Thursday, December 16, 2010

Swiss bank dress code: Skin-tone lingerie, no tight-fitting skirts Read more: Swiss bank dress code: Skin-tone lingerie, no tight-fitting skirts

ZURICH: Swiss banking giant UBS has issued a strict dresscode for employees, calling on them to wear "skin-coloured" lingerie and to ditch "fancy and coloured" artificial fingernails.

In a document of over 40 pages, UBS underlined details from head to toe, including permissible hairstyles, what cut of skirt and which type of socks to wear.

Women should not wear "flashy" jewellery or skirts that are "too tight behind".

Underwear must not be "visible against clothing or spilling out of clothing". Rather, they should be "skin-coloured under white shirts."

Employees should ensure that natural roots are not showing if they have coloured their hair. "Three days of stubble is not permitted and a visit to the barber is recommended once every four weeks," it added.
Employees are also urged to "avoid smelling of strong scent, garlic, onion and cigarette smoke".

Men should wear a "straight-cut two button jacket and pants that make up part of a classic professional suit." They should not wear ties that do not match the "morphology of the face" nor socks with cartoon motifs.

"The reputation of UBS makes up our most precious asset. Adopting an irreprochable behaviour implies having an impeccable presentation," said the bank, which has been trying to rebuild its reputation since suffering record losses during the financial crisis.


Read more: Swiss bank dress code: Skin-tone lingerie, no tight-fitting skirts - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/europe/Swiss-bank-dress-code-Skin-tone-lingerie-no-tight-fitting-skirts/articleshow/7115166.cms#ixzz18LEE5d4B

Assange free from prison, back to leaking secrets

LONDON: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was released on bail Thursday — confined to a supporter's 600-acre estate but free to get back to work spilling U.S. government secrets on his website as he fights Sweden's attempt to extradite him on allegations of rape and molestation.

The silver-haired Australian, who surrendered to British police December 7, will have to observe a curfew, wear an electronic tag and report to police in person every day.

But there are no restrictions on his Internet use, even as U.S. authorities consider charges related to thousands of leaked diplomatic cables and other secret documents WikiLeaks has released. The site has released just 1,621 of the more than 250,000 State Department documents it claims to possess, many of them containing critical or embarrassing U.S. assessments of foreign nations and their leaders.

Dressed in a dark gray suit, Assange emerged from London's neo-Gothic High Court building late Thursday following a tense scramble to gather the money and signatures needed to free him. Speaking under a light snowfall amid a barrage of flash bulbs, Assange — who's been out of the public eye for more than a month — told supporters he will continue bringing government secrets to light.

``It's great to smell the fresh air of London again,'' he said to cheers from outside the court. ``I hope to continue my work.''

Assange ignored shouted questions from the assembled media. Later, BBC footage captured the 39-year-old riding in a white armored four-by-four outside the Frontline Club, a venue for journalists owned by his friend and supporter Vaughan Smith. The broadcaster reported that Assange jumped upstairs for a celebratory cocktail at the bar, then went back outside to engage in a brief verbal joust with journalists over the merits of one of the leaked cables.

A few hours later, Assange arrived at Ellingham Hall, Smith's 10-bedroom mansion about 120 miles (195 kilometers) northeast of central London. Assange told journalists there that his time in prison had steeled him, giving him time to reflect on his personal philosophy and ``enough anger about the situation to last me 100 years.''

Assange was granted conditional bail Tuesday, but prosecutors appealed, arguing that he might abscond. High Court Justice Duncan Ouseley rejected the appeal Thursday, saying Assange ``would diminish himself in the eyes of many of his supporters'' if he fled.

``I don't accept that Mr. Assange has an incentive not to attend (court),'' Ouseley said. ``He clearly does have some desire to clear his name.''

WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson had said Assange might have to spend one more night behind bars anyway, because of difficulties producing the 200,000 pounds ($316,000) bail pledged by several wealthy supporters, including filmmaker Michael Moore. But lawyers managed to collect the money quickly.

The restrictions Ouseley imposed on Assange amount to ``virtual house arrest,'' Hrafnsson said. But he added that Assange can still use Smith's estate as a base for coordinating the publication of the leaked cables.

``There is a good Internet connection there,'' he noted. The subject of whether Assange should have Internet access was never raised in court. WikiLeaks continued publishing documents even while Assange was in prison — including a new batch that hit the Web two hours ahead of his release.

``We have seen in the week I have been away that my team is robust,'' Assange told the BBC outside the Frontline Club. ``It does show the resilience of the organization, that it can withstand decapitation attacks.''

The publication of the cables has angered U.S. government officials, embarrassed allies and nettled rivals. The U.S. State Department says that international partners have curtailed their dealings with Washington as a result of the cable leaks, and have gone on the offense in a bid to limit the diplomatic fallout.

Assange insists that publishing the documents was essential to expose government wrongdoing. In particular, he has referred repeatedly to one cable that asked diplomats to gather information on United Nations staff such as their passwords, frequent flier numbers and even biometric information.

State Department officials say the cable originated from the U.S. intelligence community and deny Assange's contention that it ordered diplomats to spy. On Thursday, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva continued America's damage-control efforts over the document.

``I just want to assure everybody we're not collecting data on U.N. officials,'' Betty E. King told reporters in Geneva.

U.S. officials are investigating WikiLeaks and considering charges against Assange, a case that if pursued could end up pitting the government's efforts to protect sensitive information against press and speech freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment. The government suspects WikiLeaks received the documents from an Army private, Bradley Manning, who is in the brig on charges of leaking other classified documents to the organization.

Australia's prime minister said Thursday that police determined that WikiLeaks did not break any laws in the country. The government had ordered the Australian Federal Police to investigate whether the website had broken local laws in publishing sensitive U.S. diplomatic documents leaked to it because Assange is Australian.

Assange was arrested not because of WikiLeaks, but because Swedish officials are seeking him for questioning on allegations stemming from separate encounters with a pair of women in Sweden over the summer. The women have accused Assange of rape, molestation and unlawful coercion. Assange denies the allegations, which his lawyers say stem from a dispute over ``consensual but unprotected sex.''

After his release, Assange said he will ``continue to protest my innocence in this matter and to reveal, as we get it, which we have not yet, the evidence from these allegations.''

Although Swedish officials insist the extradition effort has nothing to do with the WikiLeaks controversy, Assange's supporters say the timing of the allegations suggest that the case has been tainted by politics.

In Washington, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley stressed that the U.S. has no involvement in Sweden's case. He said of Assange's release, ``Perhaps that will put the conspiracy theories to bed once and for all.''

The Swedish moves could complicate any potential U.S. effort to bring Assange to trial for revealing classified information. A U.S. extradition request would have to compete with the Swedish one, and the legal wrangling could drag on for months or years.

Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny said the bail decision would not change the ongoing investigation in Sweden, and the extradition case would be handled by British authorities. Assange's next hearing is set for January 11.

Read more: Assange free from prison, back to leaking secrets - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/uk/Assange-free-from-prison-back-to-leaking-secrets-/articleshow/7115753.cms#ixzz18LDtUvCQ

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

WikiLeaks boss Assange gets bail but stays in jail

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has succeeded in securing a bail at a British court where he appeared in connection with a case of sexual misconduct.

The embattled whistleblower who was accused of sexual misconduct by two women in Sweden is resisting an extradition claim by the country.

Granting him bail on an amount of 240,000 pounds (Over Rs 1.5 crore), the court ordered Assange to adhere to strict bail conditions.

The 39-year-old Australian, who has earned the wrath of the US for leaking a huge cache of secret diplomatic documents, has been imprisoned for a week now after he gave himself up to Scotland Yard in London.

File photo of Julian Assange

Monday, December 13, 2010

No plan to ban anthem in Tamil: SL

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka denied on Monday plans to outlaw the singing of the national anthem in Tamil after the main minority party raised strong objections to the mooted ban.

The status quo will remain, said public administration minister John Seneviratn, who is in charge of the managing code of conduct for the national anthem.

The Sunday Times in Colombo reported that the cabinet of president Mahinda Rajapaksa decided last week to order that only Sinhala should be used for the anthem.

Language and discrimination were key issues used by Tamil Tiger separatists to gain popular support for their campaign of suicide bombings and assassinations that terrorised the country until last year.

Read more: No plan to ban anthem in Tamil: SL - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/south-asia/No-plan-to-ban-anthem-in-Tamil-SL/articleshow/7096583.cms#ixzz183frs75N

Friday, December 10, 2010

Saudi Arabia receives $1.2bn for damage during Gulf War

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia has received USD 1.2 billion from the United Nations in compensation for the damage caused by the 1991 Gulf War to the environment in the Eastern Province of the Kingdom, the country's head of the Presidency of Metrology and Environment Protection has said.

Following his meeting with a United Nations delegation Prince Turki Bin Nasser Bin Abdul Aziz said compensation was taken from the Iraqi government by the United Nations and given to the kingdom, according to a media report.

Prince Turki said that USD 100 million was spent on coasts and water cleaning operations while another USD 100 million was paid to local and foreign companies working on the cleaning project.
The rest of the money will be spent on the completion of cleaning affected areas, Gulf News quoted him as saying.

During the Gulf War exploding and burning of several hundreds of oil wells in Kuwait created pollution and caused damage to the shoreline and marine life and significantly affected the multimillion-dollar Saudi fisheries industry in the Eastern region.

Read more: Saudi Arabia receives $1.2bn for damage during Gulf War - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/middle-east/Saudi-Arabia-receives-12bn-for-damage-during-Gulf-War/articleshow/7075271.cms#ixzz17iTdm4aQ

Monday, December 6, 2010

WikiLeaks founder Assange may surrender to British police

LONDON: Julian Assange's lawyer was arranging to deliver the WikiLeaks founder to British police for questioning in a sex-crimes investigation of the man who has angered Washington by spilling thousands of government secrets on the internet.

Lawyer Mark Stephens told reporters in London that the Metropolitan Police had called him to say they had received an arrest warrant from Sweden for Assange. Assange has been staying at an undisclosed location in Britain.

"We are in the process of making arrangements to meet with police by consent," Stephens said on Monday, declining to say when Assange's interview with police would take place.

The 39-year-old Australian is wanted on suspicion of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion in Sweden, and the case could lead to his extradition. Interpol placed Assange on its most-wanted list on Nov. 30 after Sweden issued an arrest warrant. Last week, Sweden's highest court upheld the detention order.

Assange has denied the accusations, which Stephens has said stem from a "dispute over consensual but unprotected sex." The lawyer has said the Swedish investigation has turned into a "political stunt."

The pressure on WikiLeaks mounted from other quarters Monday: Swiss authorities closed Assange's bank account, depriving him of a key fundraising tool. And WikiLeaks struggled to stay online despite more hacker attacks and resistance from world governments, receiving help from computer-savvy advocates who have set up hundreds of "mirrors" - or carbon-copy websites - around the world.

In one of its most sensitive disclosures yet, WikiLeaks released on Sunday a secret 2009 diplomatic cable listing sites around the world that the US considers critical to its security. The locations include undersea communications lines, mines, food suppliers, manufacturers of weapons components, and vaccine factories.

Pentagon spokesman Col. David Lapan called the disclosure damaging and said it gives valuable information to the nation's enemies.

"This is one of many reasons why we believe WikiLeaks' actions are irresponsible and dangerous," Lapan said.

WikiLeaks has been under intense international scrutiny over its disclosure of a mountain of classified US cables that have embarrassed Washington and other governments. US officials have been putting pressure on WikiLeaks and those who help it, and is investigating whether Assange can be prosecuted under espionage law.

In what Assange described as a last-ditch deterrent, WikiLeaks has warned that it has distributed a heavily encrypted version of some of its most important documents and that the information could be instantly made public if the staff were arrested.

For days, WikiLeaks has been forced by governments, hackers and companies to move from one website to another. WikiLeaks is now relying on a Swedish host. But WikiLeaks' Swedish servers were crippled after coming under suspected attack again on Monday, the latest in a series of such assaults.

It was not clear who was organizing the attacks. WikiLeaks has blamed previous ones on intelligence forces in the US and elsewhere.

WikiLeaks' huge online following of tech-savvy young people has pitched in, setting up more than 500 mirrors.

"There is a whole new generation, digital natives, born with the Internet, that understands the freedom of communication," said Pascal Gloor, vice president of the Swiss Pirate Party, whose Swiss Web address, wikileaks.ch, has been serving as a mainstay for WikiLeaks traffic.

"It's not a left-right thing anymore. It's a generational thing between the politicians who don't understand that it's too late for them to regulate the Internet and the young who use technology every day."

Meanwhile, the Swiss postal system's financial arm, Postfinance, shut down a bank account set up by Assange to receive donations after the agency determined that he provided false information regarding his place of residence in opening the account. Assange had listed his lawyer's address in Geneva.

"He will get his money back," Postfinance spokesman Alex Josty said. "We just close the account."

Assange's lawyers said the account contained about $41,000. Over the weekend, the online payment service PayPal cut off WikiLeaks and, according to his Assange's lawyers, froze $80,000 of the organization's money.

The group is left with only a few options for raising money now - through a Swiss-Icelandic credit card processing center and accounts in Iceland and Germany.

Monday marked the first day that WikiLeaks did not publish any new cables. It was unclear whether that had anything to do with the computer attacks.


Read more: WikiLeaks founder Assange may surrender to British police - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/uk/WikiLeaks-founder-Assange-may-surrender-to-British-police/articleshow/7056682.cms#ixzz17PEqCNw5

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Spain arrests seven over links to Mumbai attacks

MADRID (Reuters) - Seven men have been arrested in Barcelona, accused of providing fake identification documents to al Qaeda-linked groups including the one that carried out the Mumbai attacks in 2008, the Interior Ministry said on Wednesday.

Six Pakistanis and one Nigerian were arrested on Tuesday and early Wednesday accused of stealing passports and other travel documents from tourists in Barcelona and sending them to Thailand where they were falsified and passed to extremist organised crime groups, it said in a press release.

Among the groups the documents were sent to was the militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was blamed for the attacks in Mumbai in November 2008 in which 166 people were killed, as well as Sri Lanka's separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

The ministry said the arrests were part of an international operation in which two Pakistanis and one Thai were also arrested in Thailand, accused of leading the group set up in Spain and other European countries.

The ministry said the group robbed people whose age and nationality enabled members of the militant groups holding the falsified documents to travel freely across borders.

"This large-scale operation neutralises an important cell providing passports to al Qaeda, weakening the falsification apparatus of this organisation at an international level, and as such its operational capabilities," the ministry said.

Spanish police recovered numerous identification documents in the homes of those arrested, as well as hard discs, memory sticks, 50 mobile phones and SIM cards, and cash in dollars, euros, and British pounds.

Mother of WikiLeaks chief fears for his safety

SYDNEY: The mother of Australian-born WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange today expressed fear for her son's safety, saying the forces he was challenging had become "too big".

Christine Assange said her "highly intelligent" and curious son had been raised as a strongly ethical "seeker of truth".

But Assange said her son, now subject to a global Interpol arrest demand over rape charges in Sweden, had become "too smart for himself" and she now feared for his safety.

"He sees what he's doing as doing a good thing in the world, fighting baddies if you like," Assange told the Courier Mail, her local newspaper in Queensland.

"I'm concerned it's gotten too big and the forces that he's challenging are too big," she added.

The WikiLeaks chief, who is said to lead a spy-like life of rarely sleeping in the same place twice, has sparked a political storm by dumping about 250,000 secret US diplomatic cables onto the Internet.

His mother -- who according to the Courier Mail does not even own a computer -- defended the 39-year-old's actions as being driven by deep conviction, and said he had not always been destined for a career in computer hacking.

"He didn't actually come from a background of high technology, he came from a background of creativity and a love of learning and books," Christine Assange said.

"Whether you agree with what Julian does or not, living by what you believe in and standing up for something is a good thing."

She said Julian Assange had put his life on hold when he was just 18 to care for his newborn son, Daniel, who is now 20 and works as a software developer in the southern city of Melbourne.

"Jules put his life and university studies on hold to parent Daniel and be there for him," Christine Assange said.

"He's a very good father -- not many men of that age will fight for their kid, but he stepped up to the responsibility."

Julian Assange's marriage to Daniel's mother reportedly broke down and there was a protracted custody battle.

Christine Assange said the father and son had even attended the University of Melbourne together -- Julian studying mathematics and physics while Daniel, then aged just 15, began a degree in genetics.

She said her son had distanced himself from the family for their own safety, but disputed some unflattering portrayals given of him by critics and ex-colleagues.

"He was (a) lovely boy, very sensitive, good with animals, quiet and has a wicked sense of humour," she said.

Read more: Mother of WikiLeaks chief fears for his safety - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/Mother-of-WikiLeaks-chief-fears-for-his-safety/articleshow/7026979.cms#ixzz16vWmlKvb