Tag Archives: Video

2001 ➤ The other 9/11 assassination: could Massoud have become his nation’s spiritual leader?

Ahmad Shah Massoud and followers photographed by the Japanese photographer and anthropologist Hiromi Nagakura who knew him over two decades... “Massoud said to me, ‘We are fighting against terrorism. If we don’t fight here, the war will only expand.’ After September 11, I finally understood what he was talking about.”

❚ SUNDAY IS THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States, but this week also marks a decade since Al Qaeda assassinated the one figure who was holding out against its protectors, the Taliban. This was Ahmad Shah Massoud, an Afghan guerrilla commander known variously as The Lion of Panjshir and the Afghan Che Guevara who became the nation’s defence minister. Following his death he was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, declared a National Hero of Afghanistan and Sept 9 is now observed there as a national holiday known as Massoud Day.

He was assassinated at the age of 48 two days before the Twin Towers fell, ostensibly as part of the 9/11 process to draw the US into the Afghan war in 2001. Two Tunisian suicide bombers posed as overseas television journalists to interview Massoud in Khvajeh Ba Odin, a small village in north Afghanistan, where they detonated a bomb hidden in their camera.

Ahmad Shah Massoud, postage stampIn 1996, during the civil war in Afghanistan, the Taliban seized the capital city, Kabul, and soon the majority of their fighting force were soldiers imported from abroad by Al Qaeda, the Sunni Islamist militant group founded by Osama Bin Laden and designated a terrorist organisation by the United Nations.

In 1989, Massoud had been instrumental in driving the Soviet army out of Afghanistan. In the 90s, with the Taliban gaining control of 90% of the country, he opposed them by creating the United Front (Northern Alliance), and so posed a constant threat to Al Qaeda.

What was revealed only last December, when the 30-year rule released previously secret UK Cabinet papers, was that western powers had decided in 1980 to provide “discreet support for Afghan guerrilla resistance” after the Soviet invasion of their country. This not only meant Britain secretly supplying arms to Massoud, but also that one faction of the mujahideen fighters were covertly funded by the CIA. These went on to become founding members of the Al Qaeda terrorist network.

➢ Afghanistan’s “lost pillar of stability” — Listen to yesterday’s flagship Today show on BBC Radio 4, when security correspondent Gordon Corera discussed why Massoud had to die before the Twin Towers fell. If he had lived, many believe Massoud would have become a vital pillar of stability for his nation.

Massoud Tomb, Afghanistan,video,DocsOnline

Annual pilgrimage: Ahmad Shah Massoud’s chauffeur brings flowers from his leader’s garden to his tomb overlooking the Panjshir Valley. (Grabbed from video documentary by Iqbal Malhotra)

➢ VIEW a scene from Ahmad Shah Massoud, a documentary (above) by Indian film-maker Iqbal Malhotra (from DocsOnline)

An Intimate Portrait of the
Legendary Afghan Leader

A freedom fighter, a warrior, a man of God, an intellectual, a humanitarian, a liberal… the list goes on. Massoud was a renaissance man, though his modesty would never acknowledge it. This is perhaps his greatest quality – humility. Unlike radical leaders such as Che Guevara, his desires were modest: Freedom and prosperity for his people.

Massoud was a passionate enemy of terrorism. He strongly objected to any terrorist-style actions by mujahideen during the war with the Soviets, and identified the war against the Taliban as a war against terrorism.

Massoud was a deeply spiritual man and a devout Muslim. It is important to make these distinctions, for “Massoud the man” has perhaps more in common with Mahatma Gandhi than Che. We are exposed to a man of grace, who revelled in the beauty of his country and his creed.

➢ Read more: the biography of Massoud by Marcela Grad is appraised by Justin McCauley in the Vienna Review of Books

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➤ George Michael remembers Amy Whitehouse, live in Prague

In 30 years of making music I was never actually in awe of anybody new who came along on the British scene until this lady arrived — George Michael

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➤ Bananarama still living the pop life, woteva

Bananarama, Keren Woodward, Sara Dallin, Viva,Rewind Henley, Rewind Australia,pop music

Current Bananarama, Keren Woodward and Sara Dallin. Photography by Ellis Parrinder

❚ YES, YES, WE KNOW there used to be three of them in Bananarama when they became the leading UK girl group of the Swinging 80s. The trio established what became a much-parodied all-girl genre with It Ain’t What You Do, It’s the Way That You Do It in 1981 with the Fun Boy Three, followed by He Was Really Sayin’ Somethin’. Their windswept hair and fun-girl glamour initially defined a raunchy street style which evolved into the knowing kind of new alpha-female making waves in showbiz such as TV presenters Muriel Gray and Paula Yates. By 1986 the Nanas formed a mutually beneficial partnership with the hitmaking producers Stock Aitken Waterman who crowned the girls’ progress with Venus, their No 1 hit in the US (No 8 in the UK).

Bananarama, Na Na Hey Hey, Kiss Him Goodbye,pop music But in 1988 we said byebye to co-founder Siobhan Fahey after she found love with Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics and became Shakespear’s Sister. Then for a while the Nanas had a fourth girl, Jacquie O’Sullivan, as number three, when the Guinness Book of World Records claimed them as the female group with the most chart hits ever, a record they still seem to hold. Then we said farewell to Jacquie, and then farewell to the lot of them. Then in 1992 Bananarama came back as two of the original three, Keren Woodward and Sara Dallin, but mainstream chart success has proved elusive while they’ve spent nearly two decades faffing around with remixes and greatest hits but precious little original material on their five albums.

They did score a UK top 20 hit with the new song Move in my Direction in 2005, and they did manage some fresh stuff (such as Seventeen) alongside the covers (such as the chunky S-s-s-single Bed) on the Hi-NRG dance album called Viva in 2009 and a kind BBC reviewer said that as middle-aged women “they still bristle with a pop energy born out of total conviction”!

They naturally boarded the current 80s revival bandwagon singing along with the Here & Now tour and the Rewind Festival this Saturday at Henley, and they’ve spent the past month whetting people’s appetites for their next comeback at the Australian Rewind in October [see below]. But, y’know, the fact that the biog at their website hasn’t been refreshed since wheneva, and their Facebook page is still plugging the Viva album tracks (99p per download at Play.com) and the Video for Love Comes, the “comeback single” from 2009, is all a bit woteva. Just read the interview plugged in their media gallery, Keren’s from the Pink Paper last Christmas where she says: “Same old, same old. It seems so long ago, and yet not so long ago. I don’t know where the year’s gone, really. Shows and stuff, the usual. I don’t know.” Hm, that’s Really Sayin’ Somethin’.

➢ Click to run video for ♫ Love Comes, the “comeback single”

➢ The first Rewind Festival Australia calls itself the world’s biggest 80s music fest, and offers 25 acts over three days Oct 28–30 on the coast of Wollongong NSW. As well as the original Bananarama’s co-founders Sara and Keren, the line-up includes Sister Sledge, Kool and The Gang, Midge Ure, ABC, The Human League, Tony Hadley, Nik Kershaw, ABC, Go West + more tba.


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➤ Digital beaver grills the stars of The Inbetweeners Movie

The Inbetweeners Movie,Blake Harrison ,James Buckley, Joe Thomas, Simon Bird, Digital Spy, video

On video: clockwise, Blake Harrison, James Buckley, Joe Thomas and Simon Bird with his hand up the beaver. (Video grab from Digital Spy)

❚ THE BEST INTERVIEW YET with The Inbetweeners plugging their film from the TV series went online today. Cue the movies editor at Digital Spy

For the past few months, Digital Spy HQ has been home to a stuffed hand puppet. A beaver, to be precise (something to do with a Mel Gibson movie). With The Inbetweeners Movie hitting cinemas this week and with stars Simon Bird, Joe Thomas, James Buckley and Blake Harrison in interview mode, we thought we’d utilise our new furry friend on camera. Filling the animal with some bizarre questions, we got Simon, Joe, James and Blake to pluck the queries from the beaver…

➢ View video of The Inbetweeners answering the
beaver’s questions at Digital Spy

➢ View more videos on location with The Inbetweeners in Malia

➢ Update: The Inbetweeners Movie will be released on DVD Dec 12

Inbetweeners Movie, premiere, London, films,

Our lads at their premiere: three out of every four Inbetweeners wear a tie, shock! (PA)

Inbetweeners Movie, premiere, London, films,

Eagerly anticipated at the premiere: Will’s Mum (Belinda Stewart-Wilson – Wenn photo) and Neil’s Sister (seemingly a no-show by cricketing WAG Kacey Barnfield)

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➤ “I always wanted to be a model”

➢ Uploaded to YouTube by Yolanda Dominguez

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