Guardian.co.uk's web search volume in cities and regions across the world: Ireland enjoys the highest search volume,the next are the United Kingdom,New Zealand,Norway,Greece and Australia.It's no doubt that the UK enjoys a high web search volume,because guardian.co.uk is a British website owned by the Guardian Media Group,and formerly konwn as Guardian Unlimited.What's more,it was the second-most popular UK newspaper website after Mail Online.
What surprise us most is that Ireland has the highest search volume,maybe it's because Ireland is adjacent to Britain,they have similar customs and life styles,there is no surprise that guardian.co.uk
has a good market in its neighboring cuntry.
Other top ten countries like New Zealand,Norway and so on,these country must all have a large population and developed economy.Guardian.co.uk wins great popularity in these countries,the website including news,sport,comment,culture,business,money,life & style,travel,environment,tech,TV,video,jobs etc.
Seeing from the rankings in cities,they are Dublin,London,Brentford,Poplar,Manchester,Sydney,New York,Paris,Toronto,Madrid respectively.Guardian.co.uk is most popular in Dublin,it's the capital of Ireland,so it's no doubt that Dublin has the highest search volume.
As for London,the capital and the largest port in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Europe's largest city,the world's top international metropolis and one of the most prosperous cities in the world. London have firmly been Europe's largest financial center cities and Europe's largest economic center.It's undeniable that these top ten cities all have a large population and a developed economy.
www.guardian.co.uk
provide the news related to guardian and the relevent research analysis.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Monday, June 17, 2013
A huge explosion shook the Mezze military airport on the western edge of Damascus on Sunday, and ambulances were seen heading to the compound, a major base for President Bashar al-Assad's elite forces, activists said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group based in Britain with a network of observers in Syria, said it appeared that a booby-trapped car had exploded at a road block near the airport, killing or wounding about 20 members of Assad's forces.
Video footage taken by activists showed flames rising from the area.
State controlled al-Ikhbariya Television said the explosion "resulted from an attempt to target the Mezze military airport". Activists said Assad's forces had blocked roads leading to the airport.
The compound, which is used by Syria's elite Republican Guards, special forces and air force intelligence, also serves as a private airport for the Assad family.
Since the uprising, it has been used to fire rockets and artillery at rebellious Sunni Muslim neighbourhoods on the edge of the capital.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group based in Britain with a network of observers in Syria, said it appeared that a booby-trapped car had exploded at a road block near the airport, killing or wounding about 20 members of Assad's forces.
Video footage taken by activists showed flames rising from the area.
State controlled al-Ikhbariya Television said the explosion "resulted from an attempt to target the Mezze military airport". Activists said Assad's forces had blocked roads leading to the airport.
The compound, which is used by Syria's elite Republican Guards, special forces and air force intelligence, also serves as a private airport for the Assad family.
Since the uprising, it has been used to fire rockets and artillery at rebellious Sunni Muslim neighbourhoods on the edge of the capital.
You might have thought that Northern Ireland was one jurisdiction where the judiciary had learned the dangers of conducting justice in secret.
Evidently not. The Belfast Telegraph reports that a judge sitting in Derry, Barney McElholm, has imposed reporting restrictions on a case involving three men.
One was charged with obstructing a police officer; the second with perverting the course of justice by falsely identifying someone to the police; and the third with perverting the course of justice by falsely claiming he was someone who had been asked to produce their driving documents.
The judge has previously imposed anonymity orders in drugs trials, citing the activities of of a vigilante group, Republican Action Against Drugs, which has been blamed for around 40 paramilitary-style punishment attacks on alleged drug dealers.
The judge explained that he did so because "there are people out there who seem to believe if someone is charged with an offence it means they are guilty of it".
But the new order relates to offences that are not drug-related, and judge McElholm's decision is regarded by the Telegraph's editor, Mike Gilson, as an error of judgment.
In a leading article, he argues that the judge is setting a dangerous precedent. He writes:
"This newspaper feels that the question of danger to defendants could be used by virtually every defence lawyer hoping to keep their clients' names out of the public domain.
There must be compelling evidence of likely threat before such anonymity can be granted.
The identities of people appearing in court are often well known in their immediate localities, whether they are publicly named or not…
The old maxim that justice must not only be done but must be seen to be done has served the legal system well for a very long time and must be jealously guarded."
Gilson is backed by his paper's managing editor, Paul Connolly, who is told HoldTheFrontPage that there is increasing concern in Northern Ireland about the erosion of press freedom.
Connolly is quoted as saying: "There is an increasing tendency amongst some members of the judiciary to impose reporting restrictions that would not be entertained in the rest of the UK…
"As the legal systems of England, Wales and Scotland embrace the principles of transparency and open justice, Northern Ireland is going backwards."
Evidently not. The Belfast Telegraph reports that a judge sitting in Derry, Barney McElholm, has imposed reporting restrictions on a case involving three men.
One was charged with obstructing a police officer; the second with perverting the course of justice by falsely identifying someone to the police; and the third with perverting the course of justice by falsely claiming he was someone who had been asked to produce their driving documents.
The judge has previously imposed anonymity orders in drugs trials, citing the activities of of a vigilante group, Republican Action Against Drugs, which has been blamed for around 40 paramilitary-style punishment attacks on alleged drug dealers.
The judge explained that he did so because "there are people out there who seem to believe if someone is charged with an offence it means they are guilty of it".
But the new order relates to offences that are not drug-related, and judge McElholm's decision is regarded by the Telegraph's editor, Mike Gilson, as an error of judgment.
In a leading article, he argues that the judge is setting a dangerous precedent. He writes:
"This newspaper feels that the question of danger to defendants could be used by virtually every defence lawyer hoping to keep their clients' names out of the public domain.
There must be compelling evidence of likely threat before such anonymity can be granted.
The identities of people appearing in court are often well known in their immediate localities, whether they are publicly named or not…
The old maxim that justice must not only be done but must be seen to be done has served the legal system well for a very long time and must be jealously guarded."
Gilson is backed by his paper's managing editor, Paul Connolly, who is told HoldTheFrontPage that there is increasing concern in Northern Ireland about the erosion of press freedom.
Connolly is quoted as saying: "There is an increasing tendency amongst some members of the judiciary to impose reporting restrictions that would not be entertained in the rest of the UK…
"As the legal systems of England, Wales and Scotland embrace the principles of transparency and open justice, Northern Ireland is going backwards."
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