One Party State

‘Consensus’ strikes again-

Gordon Brown yesterday won Conservative backing for a move that would allow the government to block future criminal investigations such as the corruption case against the arms company BAE Systems.

Despite scathing criticism in the high court on Thursday, the Tories have chosen to support Downing Street in facing down critics who are keen for the BAE investigation to be reopened.

Brown is said by Downing Street to have been totally behind Tony Blair in pressing Robert Wardle, the director of the Serious Fraud Office, to drop the investigation into secret payments by the arms company to Saudi Arabia. In Thursday’s judgment, the high court rejected claims that the inquiry had had to be closed down for security reasons because “lives were at risk” if Britain no longer received intelligence on national security from Saudi Arabia. (ht2 Lenin)

It’s simply because whoever is in power is in the ongoing deals with the House of Saud, it’s like getting the keys to No. 10, so of course they both cover it up, car sharing the gravy train (to horrifically mix metaphors).

Arms Trade Corrupt Court Discovers

And our legal systems is run by a global elite answering to their own bloodthirsty avarice, honestly I thought the biscuit thing was a bigger surprise. But at least the legal community and the Campaign Against the Arms Trade are kicking back even if as Korova notes the story was pushed off the front page/agenda by banal tabloid ‘human interest’ that allow the ruling elite (here and in the House of Saud) a free pass.

The High Court has ruled that the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) acted unlawfully by dropping a corruption inquiry into a £43bn Saudi arms deal. In a hard-hitting ruling, two High Court judges described the SFO’s decision as an “outrage”.

In handing down the decision on Thursday, one of the judges, Lord Justice Moses, told the High Court that the SFO and the government had given into “blatant threats” that Saudi co-operation in the fight against terror would end unless the probe into corruption was halted.

Now I don’t really buy those threats, I think they were agreed upon by the parties implicated as another way to justify & enable dropping the corruption probe into the ongoing arms business between the UK and Saudi elites. To the lower level of government & nationalist security types they might well have appeared genuine, but to the establishment deeply enmeshed in the global arms trade they are facile grandstanding to pull strings and as they well know the ‘war on terror’ is a brand that enables greater profit. If you really think the interests of the British people override corporate interests for Blair and co. then hey why not follow this link, it’s not Rick Astley honest.

Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex

 Members of Congress have as much as $196 million collectively invested in companies doing business with the Defense Department, earning millions since the onset of the Iraq war, according to a study by a nonpartisan research group.

The study found that more Republicans than Democrats hold stock in defense companies, but that the Democrats who are invested had significantly more money at stake. In 2006, for example, Democrats held at least $3.7 million in military-related investments, compared to Republican investments of $577,500.

Overall, 151 members hold investments worth $78.7 million to $195.5 million in companies that receive defense contracts that are worth at least $5 million. These investments earned them anywhere between $15.8 million and $62 million between 2004 and 2006, the center concludes.

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India Dammit!

India has agreed to build a $120m seaport and transportation system in Myanmar. 

Senior General Maung Aye, second-in-command of Myanmar’s military government, and Mohammad Hamid Ansari, India’s vice president, signed the accord. India also called for Myanmar to push forward with plans for national reconciliation, saying the country’s rulers should engage Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s detained pro-democracy leader, the statement said.

During his visit, Maung met Manmohan Singh, India’s prime minister, who reiterated New Delhi’s commitment to support Myanmar in telecommunication and IT sectors, the Indian statement said. An Indian defence ministry official separately told the AFP news agency that Maung “reviewed bilateral military co-operation” in his talks with the Deepak Kapoor, the Indian army chief.

“The talks included Indian military exports to the government in Yangon,” the official said. Over the past decade, India has increased its economic and military ties with Myanmar. New Delhi has been eager to secure the co-operation of the Myanmar military to help contain separatist groups fighting New Delhi’s rule in northeastern India near the Myanmar border.

The infrastructure agreement was signed the same day as Aung San Suu Kyi’s political party urged voters to reject a military-backed draft constitution, saying it was undemocratic and written under the government’s direct control.

Yes I’m sure saying the junta should engage with the democracy movement really puts the sting in the $120 million deal.

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British Government Goes Ahead With Deportations To Iraq

In an email from National Coalition of Anti-Deportation Campaigns

today’s charter flight did go ahead. 140 people were scheduled to be on the flight, but 11 were taken off at the last moment because they became too ill to fly.

As far as we know the 11 were taken back to detention. In at least one case the solicitor has applied for bail because the individual cannot now be removed before his removal directions expire on Sunday.

Context-

More than 1,400 rejected Iraqi asylum seekers are to be told they must go home or face destitution in Britain as the government considers Iraq safe enough to return them, according to leaked Home Office correspondence seen by the Guardian.

The Iraqis involved are to be told that unless they sign up for a voluntary return programme to Iraq within three weeks, they face being made homeless and losing state support. They will also be asked to sign a waiver agreeing the government will take no responsibility for what happens to them or their families once they return to Iraqi territory.

The decision by the home secretary, Jacqui Smith, to declare that it is safe to send asylum seekers back to Iraq comes after more than 78 people have been killed in incidents across Iraq since last Sunday.

Well it’s more than 78 now, I don’t care what piece of paper they were harangued into signing, the government has responsibility for any harm that befalls them. Although all the cogs in the mechanism that did this, shame on you too. Shame on you.

The Border and Immigration Agency In Denial

Today-

The most comprehensive examination of the UK’s asylum system ever conducted has found it “marred by inhumanity” and “not yet fit for purpose”.

The report, published by the Independent Asylum Commission, is a damning indictment of the Home Office’s failure to deal fairly with those applying for sanctuary in this country.

The commission found that Britain’s treatment of asylum-seekers “falls seriously below the standards to be expected of a humane and civilised society“. Its interim report will be delivered to the Home Office today by a delegation of asylum-seekers.

The report details how the “adversarial” system is failing applicants from the very first point of interview, with officials accused of stacking the odds against genuine claimants. “A ‘culture of disbelief’ persists among decision-makers,” it said. “Along with lack of access to legal advice for applicants this is leading to perverse and unjust decisions.

The findings are the result of the most thorough look at the system in history, with testimonies from every sphere of society, including three former home secretaries, more than 100 NGOs, 90 asylum-seekers, the police, local authorities, and hundreds of citizens.

All-day hearings were held in seven major cities, where hundreds of people gave evidence, from those who brand the system too lenient to those who think it is a blot on the country’s human rights record.

As well as this current information, an independent academic body was tasked to gather all documents already published on the issue in the past five years, from both sides of the political spectrum.

But the Border and Immigration Agency has rejected the report, claiming it operates a “firm but humane” system.

Cognitive dissonance much BIA? To say the least the BIA’s response is totally unacceptable (I’m being awfully fucking polite here). It’s nice of the Independent Asylum Commission to catch up though, below are two previous posts that detail that the Border and Immigration Agency is a big stinking pile of arrogant, cruel, racist shit (in that way one might reflect it is the perfect institutional embodiment of the ignorant spiteful racism of the gutter press and their imbecilic fucking readers)-

Buried Alive, The Migrant Gulag

Chief Exec Lin Homer (more of whom in those links) says-

“I totally refute any suggestion that we treat asylum applicants without care and compassion. We have a proud tradition in Britain of offering sanctuary to those who truly need our protection. We operate a firm but humane system, supporting those who are vulnerable with accommodation and assistance. But we expect those that a court says have no genuine need for asylum to return home voluntarily, saving taxpayers the expense of enforcing their return. We will enforce the removal of those who refuse to comply, always ensuring first that it is safe to do so.”

Well here are your choices Lin, you are either-
a/. a big fat liar…or
b/. mentally ill.
I’m sorry but those are your only choices here in reality. Either way you should not be holding your current position (something Birmingham people can appreciate after her NuLabour vote rigging exploits there, ahem. Oh look, we just found the reason she keeps failing upwards). This would be the agency that recently deported a cancer patient who then died, I would call that corporate manslaughter and is now trying to deport people to…Iraq (you honestly can’t make this shit up). So Lin, you should be fired and prosecuted. But in the post Blair -hey what’s so wrong with being a war criminal- Britain we have no such standards of ethical behaviour, that is another consequence of this war, an epidemic corruption at the heart of the state with no end in sight.

Fight the scum in the BIA- National Coalition of Anti-Deportation Campaigns

The Financial Services Authority & Its City Chums

The City watchdog admits to inadequate record keeping. Proper notes weren’t taken of important meetings with Rock executives. There was no rigorous assessment of the serious business risks being run by the Rock, both in the way that the bank was rapidly increasing its mortgage lending and in its financial dependence on selling these mortgages to investors in the form of bonds.

In some ways, it was the riskiest bank in the UK. But here’s what will shock many. It was treated by the FSA as though it was the least risky bank in the UK: it received deep assessments of its operations less frequently than most other banks; FSA staff had far fewer meetings with Rock executives than they did with executives at other banks; and unlike what happened at other banks, there was no attempt to force the Rock to reduce the risks it was running. As the FSA itself says, this was not just a failure of more junior staff. Responsibility for these failings ultimately rests with senior FSA management.

Call me old fashioned but when the regularory body set up to police the financial system also says this-

“Our understanding is that, during the review period, the FSA’s approach to liquidity reflected a presumption that, in the event of a crisis like that experienced in August 2007 (when money markets seized up), general market liquidity provided by the Bank of England would be increased and, in extremis, liquidity would be provided for systemically important institutions”. 

Which is formal confirmation that the FSA was urging the Bank of England to pump money into the markets over the summer – but the Bank refused,

Then incompetence ain’t enough to explain their determination to aid the financial system, corruption and idealogical worship of the Church of the Free Market do. The regulatory body was being held back by the Bank of England, that’s like a murderer telling a copper to- leave him it’s not worth it.

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Blair, His Masters Voice

In an appearance before a European Parliament panel, Blair did not call for direct talks with Hamas, which seized Gaza in June and is considered a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union.

But he said it was urgent for more food and other goods to reach Palestinians living under desperate conditions in the Gaza strip.

“If we have learned anything from the past few months it is that the present strategy in Gaza is not working,” said Blair. The former British prime minister is now a special envoy for the so-called “Quartet” of Mideast peacemakers, comprised of the United States, the EU, Russia and the United Nations.

“We need a strategy which isolates the extremists and helps the people,” he added. “At the moment, if we are not careful, we got the opposite …. That is not intelligent.”

The former British prime minister also suggested the current peace process — launched at a summit in Annapolis, Md., last fall — was starting to run on empty.

He said the Middle East was “approaching crunch time,” adding there must be visible results by May if there is to be an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal by year’s end, as planned.

The former EU President Josep Borrell did less of a ventriloquist act-

“The politics of isolating Hamas has not brought any benefits. You cannot make arrangements with just one part of the other side,” said Spanish lawmaker Josep Borrell, former president of the European Parliament who now presides the assembly’s development committee. 

‘Peacemaker’ yeah and I squirt chocolate fudge out of my bum, have a nice big bowl Tony.

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Getting Away With It

A long-awaited report into the Northern Rock crash by the main City watchdog is expected tomorrow to reject calls for an investigation of the bank’s directors and their conduct during the crisis that sparked the first bank run for 140 years.

The Financial Services Authority will admit it made a series of errors in its regulation of the Newcastle-based lender. It will also criticise Northern Rock executives for relying on international money markets to raise finance when warning signs of a credit squeeze were flashing.

But it will argue that implementing reforms should be given precedence over looking into past events at the bank. An Enron-style investigation into whether Northern Rock chief executive Adam Applegarth had inside information when he cashed in more than £1m of shares last year is also expected to be ruled out.

Like the Iraq war I think the message our elites are sending us here is as long as it happened in the past, you can and should be allowed to get away with it. Now as time on the whole moves in a uniform forward type way this means…well shit do anything you like. Or…it’s a cry for vigilantism to punish these scoflaws. Either way it’s frightfully uncivilised.

Fox Laments Chickens

Yet still pushes his faith-

There will be many casualties from the unfolding financial market crisis, which will lead to a large-scale overhaul of international banking regulations, codes and risk management, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said.

“It is important, indeed crucial, that any reforms in, and adjustments to, the structure of markets and regulation not inhibit our most reliable and effective safeguards against cumulative economic failure: market flexibility and open competition,” he said.

Stupid or just plain evil? Or Both? Those are the options I’m afraid.

Join the March 19 Blogswarm Against the Iraq War

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Iranians Have To Put Up With Conservatives Too

Well the elections have happened and right wingers have done well after already whittling down and excluding many opposing candidates, as James points out @ Mahatma X Files-

Voters in the US also are barred from voting “for a full range of people” who “might have different ideas” – albeit a bit more subtly. A party and its candidates might not be outright banned, but – let’s face it – unless a candidate is running as a Democrat or a Republican that candidate will be at an insurmountable disadvantage when it comes to campaign financing and media exposure. Those rare individuals who do manage to vocalize something different from the status quo within either the Dems or GOP usually find that their careers in Congress are short. There are always those primary challenges bankrolled by the usual corporate suspects to either silence or outright eliminate the likes of Cynthia McKinney or Dennis Kucinich. What we get left with is the same old crap election after election. I can empathize with any Iranian voter who feels a bit frustrated by his or her system – we’re dealing with a similar problem here.

Same here where our punditocracy delight in ‘consensus’ politics where only a narrow neoliberal discourse exists and the tories fight Nulabour not over the policies (because they are identical- kill the fucking poor, hoard wealth) but presentation and…I dunno, what really do they do all day? Squabble over who is screwing the most whores and ripping off the expenses or something? Anyways Naj posted-

Roughly 39% of eligible voters participated in the election. (None of my family members did! I assume their candidates were not allowed on the ballot.)

News via Payvand from Iran’s interior minister paints a rosier picture unsurprisingly-

IRNA – Interior Minister Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi said on Saturday that the principalists won 71 seats while other political groups won 29 remaining seats of the 8th Majlis. Speaking to reporters, he said 60 percent of qualified voters took part in the eighth parliamentary elections and cast their votes.

On the results of Tehran’s constituency, he said it will be declared two days before start of new year holidays but the election results in other constituencies will be by Saturday night. Pour-Mohammadi also praised the significant and powerful role of Iranian mass media which spared no efforts to mobilize the country’s public opinion.

Iranian mass media practically managed to foil all propaganda campaigns launched by the enemies of Iran, he said. Some 22,839,000 eligible voters took part and cast their ballots in the 8th parliamentary elections on March 14, said the minister.

Some 68.48 percent of the voters were female and the remaining 32.51 percent were male, he said.

Western hackers tried to disrupt Iran’s parliamentary elections which were for the first time conducted in a computerized way but to no avail, underlined Pour-Mohammadi.

Oh yes, shock horror conservative incumbents do well in an election using electronic voting machines!!! And thus with no acknowledgement of irony and enormous chutzpah the Bush administration criticise the results- “in essence the results are cooked”. Well takes one to…etc. Al Jazeera report a less establishment friendly picture-

Conservatives allied with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president, are ahead in Iran’s parliamentary elections, according to partial results. According to state television, conservatives are ahead with 108 seats against 33 for their reformist opponents in an election for Iran’s 290-seat parliament. Local media also reported that 28 million of Iran’s 44 million eligible voters had cast their ballots on Friday. 

Nearly half the seats won by conservative politicians so far were in districts where no reformist candidates were running – a sign of the impact after reformist ranks were cut by the cleric-led Guardian Council. The returns, mostly from smaller towns, were insufficient to determine any solid trend.

According to reformist leaders, their candidates were allowed to run in only about 90 of the races. The unelected Guardian Council rejected about 1,700 candidates, mostly reformists, on grounds of insufficient loyalty to Islam or Iran’s 1979 revolution.

Many Iranians who support liberal reforms spent Friday deliberating with friends and family, going back and forth between two options: vote and give legitimacy to an election many of them saw as unfair, or boycott and ensure an even stronger conservative domination of parliament.

And at the end of all this the losers are…people all over who want democracy, reform and equality. Yep, every time some shit-for-brains -let’s retard into our lizard brained past- conservative anywhere on planet earth gets more power, the universe sighs, shrugs and even with the billions of years to go, we might still be fucking around like chumps then too.

‘The Wire’ Writers Call For Resistance To The Drug War

Via Tom @ Automatic Preference: If you don’t know about the Wire, I would find out if I were you, the writers here include the creators and include a former journalist, a former detective & teacher, all award winning writers who in  The Wire have crafted something that appears to be a TV drama but was something far more significant a depiction of the failing dysfunctional institutions of a city, the drugs war, the police, the schools, the working class, the media, politics and how capitalism is devaluing human beings day by day. Here they call for civil disobedience and becoming part of resistance to the failed policies rather than a collaborator-

The Wire’s War on the Drug War
By Ed Burns, Dennis Lehane, George Pelecanos, Richard Price, David Simon

We write a television show. Measured against more thoughtful and meaningful occupations, this is not the best seat from which to argue public policy or social justice. Still, those viewers who followed The Wire — our HBO drama that tried to portray all sides of inner-city collapse, including the drug war, with as much detail and as little judgment as we could muster — tell us they’ve invested in the fates of our characters. They worry or grieve for Bubbles, Bodie or Wallace, certain that these characters are fictional yet knowing they are rooted in the reality of the other America, the one rarely acknowledged by anything so overt as a TV drama.

These viewers, admittedly a small shard of the TV universe, deluge us with one question: What can we do? If there are two Americas — separate and unequal — and if the drug war has helped produce a psychic chasm between them, how can well-meaning, well-intentioned people begin to bridge those worlds?

And for five seasons, we answered lamely, offering arguments about economic priorities or drug policy, debating theoreticals within our tangled little drama. We were storytellers, not advocates; we ducked the question as best we could.

Yet this war grinds on, flooding our prisons, devouring resources, turning city neighborhoods into free-fire zones. To what end? State and federal prisons are packed with victims of the drug conflict. A new report by the Pew Center shows that 1 of every 100 adults in the U.S. — and 1 in 15 black men over 18 — is currently incarcerated. That’s the world’s highest rate of imprisonment.

The drug war has ravaged law enforcement too. In cities where police agencies commit the most resources to arresting their way out of their drug problems, the arrest rates for violent crime — murder, rape, aggravated assault — have declined. In Baltimore, where we set The Wire, drug arrests have skyrocketed over the past three decades, yet in that same span, arrest rates for murder have gone from 80% and 90% to half that. Lost in an unwinnable drug war, a new generation of law officers is no longer capable of investigating crime properly, having learned only to make court pay by grabbing cheap, meaningless drug arrests off the nearest corner.

What the drugs themselves have not destroyed, the warfare against them has. And what once began, perhaps, as a battle against dangerous substances long ago transformed itself into a venal war on our underclass. Since declaring war on drugs nearly 40 years ago, we’ve been demonizing our most desperate citizens, isolating and incarcerating them and otherwise denying them a role in the American collective. All to no purpose. The prison population doubles and doubles again; the drugs remain.

Our leaders? There aren’t any politicians — Democrat or Republican — willing to speak truth on this. Instead, politicians compete to prove themselves more draconian than thou, to embrace America’s most profound and enduring policy failure.

“A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right,” wrote Thomas Paine when he called for civil disobedience against monarchy — the flawed national policy of his day. In a similar spirit, we offer a small idea that is, perhaps, no small idea. It will not solve the drug problem, nor will it heal all civic wounds. It does not yet address questions of how the resources spent warring with our poor over drug use might be better spent on treatment or education or job training, or anything else that might begin to restore those places in America where the only economic engine remaining is the illegal drug economy. It doesn’t resolve the myriad complexities that a retreat from war to sanity will require. All it does is open a range of intricate, paradoxical issues. But this is what we can do — and what we will do.

If asked to serve on a jury deliberating a violation of state or federal drug laws, we will vote to acquit, regardless of the evidence presented. Save for a prosecution in which acts of violence or intended violence are alleged, we will — to borrow Justice Harry Blackmun’s manifesto against the death penalty — no longer tinker with the machinery of the drug war. No longer can we collaborate with a government that uses nonviolent drug offenses to fill prisons with its poorest, most damaged and most desperate citizens.

Jury nullification is American dissent, as old and as heralded as the 1735 trial of John Peter Zenger, who was acquitted of seditious libel against the royal governor of New York, and absent a government capable of repairing injustices, it is legitimate protest. If some few episodes of a television entertainment have caused others to reflect on the war zones we have created in our cities and the human beings stranded there, we ask that those people might also consider their conscience. And when the lawyers or the judge or your fellow jurors seek explanation, think for a moment on Bubbles or Bodie or Wallace. And remember that the lives being held in the balance aren’t fictional.

An Exit What?

Exit polls, y’know the means by which elections can be judged ahead of final counts and can help expose fiddling, so consequently since the Bush era came about they are no longer published and/or published unadjusted by compliant media networks, not just in the US but in various elections across the world (ain’t globalisation cool?). Well one for the Spanish election says the lefty-ish PSOE have retained power. Korova was over there and reported the dynamic was depressingly familiar (perhaps that’s why they can win and exit polls are published, hmmm)-

The current period of pre-election campaigning had Zapatero’s PSOE virtually guaranteed of victory. They are roughly 5 percentage points ahead of the Popular Party, and it is inconceivable that this lead will be surrendered. However, from a progressive’s point of view, there is little to rejoice in these elections. Replace the PSOE with New Labour and the Popular Party with Cameron’s Conservatives, and you have an almost identical political situation. As in the UK, there is very little to choose between the two parties. It would make little difference who was in power, as both parties are beholden to the capitalist economic system. The only other party remotely capable of challenging these two, is Izquierda Unida (or United Left). Much like the Liberal Democrats, they hover around the fringes of the political debate. However, unlike the libs, IU is a viable left-wing alternative to the parties of the establishment. One hopes very much that IU increase their vote across Spain and begin to wield influence although, for the moment at least, this seems unlikely.

PS. Spain dropped its extradition request of former Gitmo inmates Jamil El-Banna (threatened with Gitmo to force him to work for MI5 then kidnapped by the CIA when he refused) and Omar Deghayes (more here) a few days ago, looks like being onside with the Bush gulag is not politically favourable, good-

Baltasar Garzón, the prominent judge who agreed to shelve the case against the two men, explained that he was doing so because of medical reports filed by the men’s lawyers at their last hearing in February. Two doctors, Jonathan Fluxman and Helen Bamber, had examined the men earlier in the month and had concluded that they were suffering from severe medical conditions caused by torture at the hands of their US captors and the inhumane conditions in which they were kept for five years.

Conrad Black Eats Porridge!

Yep, sometimes bad things do happen to bad people, cosmic karmic equilibrium is harmonised or…it couldn’t happen to a nicer (scummier) bloke-

Former media tycoon Conrad Black has started his six-and-a-half year jail sentence at a Florida prison. The former owner of the Daily Telegraph was convicted of three counts of fraud and one of obstructing justice. The fraud involved millions of dollars that was siphoned-off from his media firm Hollinger International. The UK peer will serve his sentence at a low-security prison 50 miles north west of Orlando in central Florida. He will also have to pay back $6.1m (£3m).

I’d like to think there’s still room at that country club jail for Rupert…

Behold Britain’s Mighty Nuclear Power!

The awesome power of British Nuclear plants shall rule the world!!!!

In the four years before 2002, the plant had produced annual figures respectively of 2.3 tonnes, 0.3 tonnes, 0 tonnes and 0 tonnes.

Erm…yeah but…

A nuclear plant built at a cost of £470m to provide atomic fuel to be used in foreign power stations has produced almost nothing since it was opened six years ago, the government has admitted. The mixed oxide (Mox) facility at Sellafield in Cumbria – which was opposed by green groups as uneconomic – was originally predicted to have an annual throughput of 120 tonnes of fuel.

No, but see the thing is…

The SMP was designed to make new fuel from the recycled uranium and plutonium recovered from used nuclear fuel, which had been reprocessed by the nearby thermal oxide reprocessing plant (Thorp) at Sellafield. A Mox demonstration complex was opened in 1998 but was hit by a scandal involving quality control and the falsification of documents, which led to the resignation of John Taylor, chief executive of BNFL.

Attempts to open the main SMP facility led to high court challenges by Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth, which argued that the government’s decision to allow BNG’s parent group, BNFL, to proceed with opening the facility was unlawful under European law. The Irish government also took unsuccessful legal action to stop the SMP opening over concerns about radioactive effluent from the plant polluting the Irish Sea.

Jean McSorley, a nuclear campaigner at Greenpeace, said the Mox plant was – along with Thorp – “another great failure of British nuclear engineering” and pointed to the dangers of accepting the industry’s economic models and promises. She pointed out that Thorp had been shut for the past three years because of an accident and continual attempts to reopen it had been thwarted by further problems.

Um…

BNG has been forced to meet the needs of Swiss and other contracted customers for Mox fuel through buying alternative supplies from France and Belgium. With the £470m construction costs written off, the plant was assessed by government appointed consultants in 2001 to have a net positive value of only £216m, a value that was partly based on winning back Japanese business, which proved hard after the falsification of quality-assurance data in 1999.

It’s easy to mock, but you try scamming hundreds of millions of pounds out of the government, that was a success at least. The nuclear thing…not so much. Still I’m sure all those new power stations being pushed through against legal challenges and false consultation processes will be just peachy!