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he CRS, by a member of France's infamous riot control units. A former delinquent in one of the violent areas around Paris which saw protracted rioting 18 months ago, Jamel Bousetta, 25, joined the police because he wanted to see 'life from the other side'. The book details a series of racist and violent incidents, particularly in a centre dealing with asylum-seekers, that culminate in the author himself being beaten up by his colleagues.'There are lots of policemen who are cowboys, who dispense justice themselves; there are drunkards, racists,' Boussetta told The Observer. 'I saw people spitting in the food of the detained asylum-seekers, making them stand naked, humiliating them, I saw violence, I saw falsified statistics and I saw petty daily corruption.'The books have been received positively by the mainstream media. Pierre Dragon's cartoon description of life as an agent of the Renseignements Generaux was praised by the cultural website Evene for its 'references to Chandler and Melville'.And, despite their warts-and-all portrait of French policing, it appears that support for the creative cops among their colleagues is widespread, a reflection in part of the respect in which writers are held in France generally.Erik Blondin, a constable or gardien de la paix for the last 25 years, spent yesterday treading the pavements of Paris's 14th arrondissement, dealing with minor traffic incidents, stolen handbags and the occasional fight.'It's daily human life,' he said during a short break. 'It's important for t
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ming wish: 'I want to stress that reading aloud makes children readers for life.' She is impressed by a Polish campaign that encourages parents to read to their children for '20 minutes a day'. And thinking about this has brought her father back to her.Harry Albert Aitken was a draughtsman-turned civil servant who worked at the Treasury. 'I didn't get on terribly well with my dad. He was a strange man. I was used to his towering rages, sulks and silences.' But when, aged six, she was 'terribly ill with measles, bronchitis and whooping cough', he read to her - The Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton and half of David Copperfield. And he borrowed library books: Marianne Dreams by Catherine Storr and The Greengage Summer by Rumer Godden. You can see how pleased she is to remember him through books.Wilson celebrates her 60th birthday in the week before Christmas. 'When I was 50, I remember thinking, "This is it. Nothing is going to change now, it will be more of the same, with a gradual decline." Instead, my marriage broke down and my career took off dramatically.' Sixty is 'just another number' (she puts her inner age 'between 10 and 40').She wonders what the next decade will hold. How will she celebrate? She doesn't know - and I can't help. But I do know exactly what, if my calculations are right, she should be given for her birthday: 315 rings.Jamie Doward The Observer,Sunday 27 December 2009The following correction was printed in the Observer's For the record column, Sunday January 3 2010 The article below re
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of sovereignty.' Mandel is worried that the most likely scenario for Iraq - rather than either a strong national government of unity or a civil war of the kind envisaged by Galbraith - is a kind of 'Afghan' outcome: a weak government in Baghdad, beset by divisions, in control of ineffectual and partisan security forces, and with a continued potential for lawlessness and terrorism. 'I just can't see a significant potential for a reduction in foreign forces in 18 to 20 months' time, as some believe. It will be at least two or three years at the same levels we have now. 'If I were advising investors, I would say there was a very high degree of risk of getting involved in Iraq in the next five years. I still remain sceptical about the whole civil war and fragmentation scenario. But I am much less certain about that than I was four months ago. 'I do think it is very unlikely that we will have strong central government or a federal system that functions throughout the country.' Sign up for the Guardian TodayOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.Sign up for the daily emailGet the Guardian's daily US emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Enter your email address to subscribe.Sign up for the daily emailSign up nowGet the Guardian's daily Australia emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox every weekday.Sign up for the daily emailWill Woodward The Guardia
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t banks. Click here to read them all.As Dominic warns:If Italy goes down in a disorderly default, it will make the Lehman Brothers collapse feel like a Roman holiday.Perhaps Italy will be the 'event' that triggers the major panic which Lance Roberts warns of tonight....Wall Street may be heading for troubled times.... Photograph: Sipa Press/Rex Features8.22pm: Our man on Wall Street, Dominic Rushe, has been talking to Lance Roberts, CEO of Streettalk Advisors, the investment management company.The Dow is now off close to 350 points but Roberts doesn't think we've even begun to see the problems coming down the line.The recent rally on Wall Street was mainly due to technical reasons, he told Dominic. Pension funds et al had sold too much stock but needed to get back into the market to meet their investment criteria. "The markets were so oversold going in to October that they rallied on any bit of good news. Well we've run through that course," Roberts says. He adds that:Go back 800 years and you'll fund a series of events when individual countries get into debt crises. This is the first time we've had a global crisis of this magnitude.Two weeks from now the Senate "super-committee" is due to report on ways the US can tackle its massive debts �C no one is expecting much of in the way of solution which will lead to yet more infighting in Washington and the threat of massive cuts in spending.Roberts says there may be, worrying, parallels with the last crash when the collapse of Lehman's triggered a global meltdo
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