher leaves the House of Commons, joins the Lords as Baroness Thatcher1994 – Praises Tony Blair and New Labour as her proudest achievement2013 April 8 – Lady Thatcher dies in The Ritz hotel owned by Daily Telegraph proprietors the Barclay twins. … Read More
French robber blasts his way out of prison, takes four guards hostage
Faid, notorious for armed robberies of cash-in-transit vehicles, staged a dramatic and “very well organized” escape from the prison in the French town of Sequedin, the police and local officials said on Saturday.For the start, Faid used smuggled explosives to blast through five prison doors. He then took four prison wardens hostage as he was making his way through the jail.The criminal released one the hostages just outside the prison. He then let go another one some hundreds of meters away, and left the remaining two next to a motorway. All were reportedly left in shock, but unharmed, state prosecutor Frederic Fevre said, as cited by AFP.Meanwhile, the escaped robber jumped into a getaway car and sped to the town of Ronchin, south of Lille. There, he got into another vehicle – but not before setting his first car on fire.French police and gendarmes on Saturday afternoon said they are still trying to trace the second car the robber used. They also issued a warning saying Faid’s a “particularly dangerous prisoner,” he’s thought to be armed, and might still be in possession of explosives.The explosives in question might have been given to Faid by a woman who visited him on Saturday morning, according to a prison unionist. The lawyer for the robber’s ex-wife has denied she was in prison on Saturday.Notorious robber and co-author of an autobiographical book describing a young criminal’s life in the suburbs of Paris, Faid was sentenced to 18 years in prison in 1999. He then was released on parole in 2009, but was taken back just two years after in 2011 on suspicions of masterminding an armed robbery in which a young policewoman was killed. Faid was due to serve the eight years remaining from his original sentence. … Read More
NYPD officer charged with using badge, cruiser to help rob drug dealers
Officer Jose Tejada is accused of involvement in a string of 2006 and 2007 robberies in which he is alleged to have provided NYPD badges, uniforms and even police vehicles to a group of thieves. Tejada, 45, who had been assigned to police Harlem, was in uniform and on duty at the time of at least one of his alleged crimes.He’s been connected to three of the more than one hundred robberies the crew is supposedly behind, with some dating back to 2001. Tejada is charged with conspiracy to commit robbery, conspiracy to distribute drugs including heroin, cocaine, MDMA, and marijuana, as well as an unlawful use of a firearm charge, according to local NY1 news.Prosecutors say Tejada was caught in an “ongoing Internal Affairs Bureau investigation” and has been suspended from the department after holding a family of three at gunpoint while his colleagues searched their home.He also is accused of checking the legal status of other robbers in the gang and letting them know when it was safe to flee then reenter the United States.“Obviously it is sad and disappointing anytime a police officer is arrested,” said NYPD commissioner Ray Kelly.Tejada is the second officer to be charged as part of the robbery crew, which began in 2001 and has “netted more than 250 kilograms of cocaine and $1 million in narcotics proceeds,” prosecutors told the Times.Emmanuel Tavarez, an eight-year veteran of the force, was sentenced to 25 years in prison in May 2012 after being convicted of similar crimes. Twenty other members have been implicated in the years-long investigation. … Read More




