News Feed 20120423

Financial Crisis
» 25 Signs That Middle Class Families Have Been Targeted for Extinction
» France 2012: Hollande Now to Reassure EU
» IMF Doubles Its Funds, Warns Europe
» Italian Stocks Down After Dutch Premier Resigns
» Italy Could Balance Budget by Next Year, Bank of Italy Says
» Nigel Farage: Euro Break-Up Inevitable, Just a Question of How
» Qatar Royal Family Member Buys Greek Island
» Spain: Economy in Recession, Unemployment at 24%
» The Coming Chaos From the Obama-Soetoro Playbook
» The Spanish Dilemma: Euro’s Fate Hinges on Austerity in Madrid
» There is Not Going to be a Solution to Our Economic Problems on the National Level
» Tunisia: Road to Recovery Still Long
» US and EU Attack Swiss in Economic War: Ermotti
 
USA
» “We Can’t Wait”: Obama Embraces Executive Orders to Bypass Congress
» How Much Skepticism Can the Climate Take?
» John Edwards Goes on Trial Over Mistress Money
» Occupy Wall Street (OWS) Training: Their Target is the Tea Party
» One-World Governance Policies Begin in New Rochelle, NY
» Political Extortion of America
» Private Spaceflight Company Spacex Has Lofty Goal: Help Save Humanity
 
Europe and the EU
» Anti-Jihadist Raid Through Italy, Italian Convert Arrested
» Bossi Calls for Lega Nord to Stay United and Fix Problems
» Center-Right Czech Coalition Dissolves Itself
» Dutch Prime Minister Submits Government’s Resignation
» Europe Rings Alarm Bell After French Far-Right Success
» Foreign Flags Hurt Our Feelings: Swiss Patriots
» German Military Rethinks Exporting Democracy
» Germany: First Wolf in Rhineland for 120 Years Shot Dead
» Germany: Chinese PM Opens Hannover Trade Fair
» German Scientists Use Fungi to Clean Soil, Water
» Italian Islamist Arrested, 10 More Probed
» Italy: Profumo on Education: No Time for Reforms, We Need Stability
» Italy: Lega MP Maroni Calls for Unity to Weather the Crisis
» Lars Man Standing, Final Score
» Norway Killer Picked Victims Who Had “Leftist” Look
» Norway: Breivik Offers Apology to Non-Political Victims
» Norway: Breivik Apologises to the ‘Non Politcal’ Victims
» Norway: Oslo Muslims Pained by Breivik’s Testimony
» Sarkozy Says Le Pen Supporters Must be Respected
» Spanish Royalty in Crisis After King’s Antics
» Storms to Hit Central and Northern Italy Then Intense Heat
» Sweden: ‘Laziness is Not a Disability’: Council
» Switzerland Home to Kim Jong-un ‘For Nine Years’
» UK: Pakistani Students Raped Woman, 20, After She Fell Asleep on Night Bus on Way Home From Night Out
» UK: Renovation Tax Will Harm Our Churches, Warns Hurd
» UK: Terror Case Lawyers Who Fight Fanatics’ Deportation Land £110m Bill in Legal Aid
» UK: Takeaway Boss ‘Tried to Recruit Girls as Young as 12 to Work as Prostitutes in His Brothel’Azad Miah ‘Hounded and Stalked Girls to Have Sex for Money’
» UK: Western Allies of MI6 ‘Kept in Dark’ Over Mosque Sting Plan
 
North Africa
» Egypt Stops Gas Supplies to Israel
» Egypt Scraps Gas Deal With Israel
» Tunisia: Director Mourad Ben Cheikh, Too Many Foreign Funds
 
Middle East
» Bomb Blasts in Blue Helmet Hang-Out in Lebanon
» Turkey: Great Ambitions But Lacking Resources, Study
» Turkey: Fazil Say Contemplates Exile, ‘Insulted as Atheist’
» Yemen: Army Offensive Kills 16 Al Qaeda Militants
 
Russia
» Moscow: Tens of Thousands With Kirill in Defense of the Faith
 
South Asia
» India Shooting Ship Release Delayed
» India’s Top Court Admits Italy’s Appeal on Marines
» Indian Military Makes Strategic Stride With the Agni-V
» Indonesia: West Java: Islamic Extremists Attacked an Ahmadi Mosque
» Over 3 Thousand Former Maoist Guerrillas Join Nepalese Army
» Sri Lanka Backs Monks in Fight Over Mosque
» US-Afghan Strategic Partnership Finalized
 
Far East
» Pyongyang Threatens to Turn Seoul to Ashes
» Tension is Expected to Remain in the South China Sea
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Jihadists in Mali Ready to Release Kidnapped Swiss Woman
» Sudan President Bashir Vows No Peace Talks as Missles Strike
 
Latin America
» Brazil: Actor Playing Judas Dies After He Accidentally Hanged Self in Passion Play
 
Immigration
» France and Germany Push to Suspend Free Movement
» Immigrants Deported, Algiers Complains With Rome
» Sweden: Cop Blames Colleagues’ Racist Slurs on ‘Stress’
» Switzerland: Berne Closes the Door on East Europeans
» We Only Deport a Third of Illegal Migrants We Catch: New Figures Deliver Another Blow to UK Border Agency
 
Culture Wars
» Professor Depicts Blood-Dripping Knife, Machine-Gun, While Talking Population Control
» Shaping America Into Progressivism

Financial Crisis


25 Signs That Middle Class Families Have Been Targeted for Extinction

The middle class in America is being systematically wiped out, and most people don’t even realize what is happening. Every single year, millions more Americans fall out of the middle class and become dependent on the government. The United States once had the largest and most vibrant middle class in the history of the world, but now the middle class is rapidly shrinking and government dependence is at an all-time high. So why is this happening? Well, America is becoming a poorer nation at the same time that wealth is becoming extremely concentrated at the very top. At this point, our economic system is designed to funnel as much money and power to the federal government and to the big corporations as possible. Individuals and small businesses have a really hard time thriving in this environment.

To most big corporations these days, workers are viewed as financial liabilities. Most corporations want to reduce their payrolls as much as possible. You see, the truth is that most corporations want to be just like Apple. If you can believe it, Apple makes $400,000 in profit per employee. Big corporations don’t care that you need to pay the mortgage and provide for your family. Their goal is to make as much money as possible. And most of the control freaks that run our bloated federal government don’t care much about middle class families either. To many politicians and federal bureaucrats, middle class families are “useless eaters” that are constantly damaging the environment with their “excessive” lifestyles. In this day and age, neither the federal government nor the big corporations really have much use for middle class Americans, and that is really, really bad news for the the future of the middle class family in America.

There are three key factors that are constantly chipping away at the middle class…

-Globalization

-Inflation

-Taxes

Labor has become a global commodity, and American workers are often 10 to 20 times as expensive as workers on the other side of the world are. Middle class jobs (such as manufacturing, etc.) have been leaving this country at an astounding pace. Competition for the jobs that remain has become extremely fierce, and this has driven wages down. The following is from a recent article in the New York Times…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



France 2012: Hollande Now to Reassure EU

‘Re-orientate Union in name of European values’

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 23 — Following his victory in the first round of the French presidential election and today’s crash of European stock markets, Francois Hollande knows that the eyes of EU leaders and of his partners in Europe are directed at him. Thus, as soon as he was back on the campaign trail once more in Brittany today, Mr Hollande was careful to send these spectators a message. In it, he reaffirmed his pro-European faith alongside a criticism of the new EU structure constituted by the Merkel-Sarkozy partnership.

“It is in the name of European values that I want to redirect the construction of the Union,” he told supporters in Lorient, Brittany. The none-too veiled reference was to the promise in his manifesto to renegotiate the fiscal treaty by inserting growth alongside rigour. This idea he repeated shortly after in an attack on the decision to subject budget decisions made by individual countries to those made in Brussels: “France deserves respect; it is the French people who should decide on their future, and they alone,” Mr Hollande declared. “We need the country to take its destiny into its own hands”.

These are strong words and they are aimed at preparing European partners and financial markets of the Socialist candidate’s behaviour should he be crowned at France’s presidential palace. But at the same time, the message aims to persuade as many electors as possible to transform his first-round success into a final one, pushing his supporters to remain mobilised.

The response from financial markets was immediate: the phantom of crashing indexes repeatedly evoked by Sarkozy appears to have come true today — at least in part. Despite a paradoxically mild level of loss on the Paris stock market (down by 2.83%), most markets suffered on a day made more nervous by a government crisis in Holland.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF Doubles Its Funds, Warns Europe

Finance ministers from emerging countries over the weekend joined Europe in doubling the coffers of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), while asking for a bigger say in its governance and warning the eurozone to speed up anti-crisis measures.

Chaired by Singapore’s finance minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, the IMF meeting on Saturday (21 April) concluded that “continued progress” in the eurozone is needed to lower the borrowing costs of governments and “secure financial stability.”

“Undertaking bold structural reforms will be crucial to boosting confidence and productivity, facilitating rebalancing within the monetary union, and promoting strong and balanced growth,” the final communique says.

For his part, US treasury secretary Timothy Geither noted that more action is needed from the European Central Bank (ECB). “The success of the next phase of the crisis response will hinge on Europe’s willingness and ability, together with the European Central Bank, to apply its tools … aggressively to support countries as they implement reforms,” he said.

The Frankfurt-based ECB has already poured €1 trillion worth of cheap loans into eurozone banks to prevent a credit crunch and to allow them to buy more government debt, a move which temporarily lowered Spain and Italy’s borrowing costs.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde on Friday managed to raise €326 billion extra for her institution’s general intervention budget. The money could be used for further euro-bail-outs.

The US and Canada declined to chip in. Meamwhile, in return for their — so far unspecified — extra contributions, Brazil, China, India and Russia want a bigger say in the way the IMF takes its decisions.

Brazil’s finance minister Guido Mantega pointed out that even though his country could be described as the third largest economy in Europe behind Germany and France, its voting power at the IMF is equivalent to the Netherlands and smaller than Spain, Italy or Britain.

The UK also said that its €11 billion contribution will only become available once IMF reforms are completed. “I take reforms one step at a time,” Lagarde told reporters on Saturday. “Everybody wants to have a bigger share of the same pie, so there will have to be give and take.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Stocks Down After Dutch Premier Resigns

Spread above 400

(ANSA) — Milan, April 23 — The spread rose and the stock market shrank in Italy on Monday after European markets responded badly to Socialist candidate Francois Hollande coming out on top in the first round of the French presidential elections and the resignation of Dutch Premier Mark Rutte over budget cuts. The yield spread between 10-year Italian bonds and the German benchmark, a key indicator of market confidence in Italy’s ability to weather the eurozone crisis, climbed back above the psychologically important 400 mark and went up to 410 before dropping to 408.6 at the close of trading. Milan’s FTSE Mib index lost 3.83% of its stock value and dropped below the 14,000-point mark to 13,849.

Markets across Europe suffered big losses as nearly 160 billion euros went up in smoke in a 2.34% loss on the Stoxx Europe 600 index. photo: Dutch Premier Mark Rutte after tendering resignation

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Could Balance Budget by Next Year, Bank of Italy Says

‘Better asset management needed’ says Rossi

(ANSA) — Rome, April 23 — The Bank of Italy said Monday that the recession-hit country could balance its budget in 2013 by managing public assets better.

Bank of Italy Deputy Director-General Salvatore Rossi said in a House hearing that market volatility required “better public-asset management” in order for Italy to hit its target of balancing the budget next year.

A deepening recession has led some commentators to say it will be harder to balance the budget in 2013, but Premier Mario Monti has said that the goal remains unchanged.

Commenting on the government’s Economic and Financial Document (DEF), Rossi said Italy could show growth by the end of the year if investor confidence comes back and if taxes are lowered.

“We need to find a way to reduce the tax burden on workers and businesses”, he said.

The International Monetary Fund says that the Italian economy will shrink in 2013 by 0.3%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Nigel Farage: Euro Break-Up Inevitable, Just a Question of How

* Speaker: Nigel Farage MEP, Leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP), Co-President of the ‘Europe of Freedom and Democracy’ (EFD) Group in the European Parliament

Transcript:

“It’s a great shame Mr Van Rompuy’s not here because a month ago he told us the worst was over, we’d reached the turning point. He even told us that he’d solved the Euro crisis! Well, today we’ve got a more realistic Mr Barroso who says if we follow his policies and stick together we can solve this in the end!

Sorry! No one believes you anymore, and actually, in the face of the rapidly deteriorating situation these comments look ridiculous.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Qatar Royal Family Member Buys Greek Island

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 23 — A member of Qatar’s royal family has purchased a Greek island for 5 million euros, according to a report in a Qatari newspaper. The 1,236-acre island, named Oxia, was initially advertised by owners the Greek-Australian Stamoulis family for 6.9 million euros, Greek daily Ekathimerini reported, citing unnamed sources. The island’s new owners are expected to develop part of the island, it added. The island is located in the Ionian Sea, near Ithaca, and is protected by the Natura 2000 ecological network, the newspaper said. Greece’s government has been under pressure to privatise the country’s islands in the wake of its sovereign debt crisis. The sale follows a week after Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund announced it had signed an agreement to acquire Smeralda Holding, owner of luxury hotel resorts on Costa Smeralda in Sardinia. Qatar Holding said it will acquire a portfolio consisting of four luxury hotels with a total of 372 rooms, the Porto Cervo Marina, the Porto Cervo Shipyard, the Pevero Golf Club, a 51% interest in 2,290 hectares of adjacent undeveloped land and various other real estate assets in Costa Smeralda. “We intend to continue supporting the on-going development programme which will see Costa Smeralda strengthen its position as one of the world’s top resort destinations,” Ahmad Mohamed Al-Sayed, managing director and CEO of Qatar Holding, said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Economy in Recession, Unemployment at 24%

Outlooks by international bodies confirmed

(ANSAmed) — MADRID — The Spanish economy is once again technically in a recession, after a first quarter with a drop in GDP of 0.4%, in addition to that of 0.3% in the last quarter of 2011. The data released today by the Bank of Spain, before those published by the national statistics institute, confirm the outlooks by international bodies, which predicted that the recession would grow worse before the end of the summer. In the same period, unemployment affected almost 24% of the active population. On an annual basis, GDP dropped in the first quarter by 0.5%. This is the second recession seen in the Spanish economy in about 3 years, although the previous one in 2009 was much worse, at -3.7%. According to the bulletin published by Spain’s central bank, the drop in GDP was caused by the latest 0.4% drop in domestic demand and a lesser contribution from the foreign sector — which saw an increase but a lesser one than the previous quarter. In the first quarter, employment was down by 4%, adding to the 3.3% drop seen in the last quarter of 2011.

The central bank said that the backdrop (with 290,000 new jobless between January and March), was “compatible” with an unemployment rate of around 24% in the first quarter of 2012.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Coming Chaos From the Obama-Soetoro Playbook

America and the world today is in chaos. Wars, rumors of wars, high gasoline prices, increasing food prices, growing divisions among races and between classes, current and impending financial collapses dominate the headlines. Critics and detractors of Barack Hussein Obama claim that it is a result of his failed policies that our house and much of the world is in such disarray. Investigation into the man known as Barack Hussein Obama II and the people behind him suggests otherwise.

The chaos that presently exists domestically and across the globe is destined to get worse, but it’s not due to Obama’s inexperience or failed policies. Rather, it is the direct result of the implementation of his successful policies. The chaos in which we find ourselves is exactly what has been planned for decades. Chaos is the tactic, the means to an end, and not the result of failure of policy by the man known as Barack Hussein Obama II.

We have seen only the tip of the full frontal assault of the chaos planned for this country. Actually, we haven’t seen anything yet.

Investigative findings suggest that our present state of disorder was crafted long ago, compliments of a shadowy cabal of government leaders and their often unwitting lackeys, complicit media moguls and their eye-candy mouthpieces, and ideologues intent on changing the United States and thus the world. While this might sound like a bad fictional plot from the film noir genre, a good bit of investigation indicates otherwise.

Before dismissing such musings as delusional fodder, carefully consider the current state of our country — and the world — and start to connect the dots, stepping backwards chronologically.

[…]

Our founding fathers had the vision to understand that the biggest threat to our Republic is from within. That’s the reason that the founders placed a natural born restriction clause for President at the time the U.S. Constitution was drafted. They understood that there was a contemporaneous threat from a Trojan Horse president, as well as a future threat, despite the other checks and balances constructed within our government. Over time, however, communist influence in our schools and media continued to dilute the literal interpretation of the Constitution. Such revision changed or ignored history altering events, such as the infiltration of Communists into our federal government in the post World War II era. History has been revised. As the famous novelist George Orwell once stated, “He who controls the present, controls the past. He who controls the past, controls the future.” That has never been so true as today.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Spanish Dilemma: Euro’s Fate Hinges on Austerity in Madrid

Spain in recent days has taken center stage in the euro crisis. The country’s banks are threatened with collapse and the government in Madrid has not been successful in efforts to get the national budget under control. Will the country be forced to request aid from the euro bailout fund?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



There is Not Going to be a Solution to Our Economic Problems on the National Level

Once you understand how Washington works, it becomes easier to understand why our politicians do such stupid things.

For example, big corporations tend to donate large amounts of money to political campaigns and they love the “free trade” globalization agenda.

They love to import massive quantities of super cheap foreign goods so that they can undercut the prices of goods made in the United States.

They love to set up manufacturing facilities on the other side of the globe where it is legal to pay slave labor wages to workers.

The “free trade” agenda is great for the largest corporations, but it is horrible for the average American worker.

According to the Economic Policy Institute, the U.S. economy loses approximately 9,000 jobs for every $1 billion of goods that are imported from overseas.

Trade with other countries can be good as long as it is balanced. Unfortunately, the U.S. trading relationship with the rest of the world is tremendously imbalanced.

In 2011, the United States bought more than 550 billion dollars more stuff from the rest of the world than they bought from us.

This trade deficit has enormous consequences that most Americans simply do not understand.

Over the past decade, tens of thousands of businesses, millions of jobs and trillions of dollars have left our country.

Our industrial base is being dismantled and we are rapidly becoming poorer as a nation.

According to U.S. Representative Betty Sutton, an average of 23 manufacturing facilities a day closed down in the United States during 2010.

Just think about that.

Every single day we lost 23 more.

Overall, America has lost a total of more than 56,000 manufacturing facilities since 2001.

Why do you think cities like Detroit are dying?

[…]

The Federal Reserve is supposed to keep inflation low, but the truth is that the Fed has absolutely killed the value of the U.S. dollar. Just check out the chart below which was produced by the Fed itself. It shows how dramatically the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar has declined over the years…

[…]

By any measure, the Federal Reserve has been a colossal failure for the American people. Since the Fed was created, our currency has lost more than 95 percent of its value and our national debt has gotten more than 5000 times larger.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Road to Recovery Still Long

Report by central bank sends out contrasting signals

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, APRIL 19 — Tunisia has not been spared by international difficulties linked to a crisis that for years has dealt particularly heavy blows to the economies of countries that do not produce raw materials. The country has also been marked by political upheaval in the last year, with the transition from dictatorship to democracy, but this may be better interpreted as the crossover from one power system centred entirely on a rapacious oligarchy to another, with Tunisia forced to reset itself almost entirely, as it continues to search for an identity and a position in the region. Tunisia’s economic figures for the first quarter of 2012 were awaited with great apprehension, amid hope that the timid signs of recovery seen fleetingly in the last few months of last year could be interpreted as a consolidation of Tunisia’s road to revival.

The report by Tunisia’s central bank has shed some light on the matter and, though it reported encouraging factors, also confirmed a state of crisis, particularly in certain export sectors.

The bank says that tourism and equipment exports continue to be “positive”, while exports in the manufacturing and services sectors (transport in particular) continue to suffer.

While there has been a fall in exports, which have always represented a strategic sector for the economy of a country that specialises in transformation and has few raw materials, imports have risen, particularly in the manufacturing sector, with mechanical and electrical goods, textiles and clothing leading the way, a factor that has worsened Tunisia’s payment balance.

The overview is made more delicate by the situation of the country’s reserves. In the first quarter of the year, net reserves totalled 9.947 billion dinars (around 4.5 billion euros), the equivalent of 101 days worth of imports, against 113 days at the end of 2011. At the end of 2010, meanwhile, the figure stood at 147 days.

With regard to the banking sector, there was a fall in the number of deposits and a rise in non-performing credits, which has put inevitable pressure on the liquidity of banks and therefore upon their ability to finance the economy.

As a result, the average interest rate on the monetary market has been forced up to 3.73% at the start of April, from a figure of 3.48% in March, despite the “injection” decided by the central bank’s monetary system (3.4 billion dinars at the beginning of March).

As far as inflation is concerned, prices have largely remained the same, with the figure reaching 5.4%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



US and EU Attack Swiss in Economic War: Ermotti

Switzerland’s financial industry could lose 20,000 jobs in the coming years due to the “economic war” being waged by the EU and US against its top banks, the head of UBS warned in an interview Sunday.

“Switzerland has been attacked since 2008,” Sergio Ermotti, the head of Switzerland’s leading bank, told the SonntagsZeitung. This was partly because it offered more favourable tax rates than its international competitors, he added.

“We are in the middle of an economic war,” he said. “The idea is to weaken the two great Swiss banks, which have seen international success,” he argued, referring to UBS and Credit Suisse.

His comments came after French prosecutors on April 12th opened a probe into whether the bank had helped its French clients avoid taxes. UBS has said it is fully cooperating with French authorities in the inquiry.

In the United States, 11 Swiss banks are being investigated on suspicion that they encouraged their clients to channel undeclared assets into Swiss accounts.

The coordinated campaign to undermine Swiss finance would lead to a loss in high-value accounts, Ermotti said. “I am expecting Swiss finance to lose around 20 percent of its jobs in the coming years, being about 20,000 jobs,” Ermotti told the paper.

Switzerland has recently signed deals with Austria, Britain and Germany to toughen up penalties on tax cheats, but negotiations with Paris have stalled amid the ongoing French presidential elections.

Swiss Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf met with the US Attorney General Eric Holder on Saturday on the sidelines of an International Monetary Fund meeting for informal talks on the tax evasion issue.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


“We Can’t Wait”: Obama Embraces Executive Orders to Bypass Congress

COMMENT: Apologists here for Obama’s use of executive orders point out the other recent presidents who’ve also overreached their use of executive orders. This makes the abuses more important, not less, as this has been an on-going deviation from the Constitutional limits of the president since at least FDR in the 30s. An executive branch run wild makes the abuses of kings and dictators almost inevitable. That is why it must be reined in; that’s why the framers constructed limited powers in their document. On the otherhand, there’s clear evidence that all of Obama & co.’s study of the Constitution must have been focuses on tactics to skirt its limitations.

“In questions of power, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” -Thomas Jefferson

WASHINGTON — One Saturday last fall, President Obama interrupted a White House strategy meeting to raise an issue not on the agenda. He declared, aides recalled, that the administration needed to more aggressively use executive power to govern in the face of Congressional obstructionism.

“We had been attempting to highlight the inability of Congress to do anything,” recalled William M. Daley, who was the White House chief of staff at the time. “The president expressed frustration, saying we have got to scour everything and push the envelope in finding things we can do on our own.”

[…]

But increasingly in recent months, the administration has been seeking ways to act without Congress. Branding its unilateral efforts “We Can’t Wait,” a slogan that aides said Mr. Obama coined at that strategy meeting, the White House has rolled out dozens of new policies — on creating jobs for veterans, preventing drug shortages, raising fuel economy standards, curbing domestic violence and more.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



How Much Skepticism Can the Climate Take?

Influential skeptics continue to challenge the scientific consensus that CO2 emissions are responsible for climate change. Have they got a point?

In January this year, 16 scientists wrote in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) that they saw no scientific arguments supporting the need for urgent action to combat climate change.

They included prominent climate skeptics like MIT Atmospheric Science professor Richard Lindzen as well as the scientists, and former ExxonMobil employees, Roger Cohen and William Happer.

Even in Germany, where climate skeptics have less political influence than countries like the USA, a book called “Die kalte Sonne” (The Cold Sun) has been making waves since its publication earlier this year.

The authors Fritz Vahrenholt und Sebastian Lüning, employees of Germany’s second-biggest energy company RWE, maintain that less than half the world’s warming to date is human-made. They say solar activity, sunspots and magnetic fields, which change in cycles, are responsible.

As the sun is about to go into a cold cycle, they say, this will counteract global warming and we need not fear the worst. Calls for urgent action are no more than “panic-mongering”. “I feel duped on climate change”, Vahrenholt told the media. The German boulevard paper “Bild” ran the headline “The CO2 lie”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



John Edwards Goes on Trial Over Mistress Money

Opening statements were heard Monday in the trial of John Edwards, a two-time presidential hopeful accused of illegally using political campaign money to hide a love affair from the public and his cancer-stricken wife. Edwards, a former Democratic senator who was White House candidate John Kerry’s vice presidential choice in 2004, arrived at the court in Greensboro, North Carolina around 1300 GMT accompanied by his eldest daughter Cate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Occupy Wall Street (OWS) Training: Their Target is the Tea Party

Hundreds of OWS training workshops took place this month throughout the country, in all 50 states, including small rural areas. Inside one of the training workshops, attendees report that OWS is “specifically instructed to go to any and all Tea Party gatherings, rallies, etc., to be confrontational and create havoc and disruption.”

They are being trained to recruit and enlarge their numbers in their assigned geographic locations, to use the correct messaging, to incite any opponents, engage in confrontation, employ tactics to evade police blockades and create gridlock.

OWS workshops are extremely organized and clearly well funded. Each workshop had a trainer, DVD’s, handouts and a training manual.

OWS has deep pockets and they will be providing food, water, entertainment and more… just as we saw last Fall with the gourmet meals, tents, hotel rooms and printing presses for their newspapers.

OWS is not a grassroots movement, as demonstrated by the training, resources and coordination at their workshops. OWS is orchestrated and organized by George Soros’ MoveOn.org and Media Matters, Van Jones, Steve Lerner, Francis Fox-Piven, Barack Obama, Union leaders (e.g. SEIU, AFL/CIO, UAW), Communist Party USA (CPUSA), Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and other radical far-left anti-American organizations who are dedicated to the destruction of our free market system and the overthrow of our Constitutional form of government.

Eric Holder, Barack Obama, the Democrat Party — including the Marxist/Communist members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus — and the news and print media are all in bed with OWS. Ordinary Americans cannot and should not expect that OWS will be held accountable for inciting riots, raping women (as they did the last time around) or for any other crimes they may commit.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



One-World Governance Policies Begin in New Rochelle, NY

The revolutionary and Luciferian (he dedicated his book “Rules for Radicals” to Lucifer…aka Satan) Saul Alinsky said “True revolutionaries do not flaunt their radicalism, Alinsky taught. They cut their hair, put on suits and infiltrate the system from within.“ Alinsky also taught that community organizing (aka ‘teaching radicalism and Satanic concepts’) must begin at the local level and in a forceful manner. Karl Marx, his partner Frederich Engels and Vladimir Lenin wrote and believed the same. Adolph Hitler, along with Marx and the rest, also believed that environmental elements and ‘saving the planet’ were excellent ploys to be brought into every speech and were needed in order to shame and bully a population into submission. It worked — and still works—remarkably well.

Today, in the USA and the rest of the world, we now have the UN Agenda 21— which, in New Rochelle, NY (as well as other towns and cities throughout the nation), is attempting implementation via ICLEI (International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives). At one fell swoop, a city becomes part of the “international community” and is no longer accountable to its State or nation. And without the population realizing it, the city becomes part of the international order and one-world government commences with its attendant end to freedom, self-determination and the right to make any life decisions on one’s own. Thus, the end of liberty—and life as we know it—begins.

[…]

Robert: My deepest concern with ICLEI in New Rochelle is that our Mayor and his supporters have gone to great lengths to misrepresent ICLEI as a homegrown association of local governments staffed by eager 30-something staffers who want to do good. The Mayor has repeatedly denied any association between New Rochelle and the United Nations despite the undeniable and rather obvious fact that New Rochelle is a member of ICLEI and CLEI is a part of the UN system to implement Agenda 21.

When an ICLEI representative appeared before our City Council she flat-out lied in responding to a direct question on the origins and funding of ICLEI.

I might add that our City Council never held a vote to authorize joining ICLEI. When asked about this at a public meeting by Council Member Louis Trangucci, our City Manager said that joining ICLEI was implied when the ICLEI representative spoke before Council.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Political Extortion of America

One of these days Americans will either realize the treachery of the parties, or fail to make the hard decision for liberty and enable the completion of the transformation of this nation into something the Founding Fathers never intended. One of these days Americans will realize they have been so conditioned to believe that the politicians are a ruling elite that they will demand a return to a day when the politicians were servants of the people, or the transition to slavery will be complete. One of these days Americans will decide that the political games the statists play is extortion, or they will become the very peasant class the elitists are orchestrating into existence.

A conversation with an American Liberal can be quite illuminating. When the law of the land, constitutional authorities, and the importance of the sovereignty of the States are brought into the discussion, the liberal will always fall back on the rosy intentions of the government’s machinations. They will use terms emphasizing how their plans are good for the community, good for the people, and is good for the public trust. The legality, or the coercive nature, of their policies never seems to cross their minds. Even worse, when confronted with the constitutional legalities, they have been so conditioned by the liberal education system, liberal media, and liberal political force that they scoff at any notion that there may be a lack of constitutional authority.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Private Spaceflight Company Spacex Has Lofty Goal: Help Save Humanity

SpaceX plans to launch a historic demonstration mission to the International Space Station next week, but the company’s ambitions extend far beyond low-Earth orbit.

If all goes according to plan, SpaceX’s unmanned Dragon capsule will blast into space on April 30, lifting off the pad at Florida’s Cape Canaveral Air Force Station atop a Falcon 9 rocket. Once aloft, Dragon will berth with the orbiting lab — a first for a private spaceship — offload supplies and take some different items on for the trip back to Earth.

The mission is a test to see if the Falcon 9/Dragon combo are ready to start making contracted cargo runs to the station for NASA. A successful flight would be a big step forward for private spaceflight, and it would set SpaceX more firmly on a path toward its ultimate goal: helping save humanity from extinction.

“I think it’s important that humanity become a multiplanet species,” SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said in an interview that aired on CBS’ “60 Minutes” last month. “I think most people would agree that a future where we are a spacefaring civilization is inspiring and exciting compared with one where we are forever confined to Earth until some eventual extinction event. That’s really why I started SpaceX.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Anti-Jihadist Raid Through Italy, Italian Convert Arrested

(AGI) Rome — A vast anti-terrorism operation was launched by the Cagliari Police early this morning in several Italian cities. Operations were coordinated by the UCIGOS Police Prevention Central Directorate with the aim of dismantling a network of Islamist extremists active on the Internet in the dissemination of documents making an apology of Jihadist terrorism. A 28-yr old Italian convert to Islam was arrested in Pesaro under the charge of training for international terrorism.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Bossi Calls for Lega Nord to Stay United and Fix Problems

(AGI) Asti — Umberto Bossi said he resigned as party leader to let the party solve its problems. “I resigned to give a free hand to whoever had to fix the problems within the party”, Umberto Bossi said during a party rally in Asti in support of mayoral candidate Pierfranco Verrua. Bossi said he had feared, at the beginning of the election campaign, about possible negative reactions after what happened over the past few weeks: “I was afraid for a while, but I thank you for looking at the Lega Nord’s good side”. “If we don’t want to help those who caused this chaos, we must close all passages”, he added.

“Let’s solve the problems now. Whoever caused this chaos within the Lega Nord wanted its destruction. This is not an attack on one or another member. It is an attack on the Lega Nord”.

Referring to the prospect of Roberto Maroni becoming the new party secretary, he added: “This is something different. It depends on the party congress”. “All the mess between me and Maroni is over now”, he said.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Center-Right Czech Coalition Dissolves Itself

The Czech Republic’s center-right coalition government teetered on the verge of collapse over the weekend, as it sought to scrape together a parliamentary majority in the face of massive anti-austerity protests. The Czech Republic’s prime minister announced on Sunday that his center-right coalition had agreed to dissolve itself, after the smallest party in the coalition government split into two factions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Prime Minister Submits Government’s Resignation

After talks with a far-right party to form a parliamentary partnership broke down over the weekend in the Netherlands, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has submitted his government’s resignation to Queen Beatrix.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and his cabinet submitted their resignations to Queen Beatrix Monday after talks to reach an agreement on reducing the country’s budget with a far-right party collapsed over the weekend.

The Dutch information services in The Hague said the Queen had accepted the resignation and has asked Rutte to attend to the business of the state with a caretaker government for now.

Rutte’s resignation is not much of a surprise after he revealed over the weekend that the minority coalition had not reached an agreement with the anti-Islam Freedom Party of Geert Wilders on budget talks.

The Freedom Party is not a member of the coalition but had been siding with it for the past 18 months, securing the government’s majority. However, the budget rift meant early elections were likely. The next scheduled election would have been in May 2015.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Europe Rings Alarm Bell After French Far-Right Success

Europe rang the alarm bell on Monday over the far-right National Front’s historic score in the French presidential election, the latest anti-EU party to make big gains on the continent. Germany led a chorus of concerns after National Front (FN) leader Marine Le Pen finished third with a surprising 18 percent of the vote in Sunday’s first round.

“This high score is alarming but I expect it will be ironed out in the second round,” said a spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, adding that she continued to support French President Nicolas Sarkozy in the election.

Le Pen’s strong showing was not enough to take her to the May 6 runoff but it shocked European Union foreign ministers holding talks in Luxembourg the day after the vote.

Danish Foreign Minister Villy Sovndal said the French election result was “extremely worrisome” and followed the rise of the far-right across Europe, including in his own country and Finland.

Swedish counterpart Carl Bildt said: “I’m concerned with the sentiments that we see that are against open societies, against an open Europe, that does worry me, not only in France.”

Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn said Sarkozy was partly to blame for Le Pen’s success after he campaigned for tighter immigration controls and reform of the Schengen passport-free travel area.

“If you repeat every day that we must change Schengen, that we must have a strong immigration policy, that we have to speak about French exception, this is all grist for the FN mill,” said Asselborn, a socialist.

Belgium’s Didier Reynders said far-right gains in France and the rest of Europe “is always a concern” in the continent. “We must be very watchful about this,” he said.

Extreme right parties have made great electoral strides in several EU nations, from Sweden to Finland and the Netherlands, while others remain strong in Austria, Denmark, Switzerland and Hungary. Even though Le Pen fell short of the second round, she nearly doubled the 10.4 percent her father Jean-Marie took as her party’s 2007 presidential candidate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Foreign Flags Hurt Our Feelings: Swiss Patriots

Conservative nationalist party, the Ticino League, wants to make the raising of the Swiss flag mandatory for anybody hoisting a foreign flag in Switzerland. “All foreign flags hoisted publicly should be accompanied by a Helvetic banner of at least the same size,” the party announced on Thursday before the cantonal parliament, newspaper Le Matin reported.

The proposal led to two hours of lively debate in the Ticino assembly in the Italian-speaking part of the counrty, which finally rejected the idea on the grounds that imposing such regulations about flags would restrict freedom of expression. In addition, it was determined that flags do not cause any danger to public safety.

The proposal’s champion, National Councillor Lorenzo Quadri, now intends to bring the issue to the national parliament. “Some have become used to hoisting foreign flags without doing the same with the Swiss flag,” he said.

Quadri maintains that the sight of foreign flags without the equivalent Swiss representation is hurting some Swiss peoples’ feelings. Raising the Swiss flag would be a sign of respect for the host country, he said, and would be the very least foreigners could do to show their willingness to integrate.

Swiss People’s Party politician, Oskar Freysinger, agrees. “Displaying two flags gives a double positive message: the person is proud of his roots and loves Switzerland and its values,” he said.

But some, including Green Party parliamentarian Antonio Hodgers, think little of the idea. “Obliging people to give the impression that they like our country is nonsense,” he told Le Matin.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Military Rethinks Exporting Democracy

The German military may soon adopt new guidelines that call into question the export of democracy, SPIEGEL has learned. In the future, the Bundeswehr is to take greater account of local traditions and institutions, even if they are violent and corrupt.

In his second inauguration address, US President George W. Bush vowed to redouble American efforts at exporting democracy around the world. “It is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture,” he said in the January, 2005 speech, “with the ultimate goals of ending tyranny in our world.”

Seven difficult years later, however, the situation in Afghanistan continues to demonstrate the challenges facing the spread of Western-style democracy. And Germany, for its part, has now begun to adjust its military policy accordingly.

According to information obtained by SPIEGEL, overseas missions undertaken by the German military are no longer to be focused on exporting Western conceptions of democracy. Political systems are only viable, read new draft guidelines for overseas military missions, when they are founded on “local concepts of legitimacy.”

The draft guidelines “for a coherent policy relative to fragile states” were developed jointly by the German foreign, defense and development ministries. The paper indicates that intervention strategy must take into account local traditions and institutions, even if they don’t correspond to concepts of liberal democracy.

In some cases, the new concept even supports cooperating with corrupt or violent elites. The paper says that it is the responsibility of each country to choose its leader and authorities and that it is difficult to influence such decisions from the outside. “An overly dominant role played by the international community can be harmful,” the paper reads. In the future, foreign military missions in “fragile states” are to be coordinated by a task force headed by the Foreign Ministry.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: First Wolf in Rhineland for 120 Years Shot Dead

The first wolf seen in the Rhineland for more than 120 years has been found shot dead, probably by a hunter, it emerged on Monday. The Rhineland-Palatinate Hunting Association was “99 percent sure that the dead animal is the wolf,” a spokesman for the Rhineland-Palatinate Hunting Association told The Local.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Chinese PM Opens Hannover Trade Fair

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao officially opened the Hannover Messe, the world’s biggest industry and trade fair, on Sunday evening. China is this year’s guest of honour at the gigantic annual week-long trade fair, which brings together 5,000 manufacturing and technology companies from 69 countries in this northern German city from April 23-27.

As many as 500 companies are from China alone. And the motto of this year’s Hannover Messe is “Green Intelligence” with the focus on environmentally sustainable innovations and technologies.

“As two of the most important manufacturing countries in the world, China and Germany are committed to working closely to promote dialogue and cooperation of the global industries,” Wen said during a lavish and colourful opening ceremony held under tight security in Hannover’s concert and congress centre.

Merkel, for her part, noted that it was her third meeting with Wen in less than a year and that “little by little, we’re understanding better how things function in the two countries.”

Bilateral trade between Germany and China stood at €144 billion last year and “we’re working on making this even more,” she said.

According to the head of the German VDMA industry federation, Thomas Lindner, China was staging “the largest single showcase of industrial technology ever outside the People’s Republic” at this year’s fair.

“This impressive and extensive presentation shows us China both as a trading partner, but also a business competitor,” Lindner said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Scientists Use Fungi to Clean Soil, Water

Fungi get a bad rap, but they can actually be quite useful. German researchers are developing new ways of using fungus to clean soil and water.

Fungi have earned their reputation as a homeowner’s nightmare. Once they’ve settled into wood and been exposed to moisture, all that’s left are brittle remains that turn into dust at the slightest touch.

Fungi get their destructive abilities from enzymes that break down lignin, a complex chemical compound that is largely responsible for holding wood together. Enzymes in fungi, including the so-called laccase enzyme, are among the few compounds capable of decomposing lignin.

B tapping into the power of these enzymes, German scientists are finding new ways to use fungi to break down toxins, including at sewage treatment plants.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Islamist Arrested, 10 More Probed

Suspect linked to Moroccan in ‘Milan synagogue plot’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 23 — An Italian convert to Islam was arrested in the north-eastern city of Pesaro on Monday on suspicion of distributing material on waging ‘jihad’ or holy war and 10 other suspected militants were placed under investigation across the country.

The arrested man, a 28-year-old factory worker whose Muslim name was given as Abdul Wahid As Siquili, was detained because he was about to flee the country for Morocco, police said.

Police said As Siquili had “close ties” to a Moroccan militant arrested in March on suspicion of planning an attack on Milan’s synagogue, Mohamed Jarmoune.

The Pesaro worker allegedly sent Jarmoune and the others an Internet link where they could download material on guerrilla warfare and bomb attacks.

Raids were made in Milan, Cuneo, Pesaro, Cagliari, Salerno and Palermo.

The 10 probed, whose nationality was not immediately divulged, were “gravitating in the Islamist fundamentalist galaxy,” police said. In Cagliari, an Italian literature teacher was under investigation for allegedly translating material from Internet sites inspired by al Qaeda.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Profumo on Education: No Time for Reforms, We Need Stability

(AGI) Turin — “This government will soon end its tenure, we do not have enough time to complete reforms. What we can do is streamline some obsolete procedures we still find education. We can also make things steadier.” This is what the Italian Minister of Education Mr. Francesco Profumo said during the first regional conference on education organized by Piedmont bishops’ association in Turin. In particular, Mr. Profumo stressed that “We need do make plans: many things have been done in the last few years but a bit at random. Instead, we need to make plans to keep things steady”. He also added that “ We need to have a better time perspective: the last competitive test in education dates back to 1999. We need to send a clear message, thus helping people to plan their own life. The country needs to be fairer, I would say more forseable to help people make plans for the future”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega MP Maroni Calls for Unity to Weather the Crisis

(AGI) Milan — Lega MP Roberto Maroni and Umberto Bossi Met near Varese on Saturday. Emerging from the meeting, former Interior Ministry Maroni said he was very pleased with the words of esteem Bossi addressed him. Moreover Mr. Maroni pointed out that, “if the Lega Nord remains united, it will not have to fear for its future.” Together with Lega President Bossi, Mr.

Maroni stopped to talk with the media and stressed the powerful feeling of pride attached to “being part of the Lega Nord.” The MP went on to say, “unlike other parties in Italy, that need to change their logo, leader and name, we — the Lega Nord — do not need to resort to such tricks of the trade,” and concluded, “we are the only ones who have a true project for the North, we demand federalism to be fulfilled. We are the number 1 party in Northern Italy.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Lars Man Standing, Final Score

By Mark Steyn

I’ve written previously about Lars Hedegaard of the Danish Free Press Society, my host in Copenhagen in 2010. Lars was charged, acquitted, re-charged, convicted and fined 5,000 kroner for remarks about Islam made during a conversation in his own home. He appealed to the Danish Supreme Court, and late on Friday they struck down his conviction 7—0.

But the relevant provision of Danish law remains in place, and Lars can never get back the years of his time that this disgusting prosecution consumed. Restraints on free speech and individual liberty in the name of identity-group rights are now routine in much of the Western world. If it weren’t for the First Amendment, the American Left would do as the Euroleft does on freedom of expression. At America’s wretchedly conformist college campuses they already do…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Norway Killer Picked Victims Who Had “Leftist” Look

OSLO (Reuters) — The man who killed 77 people last summer to protest at Muslim immigration to Europe said on Monday he believed he could tell the ideology of his prospective massacre victims by looking at them, and tried to spare one who appeared “right-wing”.

“Certain people look more leftist than others,” Anders Behring Breivik said on the sixth day of a trial that has transfixed Norway, explaining how he picked off “Marxists” with his rifle and pistol while passing over a young man he thought looked conservative.

“This person … appeared right-wing, that was his appearance. That’s the reason I didn’t fire any shots at him,” said Breivik, 33, whose sanity or lack of it is a prime issue to be determined in the trial.

Breivik has given a detailed account of his car bomb attack at government headquarters in Oslo, which killed eight people, and a follow-up gun massacre at a Labour Party island camp where he killed 69, mostly teenagers, all within a few hours on July 22.

Most Norwegians have reacted with contained horror to the content of Breivik’s testimony, delivered in a cold, matter-of-fact manner, while there is wide public acceptance of his right as a defendant to give it.

Breivik has had almost free rein to issue warnings against immigration and explain how he scoured the Internet for bomb-making recipes while writing a 1,500-page document declaring himself part of a secretive group that is Europe’s answer to Al Qaeda — a group the police have said likely does not exist.

Breivik has denied criminal guilt, insisting that his victims were “traitors” whose multiculturalist views facilitated what he saw as a de facto Muslim invasion of Europe…

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Offers Apology to Non-Political Victims

Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people last July, said Monday he wanted to apologise for killing “innocent” people in his Oslo bombing, but offered no similar apology for the Utøya massacre.

He also insisted that not only his victims and their families had their lives ruined on July 22nd: “I also lost everything,” he lamented to the court.

For the first time since his trial started on April 16, the 33-year-old right-wing extremist voiced a small ounce of regret for his actions.

Breivik said: “I would like to offer a large apology” to those who were injured or killed in the bombing of an Oslo government building, as they were just passing by and had no political connections.

But when prosecutor Enga Bejer Engh asked if he wanted to say the same to any of the 69 people — mainly teens — he slaughtered in his shooting massacre on the nearby island of Utøya after the bombing, Breivik said: “No, I do not.”

He reiterated that the youngsters attending a summer camp hosted by the ruling Labour Party’s youth wing were “legitimate targets”, since he claims they were “political activists” working for the “deconstruction of Norwegian society” through the multiculturalism he insists is leading to a “Muslim invasion” of the country.

Instead, he insisted that “everyone who is linked to the (government) and the Labour Party … should issue a large apology” to the Norwegian people.

In his own apology, Breivik mentioned in particular Kai Hauge, a 32-year-old man who was killed as he walked past the government building when it was bombed.

Hauge’s mother Sølvi rejected the apology. “It is of course not enough,” she told the Aftenposten daily’s online edition, adding: “We will never get Kai back.”

Jon Hestnes, who represents survivors and family of the victims of the Oslo bombing, meanwhile described Breivik’s apology as surprising and insincere.

“I think it was pathetic. It doesn’t help that he said that. There was no expression in his body language showing that he meant what he said,” he told public broadcaster NRK.

On Friday, Breivik gave his account of events on Utøya, providing chilling details of how he calmly walked across the island, picking off his victims, one by one, shooting most of them point-blank in the head.

And on Monday, the sixth day of his trial, he faced cross examination from the prosecution about the deadliest massacre ever committed by a sole gunman.

He again described his massacre showing no emotion, and insisted it was “cruel but necessary.”

He stressed the shooting spree had been a “gruesome” experience for him as well, and that he had to force himself to carry it out since it felt so “against human nature.”

It was almost like “being asked to eat a plate of excrement,” he said.

He explained his years of meditation to “de-emotionalize” himself as an “indoctrination technique … where I look at all political activists as monsters.”

Yet when he was there, walking among the dead bodies, “I thought to myself that it was gruesome… I have never done anything so gruesome before,” he said, acknowledging though that “it was probably more gruesome for the people I was hunting.”

But, he insisted, “this is a small barbarity to avoid a larger barbarity.”

He also stressed that not only the families of his victims had had their lives ruined.

“One should remember that on July 22nd I also lost … my entire family, all my friends… I also lost everything,” he told the court.

When asked if he meant that people should feel sorry for him, he quickly responded: “Of course not.”

Breivik, who was dressed as a policeman during his more than hour-long shooting spree, also told the court he tried to lure a large group out into the open at one point by telling them he was there to evacuate them.

While many seemed skeptical, “two or three seemed relieved (and) came towards me… Then I raised my Glock (pistol) and shot a girl in the head… There was panic (and) I shot the others too,” he said.

He said he had not realized that so many people on the island would be under 18 — 33 of those killed were minors — but that he only considered the two 14-year-olds as children.

And even if he had known there would be so many youngsters present “I would do it again,” he said, reiterating that he had wanted to kill all 569 people on the island that day.

He reiterated that he had spared the lives of two people, a girl and a boy, whom he deemed too young, and said he had not shot one man, Adrian Pracon, as “He did not look like a Marxist… He looked like someone like me.”

“The reason he gave for not killing me was shocking,” Pracon told the VG daily’s online edition, recalling how the killer had pointed his rifle at him and then suddenly walked away.

“It is sickening that he played my god, that he decided over who would live and die,” he added.

The confessed killer said several others in Norway were “more deserving of execution than the Labour Party youth,” adding that if he had managed to attack a journalists conference, as originally planned, “I might have enjoyed” the slaughter.

Breivik had been scheduled to testify on Monday about his sanity, which is the main issue of contention during the trial, which is scheduled to last 10 weeks. But that was postponed until later so he could finish testifying about Utøya.

He has been charged with “acts of terror” and faces either 21 years in prison — a sentence that could thereafter be extended indefinitely if he is still considered a threat to society — or closed psychiatric care, possibly for life.

A first court-ordered psychiatric exam found him insane, while a second opinion came to the opposite conclusion.

The confessed killer wants to be found sane and accountable for his actions, so that his anti-Islam ideology, as presented in the 1,500-page manifesto he published online just before the attacks, will be taken seriously and not considered the ravings of a lunatic.

He lamented on Monday that his sanity was being questioned.

“If I had been a bearded Jihadi there would be no report at all… There would not be a need for a psychiatric evaluation,” he said, maintaining he was the victim of “clear racism.”

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Apologises to the ‘Non Politcal’ Victims

(AGI) Oslo — Breivik has issued an apology directed solely at the “non-political” casualties of the Oslo bomb attack. The sixth day of the trial of ultra-nationalist Anders Breivik Behring in Oslo opened with this ‘apology’ to the passers-by caught up in the explosion on 22 July last year in the Norwegian capital. Breivik had planted a bomb in a van- near office of the Prime Minister and other officials. “I would like to offer them my biggest apologies,” he said at the beginning of today’s hearing, an apology he failed to extend to those who died or were injured in subsequent shootings on the island of Utoya, where he attacked a summer camp for Labour Party youth.

Breivik killed a total of 77 people in the two attacks.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Norway: Oslo Muslims Pained by Breivik’s Testimony

“He is evil. Pure evil. A robot,” Sihen Naidja says, her voice trembling, when asked how she experienced the first week of Norwegian mass-murderer Anders Behring Breivik’s trial.

Basim Gozlan, who runs the Norwegian website www.Islam.no, meanwhile insists that it is a good thing that Breivik has been given so much time to explain his worldview.

“I think it is good and healthy that this comes out,” he told AFP in a telephone interview, arguing that Breivik built his ideology largely on the basis of Islam-critical writings in the media and online and rumours he has heard about violent Muslims.

“This should help show people that this kind of rhetoric can be very, very dangerous. It is a wake-up call, and I think many people will moderate the way they talk about these things,” Gozlan said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy Says Le Pen Supporters Must be Respected

(AGI) Paris — Nicolas Sarkozy has reached out to Marine le Pen supporters ahead of the French presidentials. Alluding to the 18% of votes gained by the Front National candidate, he said “We must respect the voters’ will, it is our duty to listen.” With regard to the results of the previous consultation in 2007, which won him the Presidency, he added “There was this crisis vote that doubled from one election to another, an answer must be given to this crisis vote.” ..

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Spanish Royalty in Crisis After King’s Antics

The Spanish royal family is in the middle of its worst crisis in years following a series of scandals, including the revelation that King Juan Carlos went on an extravagant trip to Africa despite the recession. Many people in Spain are now asking tough questions about the role of the monarchy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Storms to Hit Central and Northern Italy Then Intense Heat

(AGI) Rome — Storms are expected for tomorrow in Central and Northern Italy, then Spring will set in at its fullest. ‘ Hannibal’ the anticyclone rising from Africa, is due to make temperatures jump up 12-13 degrees. As of Tuesday night, violent storms will hit Italy’s Northern-Western regions then to move on to the rest of the North, central Italy and Sardenia during the day. Strong winds and hail are expected. Snow will fall on the Alps at low altitudes — between 800 and 1000 meters. Violent downpours are due to hit Rome on Tuesday afternoon but will not last for long. However it is Spring and as it always happens in springtime, the weather can change suddenly. Fine weather is expected on 25 April to be followed by a wave of hot air. ‘Hannibal’ will first blow hot air over Sardenia and Sicily and the South and eventually across the country until the end of the month. It will give Italy a taste of Summer with temperatures rising and reaching 30 degrees in the South and 25 degrees everywhere else.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Sweden: ‘Laziness is Not a Disability’: Council

Disability Council members of a Swedish town have had enough of “lazy” drivers who park their cars in the disabled spaces, and want the erection of signs stating that laziness is not a recognized form of disability.

“Laziness is not a disability” say the proposed signs aimed at motorists in Nordmaling, northern Sweden. Below is a picture of a person in a wheelchair. Members of the municipality’s disability council (handikapprådet) are now lobbying to see the signs be used around the local area.

“People don’t respect disabled parking signs,” said Margareta Gustavsson of the council to the Västerbottens Kuriren newspaper. “They seem to think that laziness is a disability, but it’s actually not at all.”

Gustavsson added that the Nordmaling community centre has already claimed one of the signs to erect in their own car park. However, community development officer of the municipality, Sune Höglander, sees things differently, and has no intention of implementing the signs.

“It’s just a fun thing they’ve got for themselves, but I don’t think that those kinds of road signs will be found in our catalogue. Signs must be accurate, factual, and not emotive,” he said. Höglander also pointed out that he didn’t consider “lazy parkers” taking disabled spaces to be a large problem in Nordmaling.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland Home to Kim Jong-un ‘For Nine Years’

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un lived in Switzerland from the age of seven, arriving two years earlier than previously thought, the Swiss paper Le Matin Dimanche reported on Sunday. Previously Swiss media had placed his arrival in Switzerland in 1993 when he was around nine years old.

But the paper cited documents it had obtained from federal police archives at the public ministry to show he had stayed in Switzerland between late 1991 and early 2001. The paper said it had obtained a document showing a request for accreditation of a certain Nam Chol Pak to work as a bureaucrat for North Korea’s foreign ministry.

The document showed that the official arrived on November 25th 1991, with his wife, two sons and a daughter. The two boys were the two youngest sons of Kim Jong-il, who ruled North Korea from 1994 until his death in December last year.

But they used the pseudonyms Chol Pak and Hun Pak while in Switzerland, and Hun Pak was Kim’s alias, the paper said.

Little is known about the boy’s formative years in the country. Schools where he was reportedly enrolled have refused to discuss his time there. According to Swiss and foreign media, he was a pupil at an international private school in Guemligen, near the Bern suburb of Muri, and later attended a public school in Liebefeld, also near Bern. Le Matin Dimanche, quoting an unnamed former classmate, reported early this month that he scored poor grades and was often absent.

The boy’s false father initially worked for North Korea’s mission to theUnited Nations in Geneva and was later transferred to the North Korean embassy in Muri, the paper said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Pakistani Students Raped Woman, 20, After She Fell Asleep on Night Bus on Way Home From Night Out

Two ‘despicable’ sex predators who raped a woman after she fell asleep on a night bus have been jailed for a total of 18-and-a-half years.

Pakistani students Rizwan Ahmad, 24, and Hassan Siddique, 19, targeted the 20-year-old as she made her way home from a night out in central London.

Snaresbrook Crown Court heard how Siddique got off the number 55 bus while Ahmad began chatting to the woman when she realised she had missed her stop.

Ahmad persuaded her to get off at the next stop and said he would call her a taxi. He then phoned Siddique, a student at the London College of Business Management and Information Technology, to summon him to the scene.

The two men lured their victim down a secluded alleyway off Leabridge Road in Leyton, east London, and took turns to rape her in the early hours of June 4 last year.

During their trial Ahmad and Siddique insisted their victim had encouraged them, but the jury found both defendants guilty of rape and attempted rape.

Judge Tudor Owen said he believed the pair should be kicked out of Britain once they have served their jail terms, adding: ‘The sooner you are deported from this country, the better.’

In an impact statement the victim said the attack will ‘stay with her for the rest of her life’.

But she is determined to ensure her ordeal does not dictate her future.

Sentencing, Judge Owen told the two rapists: ‘What you did was despicable. Your story was simply ludicrous.

‘You claimed she instigated the whole thing, that it was she who wanted to engage in sexual activity with you.

‘Unsurprisingly, the jury rejected your account.

‘Women travelling alone at night are entitled not to be accosted in the way you two did.

‘She had a lot to drink but that does not mean she should have been treated in the way she was.

‘She was an easy target because she was so drunk.

‘She is now frightened of travelling alone at night, this has damaged her life.’

Jailing Ahmad for 10 years, and Siddique for eight-and-a-half years, Judge Owen added: ‘If it is necessary I will recommend most strongly that you are deported at the conclusion of your sentence.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Renovation Tax Will Harm Our Churches, Warns Hurd

A Conservative grandee and former foreign secretary has launched a scathing assault on one of the Coalition’s tax changes.

In his first major criticism of the Coalition, Lord Hurd, who served in the governments of Baroness Thatcher and Sir John Major, has attacked the Chancellor’s plans to introduce VAT on church renovations. The peer’s intervention heightens pressure on George Osborne and follows damaging rows over the taxes of pensioners, pasties and charitable donations. It comes at an awkward time for David Cameron. Labour now boasts a six-point opinion poll lead over the Conservatives — their largest since June 2010. Speaking of the VAT plan, Lord Hurd said: “I think it needs to be looked at in the light of the whole scheme of relations between the Church and the state. “The Church has on the whole a pretty raw deal and this is just one example of it. “We are governed by people who are vaguely sympathetic to the Church and would be horrified if it started to disintegrate, but don’t quite understand that in order to keep it all going it needs a bit of effort and a bit of sympathy. It is taken for granted and that, I think, is a pity.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Terror Case Lawyers Who Fight Fanatics’ Deportation Land £110m Bill in Legal Aid

Lawyers working regularly for terrorist suspects have billed the taxpayer more than £110million in a decade, estimates suggest.

Among the big earners are firms that have fought to prevent the deportation of terror suspect Abu Qatada to face trial in Jordan and to halt the extradition of hate preacher Abu Hamza to the U.S.

A small group of legal firms are thought to have effectively cornered the market, with the result that they have secured high earnings from the taxpayer-funded legal aid system, which usually pays the legal bills for terrorists and suspected terrorists.

The highest-paid firm of solicitors is thought to be Arani &Co, based in Southall, West London.

Led by Mudassar Arani, 47, it is best-known for representing Abu Hamza, who spread hatred from Finsbury Park mosque in North London, and who has been fighting extradition for eight years.

[Return to headlines]



UK: Takeaway Boss ‘Tried to Recruit Girls as Young as 12 to Work as Prostitutes in His Brothel’Azad Miah ‘Hounded and Stalked Girls to Have Sex for Money’

A takeaway boss tried to recruit six girls as child prostitutes, one as young as 12, in a ‘cold, clinical, exploitation of the desperate and vulnerable’, a court heard today.

Azad Miah, 44, is said to have ‘hounded’ and ‘stalked’ girls to have sex for money while at the same time allegedly running a brothel from his city centre premises in Carlisle, Cumbria.

A jury at Carlisle Crown Court was told he also paid regularly for the sexual services of a girl over a four-year period from when she was aged 14.

Opening the case, Tim Evans, prosecuting, said: ‘This is a case in which this defendant sought to persuade a variety of young girls, some of whom he knew were under 16, to have sex with him for money via the provision of drugs or drink.

‘Those requests were either made face to face when girls either came into the The Spice of India in Botchergate or were made by telephone calls and texts.

‘The attempted persuasion was persistent. He would hound young girls for periods of weeks or months face to face or over the phone. Perhaps most worryingly, he would stalk some of them, following them home.

‘Some of the girls that he had made approaches to did indeed have sex with him for money.’

Mr Evans said many of the alleged victims aged from 12 to 16 were told by Miah that their friends were also having sex with him for money.

He told the jury it would hear ‘in essence’ that The Spice of India, since closed, not only operated as a takeaway restaurant but as a brothel ‘where women attended and prostituted themselves’.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Western Allies of MI6 ‘Kept in Dark’ Over Mosque Sting Plan

MI6 and Col Muammar Gaddafi’s Libyan intelligence service set up a radical mosque in a Western European city in order to lure in al-Qaeda terrorists, it can be revealed.

The joint operation, which was undertaken as Britain attempted to secure a deal with Col Gaddafi to reopen diplomatic relations, shows how closely Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service was prepared to work with his regime’s spies despite widespread allegations of human rights abuses. At the time, Britain was encouraging Col Gaddafi to give up plans for weapons of mass destruction. Four months later, the dictator and Tony Blair, then prime minister, struck the 2004 “deal in the desert” which ended Libya’s pariah status. The cooperation extended to recruiting an agent to infiltrate an al-Qaeda terrorist cell in the Western European city, which cannot be named for security reasons. The double agent, codenamed Joseph, was closely connected to a senior al-Qaeda commander in Iraq and had been identified as a possible spy by the ESO, Libya’s external intelligence service, on a visit to Tripoli. MI6 began recruiting the agent without telling its allies in the European country where he lived.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt Stops Gas Supplies to Israel

(AGI) Cairo — The Egyptian authorities canceled an agreement signed in 2005, allowing the East Mediterranean Company to export gas to Israel. The measure has been motivated by alleged provision violations. The news was provided by the Egyptian natural gas state company, Egas. The pipeline that connects Egypt to Israel and Jordan has been targeted by 14 attacks since the fall of Honsi Mubarak’s regime.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Egypt Scraps Gas Deal With Israel

The Egyptian partners in a joint natural gas endeavor with Israel have cancelled a deal governing commercial relations between the two sides. The gas deal with Israel has long been a source of controversy in Egypt.

Israel’s Finance Ministry on Sunday criticized Egyptian energy companies for terminating a gas deal with the Jewish state, saying that the “unilateral” move overshadowed the two neighbors’ long-standing peace agreement.

“This is a dangerous precedent that overshadows the peace agreements and the peaceful atmosphere between Israel and Egypt,” Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said in a press release.

The Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation and Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company reportedly scrapped the deal on Thursday, accusing Israel of failing to pay its bills for the past four months. Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor has denied that charge.

The two Egyptian energy companies were partners with the Ampal-American Israel Corporation in the bi-national East Mediterranean Gas Company (EMG), which operates the pipeline that supplies Israel with natural gas. Ampal said on Sunday that the termination of the deal was “unlawful and in bad faith.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Director Mourad Ben Cheikh, Too Many Foreign Funds

Funds to Salaphites from abroad, but more than one secular road

(ANSAmed) — ROME, APRIL 23 — The Salaphites in Tunisia? They are “a fringe phenomenon” and a minority, limited to around 2,000. But the real problem is “the foreign countries that support and finance them with huge resources, putting the country’s internal balance at risk and influencing politics”. The speaker is the Tunisian film director Mourad Ben Cheikh, who made the documentary on the revolution in his country entitled “No more Fear” which has, since debuting at Cannes, done the rounds of at least a hundred film festivals in the world. One and a half years ago, Ben Cheikh filmed the crowds and the flags of the revolution in Avenue Burghiba. Now, in an interview with ANSAmed, he takes stock of how the country has changed. He says he is not sure whether it is the Saudis who are behind the new prominence of the Salaphites in Tunisia, a country that had been the most secular in the region before the revolution. “But I do know that through its economic and religious policies, Saudi Arabia has become a cancer in the flesh of the Arab World”. On the other hand, it is in Riyadh that the deposed president Ben Ali has found hospitality, “because they are very keen that a former head of state does not face a trial”. Another player in Tunisia’s future is the small Emirate of Qatar. They “are doing their utmost to influence politics in the Arab World,” and not only there. In short, from tyranny of a police state under the overthrown regime, the country risks moving to “a political stalemate” under the influence of foreign finance for Islamic movements, the director notes. Ben Cheikh would like to see his country keep its right to find its own way towards democracy. “Every Tunisian should be free to choose their own approach to politics and to religion,” and a democracy that shuts out one part of its population would not be a democracy. Just as “every country should be able to find its own answer to the problem of laity. For example, Queen Elizabeth is head of the Church of England, but individual liberties are respected all the same. And the same happens in Italy, despite its Lateran Pact with the Vatican”. But the West looks at the Arab revolutions through the lens of its own fears and prejudices. Ben Cheikh has seen this in the different reactions of various audiences to his documentary, reactions that “vary according to the country”. In Spain and in Greece, for example, the revolution in Tunisia is seen with a feeling of geographical “closeness” but also with one of continuity between the economic crises and the mode of “resistance”. But in Germany it is the fear of Islam which prevails, and in France the questioning over the secular nature of the state. “Frace cannot manage to see Tunisia for what it is: it always sees it through its own current concerns”. Even though, it is thanks to organisations in that very country such as Amnesty International, that has enabled his documentary to be shown in cinemas as part of a regular programme.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Bomb Blasts in Blue Helmet Hang-Out in Lebanon

(AGI) Beirut-The casualty toll of an explosion that occurred at around midnight near a restaurant in Tyre is of at least 7 injured. The city is on the Southern coast of Lebanon. The explosion was reportedly caused by a bomb that unknown subjects placed on the elevator to the 4th floor of the building in which the restaurant is located. The restaurant is locally famous for the dance parties organized there and because it sells alcoholic drinks. This turns it into one of the favorite destinations of foreigners, including the ‘Blue Helmets’ of UNIFIL II, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Great Ambitions But Lacking Resources, Study

Influence in Middle East superficial and short-lived, USAK

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, APRIL 19 — Despite the fact that the country has started to play a much more important role in the Middle East over the past decade, Turkey still has to close a wide gap between its ambitions and its possibilities to become a real “regional power.” This claim is made in a study carried out by the Turkish think tank USAK that was published today. The report underlines that Turkey only has superficial influence because of its reduced diplomatic corps, its low level of exports and scarce use of the Arabic language. The report of the International Strategic Research Organization, as USAK writes on its website, examines Turkey’s power in the diplomatic, economic and “soft power” areas, the ability of a country to convince other countries through its intangible resources like culture, values and political institutions. The report calls for a comprehensive joint efforts by the state, the private sector and civic society in all three fields (diplomacy, economy and soft power) as “a great disparity exists between the role that Turkey wants to play and the capacity it has” to do so. USAK also warned that Turkey’s newly-found regional influence could be short-lived. “We cannot say that regional actors, be them small or big, are following Turkey’s lead,” the report claims. “The current attention accorded to Turkey is at the level of just sympathy. Any mistakes or Arab misunderstanding of certain rhetoric or policies hold the potential of quickly eroding the favourable attitudes that Turkey enjoys.” The Turkish Foreign Ministry, according to the study, was severely underfunded and understaffed when compared to those of leading nations. Its budget of 436 million euros is the lowest among several countries, including both global heavyweights and emerging powers, such as India and Brazil. With 5,533 employees, Turkey’s ministry is better staffed than Brazil and India, but lags well behind Britain and France, who employ 17,100 and 15,008 people respectively. Only 26 diplomats spoke Arabic, USAK point out, which hampers the “penetration of local information resources.” In the economic field, trade with countries in the region is booming, but Turkish exports are easily-replaceable with other, cheaper goods, with high-technology products making up only 3.5 percent of the total. USAK claims that Turkey had failed to determine any “centre of gravity” for trade, which could turn into a major disadvantage in the future.

Focusing on soft power, Turkish soap operas enjoy vast popularity in the region and tourism is flourishing. The Turkish media, however, is almost absent from the Arab-language realm and Turkey has little power in influencing the regional news agenda, USAK continues, adding that TRT’s Arab-language channel lagged behind competitors from Iran, France, Germany, China and the United States.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Fazil Say Contemplates Exile, ‘Insulted as Atheist’

Pianist and composer may escape Islamic pressures to Japan

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, APRIL 23 — One of Turkey’s best known artists internationally, pianist and composer Fazil Say has said he has been thinking for some time of moving to Japan because of the pressure he is under in an Islamic environment, where his statements about atheism are causing him trouble.

“Even though we are speaking the same language, we fail to communicate, “Mr Say is reported as saying on the English language site of Turkey’s Hurriyet newspaper. “The best thing to do is to keep away for some time. I would like to go to Japan, but I don’t know if I will be able to do so,” as “it’s too far away” and living there “means reducing the number of concerts given in Europe and in Turkey. And of course, I want to see my daughter growing up and she will remain here,” in Turkey.

According to the summary given in Hurriyet, Mr Say spoke of how it has become difficult to live in Turkey over recent years, where he has been exposed to insults over opinions he has expressed on Twitter.

As the AFP agency cites from the hard copy of the newspaper, this is a reference to “when I said I was an atheist”, “I was insulted. The law intervened over what I had said on Twitter. I am perhaps the first person in the world to have come under a judicial inquiry for having expressed my atheism”. Given the three month prison sentence Turkish law reserves for the crime of “insulting religious values”, “if I am sentenced to imprisonment, my career will be over,” the 41-year-old musician said.

A leading MP in the prime minister’s party, Samil Tayyar, insulted Mr Say by saying that his mother was “an escapee from a brothel”. The phrase itself gave rise to controversy. The pianist also said that lay people have become a minority in Turkey that is exposed to pressure from an Islamic majority which is imposing its own religious values more and more openly.

“I habe been shut out of Turkish society 100%”.

According to the Hurriyet website, the musician has lived in the USA for seven years and is currently writing his third symphony (“Evren”, the Universe) which follows those with the titles: “Istanbul” and “‘Mesopotamia”. The latter symphony is to be performed in Istanbul on June 23, while Evren is scheduled to be premiered in Austria in October.

Declared by its leading politicians to be “99%” Muslim, Turkey has a secular constitution drawn up by its founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who proclaimed the republic in 1923 on the rubble of the Ottoman Empire.

Over the past fifteen years, Turkey’s internal politics has partly seen a rediscovery of the nation’s Muslim soul, by Premier Erdogan. The case of Say forms part of a series of frictions between secular values, which are defended by the country’s military cadre and Islamic ones, represented by the AKP party of the Premier, which is enlarging the space inside the country for religious conservatism.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Yemen: Army Offensive Kills 16 Al Qaeda Militants

(AGI) Sanaa — At least 16 Al Qaeda militants have been killed during an offensive by the Yemeni army in the south of the country. The offensive has been underway for several days to re-take positions in the south, for months in the hands of groups tied to the terrorist network. The report came from the Sanaa Ministry of Defense. Sunday evening the army bombarded the area of Loder, in the southern province of Abyan, killing 13 militants. Another three lost their lives during an air raid carried out against several vehicles in the eastern province of Marib. Last week 40 Al Qaeda militants were killed in offensive launched by the army. Zinjibar, the capital of the troubled Abyan province, was seized last May by the so-called “Partisans of the Sharia”, an Islamic integralist group tied to Al Qaeda.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Russia


Moscow: Tens of Thousands With Kirill in Defense of the Faith

After weeks of media scandals, the Patriarch of All Russia leads a procession and a prayer at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior: “Protect the Church from the anti-Russian forces.”

Moscow (AsiaNews) — Thousands of people took part in the day in defense of the faith yesterday in Russia, organized by the Moscow Patriarchate to “protect the Church from the attacks of anti-Russian forces”, as stated by the same Patriarch Kirill, center of a series of media scandals which are compromising his image.

At least 40 thousand people arrived for a prayer led by the patriarch at Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Moscow. The same church, where in late February the Pussy Riot group sang their “punk prayer”, in which they condemned the close relations between the Patriarchate and the newly elected President Vladimir Putin. The gesture cost the band’s three girls custody on charges of “hooliganism”. The incident has raised a heated debate over the role of the Church in politics and exposed Kirill to harsh criticism. “We are under attack by anti-Russian force,” said the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in front of the crowd of priests and faithful. “The danger is that blasphemy and mockery of religion are presented as a legitimate expression of human freedom, which must be protected in modern society,” he added.

Media and internet criticism of Kirill intensified after his open support for the third nomination of Vladimir Putin to the Kremlin. The religious leader had called the 12-year reign of the politician and former KGB agent at the head of Russia as “a miracle of God”, but shortly after he railed against the Pussy Riot, demanding exemplary punishment. On 20 April, Moscow’s court ordered that the three girls, held since March, remain behind bars until at least June 24, to allow investigators to complete investigations. In fact, it is a case of detention without trial, note human rights activists, who point out that the three women face up to seven years in prison.

According to many believers, the “punk prayer “ was nothing more than the beginning of a series of “acts of vandalism” against the Orthodox Church. Some of these have brought to light, in the Russian media, Kirill’s life of luxury and privilege prompting the Patriarch to hold a Day of Prayer. “The reason for this hostility -, according to Pyatigorsk theology student Anastasia Pavlukhova — is that the Church now supports the state more explicitly and so they attack it to indirectly affect the authorities.” On 6 March, as news agency Reuters recalls, a man with an ax lashed out against icons in Veliky Ustyug, north-east of Moscow. Two weeks later, an attacker armed with a knife, attacked and desecrated a priest at the altar in the Church of Nevynnomyssk, in the south-east of the country.

“I came here because there is a risk that Russia will return to its past without God,” said Olga Golubeva, 54, a lawyer, who has participated in the procession and prayer led by Kirill yesterday. According to the Patriarchate, the participants were 50 thousand, 65 thousand for the Ministry of the Interior, and 40 thousand for the international press. Other similar events with thousands of people were held in Yaroslavl, Krasnodar and St. Petersburg.

“The Church needs this kind of events to prove it has more supporters than detractors — says Alexei Makarkin, an analyst with the Center for political technologies in Moscow — but also to consolidate the support of clergy and faithful.” “Within the Church itself — he adds — opinions are divided on what was worse: the performance of Pussy Riot or the reaction of the Patriarchate, the scandal or the demand for punishment for the girls.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

South Asia


India Shooting Ship Release Delayed

Hearing postponed to April 30

(ANSA) — New Delhi, April 20 — The Indian supreme court on Friday postponed a hearing regarding the release of an Italian tanker held for two months in a case involving the shooting deaths of two Indian fishermen, allegedly by two Italian marines on anti-pirate watch aboard the vessel.

The judge was prepared to order the release of the Enrica Lexie when he noted the absence of a notification document intended for the wife of one of the dead fishermen and delayed the hearing until April 30.

On March 29 a lower court said the ship could be released as long as certain conditions were met, including the payment of a deposit.

But the process has undergone a series of delays, including earlier this month when an Indian appeals court overturned a release order. The marines, Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone, are at the centre of a diplomatic dispute between Rome and New Delhi over jurisdiction, which intensified when the two were sent to prison at the beginning of March.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



India’s Top Court Admits Italy’s Appeal on Marines

Hearing set May 8

(ANSA) — New Delhi, April 23 — The Indian supreme court on Monday admitted Italy’s appeal against the detention of two Italian marines accused of killing two Indian fishermen while protecting a ship from pirates.

It set a hearing for May 8.

Italy says the case of Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone should be tried in Italy because the incident took place in international waters.

An Indian ballistics test said bullets found in the fishermen’s bodies were compatible with rifles seized from the ship.

Italy has requested another ballistics test.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Indian Military Makes Strategic Stride With the Agni-V

India has made history with the successful testing of its much awaited Agni-V long-range ballistic nuclear-capable missile, nicknamed the ‘China killer,’ that can accurately hit targets more than 5,000 km away.

Thursday’s launch from a test range at Wheeler Island off the coast of the eastern state of Odisha thrusts the emerging Asian power into a small club of nations with intercontinental nuclear weapons capabilities. The three stage, all solid fuel powered and17-meter missile blasted off according to the script at 8.07 am.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: West Java: Islamic Extremists Attacked an Ahmadi Mosque

Police patrol the place of worship, targeted in a raid last April 20 a few hours after Friday prayers. There are no injuries, but the building was seriously damaged. Controversy on the security and protection provided by the authorities. For Minister of Religious Affairs the Muslim minority is heretical and should be banned.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — A mob of Islamic extremists brutally attacked an Ahmadi mosque in the village of Cipakat in the town of Singaparna in Tasikmalaya regency, West Java province. Indonesian police departments have been deployed to protect the security of the place of worship and there is still a state of considerable tension in the area. The raid occurred on April 20, a few hours after Friday prayers, the holy day for Muslims. Local sources report that the attack was attended by at least 80 people affiliated with local Islamic extremist movements, the building was repeatedly hit with rocks and stones, while some of the assailants stormed into the building destroying objects. After the attack there were no injuries, but the structure was seriously damaged.

Human rights activists and members of civil society criticize the actions of the police, unable to “block” the attackers and defend the Ahmadi mosque, belonging to the Muslim religious minority considered heretical by Sunni — and official — Islam because they do not consider Mohammed as last prophet. However, the deputy spokesman of the National Police Gen. Muhammad Taufik rejected the accusations, adding that the crowd wanted to protest against the community for its “illegal” teachings and a practice of faith that “deviates” from the traditional doctrine.

The controversy was sparked by the delivery of a formal letter of protest from the Baitul Rahim Mosque of Representatives, which urged the protesters to attack the Ahmadi place of worship.

Djoko Suyanto, the Minister with responsibility for legal affairs and security condemned the incident and confirmed that a full investigation is underway to shed light on the matter. His words, however, have not placated public opinion and according activists the comment is not “genuine” but an empty promise, devoid of any concrete action to stop the violence.

The Minister for Religious Affairs Suryadharma Ali has instead issued a stern warning against the Ahmadi minority, “inviting” them to respect Indonesian law. The reference is to a joint ministerial decree dating back to 2008, which outlaws the practice of worship for religious minorities and prohibits any form of spreading the faith. Unlike others, minister Ali is not seen as impartial compared to his predecessors, and has repeatedly called the Ahmadi movement an “offense” that must be banished from the country.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Over 3 Thousand Former Maoist Guerrillas Join Nepalese Army

Official as of today, a total of 6 thousand ex-combatants join the army. Internal divisions of former Maoist rebels threaten the peace process with the government. Weapons disappear from some camps. Former rebel cadres attacked by extremist wing call for the protection of the military.

Kathmandu (AsiaNews) — 3,128 former Maoist guerrillas are now part of the regular army as Nepalese soldiers and officers. In recent days the military has officially taken possession of the 15 training camps still in the hands of the rebels scattered throughout the country. The Maoist Prime Minister Bhattarai said that this event marks the end “of the two armies for one state” and gives hope for a general reconciliation after 10 years of civil war between Maoists and supporters of the Hindu monarchy.

In the coming months 3500 other fighters will be integrated. The number respects the agreements between the UN, the Nepalese government and Maoist leaders. For the remaining 13 thousand a program of integration into the world of work and a subsidy of up to 50 thousand dollars for high-ranking leaders has been proposed. However, part of the former Nepal People’s Liberation Army (Npla) considers the delivery of weapons and abandonment of the struggle an affront to the ideals of the 11-year Maoist war against state powers represented by the conservative parties still close to the monarchy.

Experts point out that such a division could stop the program of reintegration of militias into the army and society. According to military sources there are at least 3 thousand guerrillas who are pushing to get into battalions of the Nepal Army (NA), rejecting the option of civilian resettlement. Thousands more have opted instead for voluntary withdrawal, but without surrendering their weapons. In recent days, the Nepalese army has denounced the disappearance of several weapons and ammunition from old camps. The weapons were taken by men close to Mohan Baidhya, a former Maoist, contrary to the disarmament of rebel troops.

Last week, the leader has attacked some camps with his men and wounded four Maoists officers, forcing the former guerrillas to seek the protection of the army.

Interviewed by AsiaNews, Bidhya, defines the plane of reinstatement “an insult to the People’s Liberation Army and the war that allowed the liberation of Nepal. He points out that the Maoists “can not surrender to the elite who for years have oppressed minorities and the weakest”. “The leaders announced a general strike in view of the delivery of the new constitution, whose term expires May 27.

The 11 year civil war in Nepal pitted the army and the Maoist guerrillas, who fought with the aim to overthrow the kingdom and establish the People’s Republic of Nepal. The conflict ended with the fall of the absolute Hindu monarchy which was followed by a comprehensive peace agreement between the army and Maoists signed November 21, 2006 in front of UN and international community. The war has claimed more than 12,800 lives and created about 100 thousand refugees.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Sri Lanka Backs Monks in Fight Over Mosque

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s government has advised the trustees of a 60-year-old Muslim mosque north of the capital to relocate the structure after angry protests by Buddhist monks.

Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne reacted after demonstrations by monks and their followers on Friday triggered tension in the pilgrim town of Dambulla. “The prime minister as minister of Buddhist and religious affairs advised the trustees to have their mosque elsewhere,” the premier’s spokesman Sisira Wijesinghe told AFP. “They have been offered the choice of three alternate locations. Steps are being taken to immediately shift the mosque.” The Indian Ocean island nation, emerging from decades of ethnic war, is a majority Buddhist nation where monks are politically influential.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



US-Afghan Strategic Partnership Finalized

With the Chicago NATO summit approaching, the US and Afghanistan have put the finishing touches on a strategic partnership to govern their relations after the 2014 troop withdrawal. The agreement comes despite tensions.

The United States and Afghanistan on Sunday finalized an agreement on a strategic partnership, after months of negotiations that nearly broke down under the pressure of rising tensions between the two nations.

The text, which was initialed by the countries’ top negotiators, still has to be signed by US President Barack Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Washington has said it hopes to ratify the pact before the NATO summit in Chicago next month.

The US has agreed to provide military and financial support to Kabul for the decade after international forces withdraw in 2014. Despite the planned troop withdrawal, Washington is expected to maintain a large presence in Afghanistan, including special forces, military advisors and governance programs.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Pyongyang Threatens to Turn Seoul to Ashes

North Korea has threatened to turn its southern neighbor to “ashes.” Pyongyang is apparently miffed at comments made by South Korea’s president about the North’s recent failed rocket test.

A military statement released by North Korea’s official state news agency said it would reduce the government of South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak as well as the country’s media outlets to ashes” through what it described as “unprecedented, peculiar means.”

“The special actions of our revolutionary armed forces will start soon to meet the reckless challenge of the group of traitors,” the statement said.

The statement represented a new spike in tensions between the communist North and capitalist South following Pyongyang’s unsuccessful rocket launch on April 13, which had been timed to coincide with celebrations marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of North Korea’s founder, Kim Il Sung. The rocket exploded a couple of minutes after lift-off.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tension is Expected to Remain in the South China Sea

The United States and Philippines have started joint naval manoeuvres as the diplomatic row between Manila and Beijing continues over territorial claims in the South China Sea. Territorial disputes in the South China Sea go way back. The riparian states — Malaysia, Vietnam, China, Taiwan, the Philippines and Brunei — lay claim to some of the same islands and reefs there.

China lays claim to almost all of the territories in the South China Sea. That led in 1974 to a military conflict between China and Vietnam over the Paracel Islands. Now the Islands, which are called Xisha in Chinese and Hoang Sa in Vietnamese, are administered by China, although Vietnam still claims the islands as part of its territory.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Jihadists in Mali Ready to Release Kidnapped Swiss Woman

(AGI) Bamako — The Swiss woman kidnapped in Mali may be in the hands of Islamist group Ansar Dine. The Swiss woman who was kidnapped one week ago in Mali’s northern city of Timbuktu is said to be in the hands of Islamist group Ansar Dine (whose name translates as ‘Defenders of the Faith’) which helped Tuareg separatists take control of northern Mali. The kidnappers are said to be ready to release her. It was revealed by sources of Mali’s security forces who explained that the woman, identified as Beatrice Stockly, was initially kidnapped by “members of a private militia who wanted to sell her to the Al Qaeda Organisation in the Islamic Maghreb, a regional branch of the terror network. The woman is in her forties and is believed to be a missionary.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Sudan President Bashir Vows No Peace Talks as Missles Strike

Sudanese war jets launched four missiles into this key South Sudanese state capital Monday, killing at least one and wounding 10 others as tensions continued to rise along the disputed South Sudan-Sudan border.

The jets appeared to be targeting a bridge on the only road linking Bentiu with the conflict zone to the north, where Sudanese and South Sudanese troops last week fought a pitched battle for control of Heglig, an oil town that had long been controlled by Sudan.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazil: Actor Playing Judas Dies After He Accidentally Hanged Self in Passion Play

SAO PAULO — A Brazilian actor playing Judas who accidentally hanged himself during a scene in “The Passion of Christ” has died. A hospital in Brazil’s Sao Paulo state confirms on its website the death of 27-year-old Tiago Klimeck. An autopsy is being performed Monday following his death the previous day. The actor had been in a coma since the accident on Good Friday earlier this month in the city of Itarare.

Investigator Jose Victor Bacetti told the G1 news website Klimeck accidentally hanged himself during a scene in which his character Judas commits suicide. About four minutes passed before anyone noticed, believing he was playing his role. Police are examining the security apparatus that was meant to support Klimeck during the scene. It’s unclear if any charges will be filed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


France and Germany Push to Suspend Free Movement

Süddeutsche Zeitung, 20 April 2012

France and Germany want to limit the free movement of people in Europe. The German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung has published a joint letter from the French and German interior ministers calling for “the possibility of re-establishing internal border controls.” The matter could be raised at the next meeting of European politicians on April 26.

In the letter Claude Gueant and Hans-Peter Friedrich suggest that suspension of the Schengen treaty is justified where security is insufficient at some of the EU external borders, and to address internal security matters and safeguard national sovereignty, the Munich daily writes.

The Süddeutsche Zeitung adds that the resumption of border monitoring would aim to combat economic migration, and suggests this could foster anti-European political sentiment —

What is the value of it, open borders without restrictions? […] What is the point of freedom of movement if European governments are able to limit it? If member states withdraw into their national territory when there are problems, they are demonstrating that they believe their small nation state is far better than Europe. In this case we should not be surprised if nationalist parties, populist and the extreme right are on the rise throughout Europe. The temporary closure of internal borders is a continuous advertisement for the enemies of Europe.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Immigrants Deported, Algiers Complains With Rome

Italian ambassador summoned, ‘unacceptable and humiliating’

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Algeria has complained with Italy over the treatment of two of its nationals deported last week on an Alitalia Rome-Tunis flight, the photos of which — showing the men with scotch tape over their mouths — went viral on the web and sparked a great deal of heated debate in Italy as well. The Algerian Foreign Minister has today summoned the Italian ambassador to the country, Michele Giacomelli, to “protest vehemently on behalf of the Algerian authorities” against the treatment which Algiers called (according to the Algerian foreign ministry spokesman) “violent, humiliating and unacceptable”. The incident — with the two seated in the last row of the plane with plastic handcuffs on, mouths taped shut with packaging tape and a protective mask lowered over their faces — is one which Rome has already announced that it will be looking into thoroughly. This was reiterated yesterday by the Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi, who wrote to the Tunisian blogger Lina Ben Mhenni — who had expressed “profound consternation” over the case — saying that the Italian government has already opened an administrative investigation into the matter and that the magistrature began a judicial one. This was in line with what had been said by Interior, Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri, who in reporting before the Chamber of Deputies on the events said that the use of “coercive measures” such as scotch tape on mouths was an “extemporaneous” behaviour, and above all one that is “offensive to personal dignity”. “It is entirely in the police’s interest” to make sure that light is shed on the case in all of its aspects, said the head of the interior ministry in announcing that an inquiry would take place.

It is a matter that the Algerian government has now asked to know more about, calling Ambassador Giacomelli to the foreign ministry, where he met with the Secretary of State for the National Community Living Abroad, Benattallah Halim. Reporting this was the spokesman for the Algerian ministry himself, saying that during the meeting “protest” had been expressed over the treatment suffered “by two of our fellow countrymen”, treatment called “violent, humiliating and inacceptable”, and that ambassador had been urged to “convey to the Italian authorities” Algiers’ position while awaiting “clarification”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Cop Blames Colleagues’ Racist Slurs on ‘Stress’

Racist slurs uttered by Malmö police officers while responding to disturbances in the city’s Rosengård district can be attributed to “stress”, according to an officer who was present at the December 2008 incident. “It was an expression of extreme stress,” police officer Paul Juhlin said on Svergies Television (SVT), which on Tuesday will start airing a reality television series about the Mälmo police force.

Juhlin was one of the officers present during the Malmö police’s response to December 2008 disturbances in the city’s Rosengård district, which is home to a high concentration of immigrants. During the police action, riot police called young people “blattajävlar”, an ethnic slur which translates roughly into “damn coloured people” or “damn immigrants”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Berne Closes the Door on East Europeans

Tribune de Genève, 19 April 2012

Starting on 1st May, workers from eight EU countries (Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia and the Czech Republic) will be once again subject to quotas, reports the Tribune de Genève. Berne has decided to reactivate the “safeguard clause” included in the Swiss-EU agreement on the free movement of people signed a year ago. The Swiss Federal Council, which is hoping to reduce immigration from the EU (EU nationals now account for 1.1 million of the country’s 7.9 million population), believes that the annual influx of 38,000 additional EU migrants have prompted difficulties with regard to integration, as well as respect for working conditions and the minimum wage.

“Switzerland closes the door on East Europeans”, announces the front page headline of the Tribune de Genève, which argues that the measure “amounts to grandstanding”, because “free movement needed to be subject to control to remain acceptable”. Le Matin argues that the initiative will have “little practical impact”, while Le Temps insists that it is a “purely cosmetic” measure —

In activating the clause included in the agreement on free movement with the EU, the Federal Council wanted to send a clear message to those who are increasingly concerned by the upsurge of European immigration in Switzerland.

In German-speaking Switzerland, the press is mainly concerned about the effect the move will have on EU relations. Tagesanzeiger predicts a decline “in good will towards Switzerland, which is increasingly perceived as recalcitrant”, while St-Galler Tagblatt remarks that for the Federal Council, it was important to show the people that it is not intimidated by the prospect “of upsetting the EU”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



We Only Deport a Third of Illegal Migrants We Catch: New Figures Deliver Another Blow to UK Border Agency

Fewer than one in three of the illegal immigrants caught last year have been deported, according to figures disclosed yesterday.

They showed that of 21,298 individuals discovered in Britain unlawfully, only 6,232 were returned to their countries in the same year.

The figures threatened to deepen the troubles at the UK Border Agency, the organisation responsible for policing immigration law.

Border officials have also been found to have abandoned checks on arrivals into the country without seeking the clearance of ministers.

The unapproved relaxation of passport controls meant 500,000 passengers who came on Eurostar trains entered the country without being checked against lists of suspected terrorists and criminals.

[Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Professor Depicts Blood-Dripping Knife, Machine-Gun, While Talking Population Control

A video has popped up showing University College’s Emeritus Professor John Guillebaud, patron of the UK-based “Population Matters”, standing before a screen depicting among other things a machine-gun, a hospital bed, and a knife dripping with blood, as examples of “natural” population control as opposed to “artificial” methods such as contraception and family planning.

The professor also impressed upon his audience to hide the true nature of their efforts by never ever using the phrase “population control.”

Guillebaud gave the lecture on October 14 2010 in front of a group of scientists at Cambridge University’s Triple Helix Society. On the top of the screen of Guillebaud’s slide show we read the words: “guide to “population control” methods”, showing on the one hand a contraception pill, which is described as an artificial method of population control. On the right hand side we see the machine-gun, the knife, and the hospitable-bed as examples of “natural” methods of population control (from 1 minute onward).

“It either happens the gentle way, through family planning (…), or it happens the nasty ways (…) excessive heat, hurricanes, flooding and so on. To me that’s the ultimate inconvenient truth”, the professor stated.

This is classical neo-Malthusian talk we hear from the mouth of professor Guillebaud. Reduce human numbers voluntarily, or else… Also typical of modern-day eugenicists is the urge to conceal their true purpose (population reduction and control) with euphemistic phrases which vary from “family planning” to “reproductive health”. In this video the professor admits to this deception:

“Will you all undertake a little project today, for me, and that is never from the 14th of October onwards will you say those words up there (pointing towards the text on the slide: “population control”). You will never find me in any situation except in the context of this slide saying: population control. So will you for the rest of this meeting, and for the rest of your life, never put those two words together. They have been so damaging. They instantly make your hair up… think of India in the 1970s and of China at time present. Use any other way you would like to say, like my phrase “population matters”. Please don’t say “population control”. So there’s one thing you can all do.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Shaping America Into Progressivism

Liberals took control of education and imposed political correctness, which silenced conservatives and any possible opposition lest they be labeled racists and anti-children.

The curriculum changed from year to year, becoming more secularized and socialist, pushing religion completely out of the public schools. Prayer at football games, singing the national anthem, and the recitation of the pledge of allegiance to our country were scorned. Atheists objected to traditions that made this country great but interfered with their agenda. Being Green, the worship of Gaia, Mother Earth, and activist environmentalism became the new religion.

Teaching methodologies changed yearly, according to the latest fashion from teacher colleges in New York, Boston, California, like a new dress, more outrageous and less conducive to learning but easy on testing and highly experimental. The curriculum became more “socially just.” Standards were so relaxed that some students graduated who could not read or write on an elementary level. Education was dumbed down to include even the laziest students, test results worsened, dropouts increased, while knowledge retention declined.

Multilingual education and multiculturalism were forced upon schools in order to accommodate the burgeoning illegal immigrant student population.

[…]

I was shocked when the entire student body was required to attend two-hour indoctrination into the peaceful religion of Islam, presented by a Palestinian imam. A rapt audience of innocent and ignorant high school students was told how respected and cherished Muslim women were. The faculty did not protest but sat stony faced although they all knew the lack of rights and worth of Muslim women. Nobody asked questions about the hangings, stonings, decapitations, and cutting limbs of women under Islam. The religious presentation had been organized by the principal, the same person who said repeatedly that there is a separation of church and state, and refused to allow students to wear crosses to school because it might make students uncomfortable who did not believe in God.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120422

Financial Crisis
» Chimps Throwing Poop and 29 Other Mind Blowing Ways That the Government is Wasting Your Money
» China: Bankruptcy in Building Trade; State Companies Profits Plummet by 13.6 Percent
» Dutch Government on Brink of Collapse
» Italy: Monti: We Can Make it, But No Exceptions to Fiscal Rigour
» One Nation Under Debt With Endless Debt Slavery for All
» S&P Concerned About Banks’ Stability in Serious Crisis
» Turkey: Asian Investments Up, EU Investments Down
 
USA
» [Photo] Earth Day 2012 — Measuring Cow Farts
» Chicagoans Warned to Evacuate Before Globalist Instigated Riot During NATO Summit
» Democrats Manipulated the 2008 Election Results
» Department of Homeland Security Buying Up Enough Ammo to Wage Seven-Year War
» Forbes Writer Scoffs at Infowars “Freak Out” On Mandatory Black Boxes
» Green is Red
» Influential Senator Warned in ‘75: “NSA’s Capability Could be Turned Around on the American People”
» Marijuana-Infused Wine Produced at Calif. Vineyards: Dangerous?
» Suspect: I Beat Up White Man Because I Am Mad About Trayvon Martin Case
» TSA’s Mission Creep is Making the US a Police State
» Van Jones: ‘Progressives Have Another Century to Win!’
» Why is it Necessary for the Federal Government to Turn the United States Into a Prison Camp?
 
Europe and the EU
» 100,000 British Women Mutilated
» 100,000 Women Undergo Brutal Genital Mutilation Illegally in Britain (And Some of the Victims Are as Young as Ten)
» British National Party Leaders Hook Up to Produce Book on the ‘Islamization of Europe’
» France 2012: Anti-Politics in the Streets in Paris
» Italy: Seven Arrested After October Riots in Rome
» Italy: Alfredo’s: Rome Eatery With Heroic Past, Delicious Present
» Italy: Renaissance Library Impounded After Massive Book Theft
» Italy: Balduzzi Signs Decree, C Bracket Drugs Also in Shops
» Italy: Father of Pakistani Baby Girl Killed in Modena Arrested
» Italy: Bossi: Maroni Good for Party, Those Who Took Money, Out
» Italy: Bossi Seeks Lega Nord Unity and Agreement With Maroni
» Italy: US Securities and Deposit Certificates Confiscated in Rome
» Right Wingers in Europe Just Fired Off Two Huge Torpedoes
» Senior British Diplomat Loses Eye After Being Mugged as He Walks Through a London Cemetery
» U.K. Police Refused to Chase Quad Bike Gang Who Stole Kayak … Because Thieves Had No Helmets
» UK: Bundling Bearded Windbags on to Jets Won’t Solve Anything
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» The New Anti-Semitism
 
Middle East
» Turkey: Coming Soon: ‘Feline Big Brother’ For Van Cats
 
Russia
» Italian-Russian Fuel Deal Applauded by Terzi
 
South Asia
» Nepalese Muslims Claim Their Rights in New Constitution
» UK Aid Helps to Fund Forced Sterilisation of India’s Poor
» Untested Vaccines Causing New Wave of Polio-Like Paralysis Across India
 
Far East
» Fukushima is Falling Apart: Are You Ready?
» Japan: TEPCO: Not Enough Money to Handle Fukushima Nuclear Reactor 4 Problems
» Taiwan Will Buy 4 US Warships to Deter China
 
Latin America
» Drug-Related Shooting in Mexico, 15 Killed in a Bar
 
Immigration
» UK: Second Hate Cleric is Allowed to Stay — and He’s So Dangerous He Was Banned From as-Level Chemistry
 
Culture Wars
» All the Morals of a Bulldozer
 
General
» Treacherous Treaties
» Trinity Versus Tyranny — Final Battle Over Fate of Man

Financial Crisis


Chimps Throwing Poop and 29 Other Mind Blowing Ways That the Government is Wasting Your Money

Why do chimpanzees throw poop? The federal government would like to know and is using your tax dollars to investigate the matter. Every single year, we all send huge amounts of our hard-earned money to the federal government.

We hope that they will spend that money wisely. Unfortunately, that is simply not the case. You are about to read some examples of how the government is wasting your money that are absolutely mind blowing. Anyone that claims that there is not a lot of waste that can be cut out of the federal budget is lying to you. Our politicians have racked up the biggest pile of debt in the history of the world and they are spending our money on some of the stupidest things imaginable. It is imperative that the American people be educated about all of this outrageous government waste, because right now the political will to change this corrupt system is simply not there among the current crop of politicians in Washington. We are stealing trillions of dollars from future generations and many of the things that our politicians are wasting that money on are almost too bizarre to believe.

The following are 30 mind blowing ways that the government is wasting your money…

[…]

#6 If you can believe it, the federal government has actually spent $750,000 on a new soccer field for detainees held at Guantanamo Bay.

#7 The U.S. Agency for International Development spent 10 million dollars to create a version of “Sesame Street” for Pakistani television.

#8 The Obama administration has plans to spend between 16 and 20 million dollars to help students from Indonesia get master’s degrees.

#30 At this point, China is holding over a trillion dollars of U.S. government debt. But that didn’t stop the United States from sending 17.8 million dollars in foreign aid to China in 2011.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



China: Bankruptcy in Building Trade; State Companies Profits Plummet by 13.6 Percent

Two construction companies have declared bankruptcy because of inability to pay debts. 50% of buildings remain unsold and Chinese banks credit crunch prostrates cash-strapped companies. State-owned industries weighed down by decrease in demand from abroad. Some shipping companies see transport almost to zero and profits decline by almost 100%.

Beijing (AsiaNews) The signs of difficulty in the Chinese economy are growing more serious, with a series of bankruptcies declared by some construction companies in Guangdong and Hangzhou. At the same time, in first quarter State owned industries profits fell by 13.6%.

Guangdong in the south, Shunde’s Guangdeye Property development filed for bankruptcy two days ago because of inability to pay its debts. The private company has not built new projects since 2008, when it started having financial problems.

In Hangzhou, the Hangzhou Jinxiu Real Estate, engaged in construction of luxury apartments, has declared bankruptcy. In recent years, thanks to a loan facility of the State banks, construction companies have created projects above and beyond the real needs. According to economist Andy Xie, China now has more houses than needed. Already, the housing space per person, while serving 650 million urban residents, is higher than Europe and Japan. The amount of buildings could provide home ownership to another 200 million people, the equivalent of the increase in urban population over the next 15 years. In Beijing and Shanghai, the average price per square foot exceeds the value of five months’ average wages, and according to calculations a few months ago, at least 50% of new buildings remained empty and unsold. To curb the speculative bubble, the government has imposed limits on bank lending and the purchase of second and third homes, , prostrating the cash-strapped construction companies.

Analysts expect a wave of bankruptcies in Beijing and Shanghai.

Today, data on the profit margins of state firms were circulated, which in the first quarter of 2012 decreased by 13.6%. The weak result was expected given that companies like China Cosco, maritime transport experienced a loss in profits of 98.84 in the first quarter 2012, after a total loss in 2011.

The Chinese economy is suffering because of reduced demand from abroad, but also an obsolete model of development and authority’s corruption (see: 30/11/2011 As China’s govt cheats, its economy is “on the brink of bankruptcy”, Chinese scholar says “).

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Dutch Government on Brink of Collapse

The Dutch government is on the brink of collapse after politicians hit an impasse on implementing austerity measures required to secure a bailout.

As the economic and technical data points to financial Armageddon looming in Spain Dutch politicians are deadlocked over the decision to implement brutal austerity measures to secure an economic bailout or to tell the bankers to shove it and take the path of Iceland.

Dutch politicians have announced they can not come to an agreement on austerity limits required to secure the bailout to save the Dutch economy.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti: We Can Make it, But No Exceptions to Fiscal Rigour

(AGI) Milan — Mario Monti while paying a visit to Milan’s furniture trade show said that he is an optimist and “Italy can make it. It will soon restore growth”. Nevertheless he kept a low profile by saying that “there will be no exceptions to economic discipline”. He also ruled out another tax on property. The Italian Prime Minister and his wife paid a surprise visit to the show that is currently taking place in Milan’s exibition centre. He had lunch with Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri and furniture industry’s businesspeople.

After an exchange of opinions with furniture industry’s businesspeople a press conference was organized. Monti did not hide that “some difficulties are still there” but he said that “Italy can make it”. He added that “We still need to be cautious about the country’s budget but there are some signs for hope and optimism”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



One Nation Under Debt With Endless Debt Slavery for All

Debt is a “soft” form of slavery. In America today, it is not legal to bind people up with chains and force them to work for you, but that doesn’t mean that there are not millions upon millions of slaves in this country. When you borrow money, you willingly become a servant to the lender. Sadly, there are millions of Americans that will spend the rest of their lives working to pay off their debts but they will never escape the endless debt slavery that they have gotten themselves into. When you add up all forms of debt in the United States at this point, it comes to more than 54 trillion dollars. That is more than $178,000 for every man, woman and child in America. We truly are one nation under debt, and we have created the biggest debt bubble in the history of the planet. Unfortunately, all debt bubbles eventually burst, and when this one bursts the consequences are going to be unlike anything ever seen before.

When most Americans think of the “U.S. debt problem”, they tend to only think of the U.S. national debt. Well, that certainly is horrifying, but it is only a small part of the overall problem.

The chart posted below shows the growth of total debt in the United States over the last several decades. Total credit market debt owed was less than 5 trillion dollars back in 1980, but now it is over 54 trillion dollars…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



S&P Concerned About Banks’ Stability in Serious Crisis

Standard & Poor’s (S&P) analyst Alois Strasser has warned that a crisis worse than the most recent one could “totally demolish” Austrian finance institutes’ capital.

Strasser — who is in charge of the US American rating agency’s economic estimations for the Austrian economy — told Die Presse today (Fri) that the Republic of Austria could have to spend 23 per cent of the gross domestic product in such a dramatic scenario. Strasser explained that S&P assumed a recession of six per cent of the GDP, a 60 per cent collapse of stock market trading values and a rise in unemployment of 15 per cent. He admitted that such a situation would be “extreme”. Strasser claimed that S&P had to consider such circumstances to make predictions.

The Upper Austrian analyst warned that Austria’s banks — of which some are highly active in the Eastern European region (EE) — were weakly capitalised in international comparison. Speaking to Die Presse, Strasser said a scenario as dramatic as investigated by S&P for its effects on the state and the various banks was “not very likely” since the credit rating of Austria and the country’s banks would be much different otherwise.

S&P lowered Austria’s rating from the best possible estimation of AAA by one grade to AA+ in January. People’s Party (ÖVP) Vice Chancellor Michael Spindelegger labelled the decision as “wrong and unfair”. Austrian National Bank (OeNB) Governor Ewald Nowotny claimed in a first reaction to the step that the New York-based agency acted “politically motivated”. The OeNB chief said the decision must have political grounds as it was made public only a few days ahead of a crucial crisis gathering of the government and state leaders of the European Union’s (EU) 27 members in Brussels, Belgium.

S&P’s decision to strip Austria of its AAA was succeeded by a disputed move of rival rating agency Moody’s.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Asian Investments Up, EU Investments Down

(ANSAmed) — ISTANBUL, APRIL 20 — Investments of Asian countries were up while investments of European Union (EU) countries were down in Turkey in the first two months of 2012, as Anatolia news agency reports today. According to direct foreign investment figures, investments of EU countries in Turkey declined by 200 million USD while investments of Asian countries rose by 413 million USD year-on-year in the first two months of 2012. Capital inflow in Turkey was up 15% to 1.2 billion USD year-on-year in the first two months of the year.

Capital inflow from EU countries decreased 22% to 716 million USD. This figure was 913 million USD in January and February 2011. France was the country from where direct investments to Turkey declined the most among EU member states in the mentioned period. France, which made 193 million USD of investments in Turkey in January and February 2011, only made 8 million USD of investments in the first two months of this year. Capital inflow from Asian countries was up 34% from 21 million to 434 million USD in the first two months of 2012.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


[Photo] Earth Day 2012 — Measuring Cow Farts

This is an example of how stupid the entire cult of environmentalism is. Some “scientists” measured the amount of methane in cow farts by way of saving the Earth from something or other.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Chicagoans Warned to Evacuate Before Globalist Instigated Riot During NATO Summit

Residents of a Chicago condo received a letter from management last week informing them that they should move out of their homes during the upcoming NATO confab to be held in the Windy City next month. If the residents decide to remain, they will be subjected to a lockdown.

“In the event of a riot or the potential of one near the building,” the letter states, “all access doors will be locked including the garage door. For everyone’s safety we will be instructing anyone in the building to stay in his or her unit.”

Aaron Klein, writing for WorldNetDaily on Saturday, said radicals with ties to Obama plan to riot during the NATO summit.

In August of 2011, Klein said the founders of a “radical group that teaches tactics of direct action, confrontation and intimidation” were among a “slew of extremist organizations, some tied to President Obama, preparing protests to coincide with major NATO and G-8 summits in Chicago.”

Klein quoted Joe Losbaker of the United National Antiwar Committee, one of the groups planning protests, who warned, “The wars and economic policies of the NATO and G8 nations are not just and will be met by protest.”

Losbaker and his wife, Stephanie Weiner, worked as leaders of the Chicago New Party. It was formed by the Democratic Socialists of America, ACORN and the labor union SEIU. The Communist Party USA breakaway group Committees of Correspondence and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) were also involved in forming the New Party.

[…]

The IPS is a Marxist organization formed in the early 1960s. It has received funding from the banker James Warburg, the son of the infamous banker Paul Warbrug. The elder Warburg was instrumental in creating the Federal Reserve and was chosen by President Woodrow Wilson to serve as one of its first members.

It may seem odd for an international banker to fund a Marxist organization supposedly advocating the destruction of finance capital. “If one understands that socialism is not a share-the-wealth program, but is in reality a method to consolidate and control the wealth, then the seeming paradox of superrich men promoting socialism becomes no paradox at all,” writes the late Gary Allen. “Instead it becomes the logical, even the perfect tool of power-seeking megalomaniacs. Communism, or more accurately, socialism, is not a movement of the downtrodden masses, but of the economic elite.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Democrats Manipulated the 2008 Election Results

(Business Insider) John McCain’s 2008 campaign staff allegedly had evidence that Democrats stuffed ballot boxes in Pennsylvania and Ohio on election night, but McCain chose not to pursue voter fraud, according to internal Stratfor emails published by WikiLeaks.

In an email sent on November 7, 2008, and titled “ Insight — The Dems & Dirty Tricks ** Internal Use Only — Pls Do Not Forward **,” Stratfor vice president of intelligence Fred Burton wrote…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Department of Homeland Security Buying Up Enough Ammo to Wage Seven-Year War

(NaturalNews) As we recently reported, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), an agency that says its main purpose now is to thwart “homegrown terrorism,” has awarded a contract to ammunition manufacturer ATK for acquiring 450 million rounds of .40 caliber hollow point ammo. You can view the announcement of the ammunition purchase at this press release: www.marketwatch.com/story/atk-secures-40-caliber-ammunition-co…

Our initial coverage of the story is at: www.naturalnews.com/035607_government_checkpoints_Martial_Law…

Many NaturalNews readers may not know this, but “hollow point” ammunition is never purchased for practice or training. This ammunition is purchased for the sole purpose of being used in active fighting. At the same time, it is a violation of the Geneva Convention to use hollow point ammunition on the battle field.

This is crucial to understand. It means the occupying federal government is acquiring this ammunition to be used against the American people. Furthermore, DHS does not fight wars overseas. It is a domestic agency with domestic responsibilities. Its purchase of .40 ammunition is a clear and obvious indication that DHS plans to wage war on the American people.

How big of a war? Here’s where this investigation gets really interesting.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Forbes Writer Scoffs at Infowars “Freak Out” On Mandatory Black Boxes

Forbes writer Kashmir Hill responds to our report about black box data recorders becoming mandatory in all new cars under a bill set to be passed by the House by accusing Infowars of engaging in a “freak out” and claiming the legislation is “good for privacy” when in reality it destroys privacy.

[…]

Hill’s attitude seems to stem from the mind set that the state has already eviscerated our privacy, so why should we bother fighting back to salvage what’s left of it? She brazenly dismisses fourth amendment rights as “roadkill” simply because having a black box in your vehicle might help the authorities work out who was responsible for an accident.

The most chilling aspect of this approach is that Hill bills herself as a privacy expert yet she has no idea about the ‘slippery slope’ principle and has seemingly failed to read the ‘Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act’ (MAP-21), on which her article is based.

The point of our original story was not that the black boxes will merely be in all new cars from 2015 onwards if this bill passes, it’s that it will be mandatory to activate them and anyone who attempts to deactivate them will be hit with civil penalties under section 31406 of the bill. This is about creating the groundwork for a future tax by the mile system which has been aggressively promoted by the Obama administration.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Green is Red

The news is out that Obama-Soetoro, his unindicted co-conspirators in the Democrat Party, and their running dog Republican toadies have, in just three years and a few months, run up a mindboggling $5,000,000,000,000.00 in new debt.

That is significantly more spending than was done by all previous presidents, from Washington to Bush. But what is really scary here, is how few people, including otherwise knowledgeable conservatives, understand that this was not simply Keynesian economics gone wild, or fiduciary irresponsibility, or incompetence, but a radical Marxist strategy aimed at ending free, capitalist America. That trillions have gone to line the pockets of corrupt, already filthy-rich Democrats, with jobs lost, rather than created, recession deepened, rather than abated, makes these traitors dance with glee, like the Palestinians after 9/11.

People who have failed to grasp this fairly obvious truth, also have, since it is an integral part of the strategy, been unable to understand why the Obama-Soetoro cabal has relentlessly attacked the oil, gas, and coal industries, and poured billions into worthless “green” energy schemes. They don’t understand why he has done zip, zero, nada to stem the rise of gas prices (or any of the myriad other rising prices, either). Jeez, Louise, he seems like such a nice guy…?

May I repeat: this is all part of a radical Marxist strategy aimed at ending free, capitalist America.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Influential Senator Warned in ‘75: “NSA’s Capability Could be Turned Around on the American People”

Senator Frank Church — who chaired the famous “Church Committee” into the unlawful FBI Cointel program, and who chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee — said in 1975:

“Th[e National Security Agency’s] capability at any time could be turned around on the American people, and no American would have any privacy left, such is the capability to monitor everything: telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesn’t matter. There would be no place to hide. [If a dictator ever took over, the N.S.A.] could enable it to impose total tyranny, and there would be no way to fight back.”

Now, the NSA is building a $2 billion dollar facility in Utah which will use the world’s most powerful supercomputer to monitor virtually all phone calls, emails, internet usage, purchases and rentals, break all encryption, and then store everyone’s data permanently.

The former head of the program for the NSA recently held his thumb and forefinger close together, and said:

We are, like, that far from a turnkey totalitarian state

So Senator Church’s warning was prophetic.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Marijuana-Infused Wine Produced at Calif. Vineyards: Dangerous?

(CBS News) Just in time for 4/20, reports have surfaced that an increasing number of California winemakers are turning to another locally produced intoxicant. The Daily Beast reports several California winemakers are creating blends of marijuana-infused wines on the sly.

According to The Daily Beast, pot wine is made by placing a pound of marijuana in a cask of wine, leading to about 1.5 grams of marijuana per bottle. The fermentation process converts sugar from grapes into alcohol, and the alcohol extracts the THC from marijuana over a nine-month process.

TIME reports the process dates back to the 1980s when the drug was blended with rose. Now vintners are more likely to infuse marijuana cabernet and syrah.

[…]

“This is a dangerous combination, with accentuates the effects of both substances,” Dr. Robert Glatter, an emergency medicine physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, told HealthPop in an email.

Side effects of consuming the substances together may include nausea, vomiting, dizziness, agitation, and paranoid ideation, Glatter said.

According to Glatter, marijuana, a hallucinogen, and alcohol — a stimulant initially that is a potent depressant — may be dangerous together because the additive marijuana will likely allow people to consume more alcohol than they normally would, potentially leading to breathing difficulties and low blood pressure.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Suspect: I Beat Up White Man Because I Am Mad About Trayvon Martin Case

Alton L. Hayes III, a west suburban man charged with a hate crime, told police he was so upset about the Trayvon Martin case in Florida that he beat up a white man early Tuesday.

Hayes and a 15-year-old Chicago boy walked up behind the 19-year-old man victim and pinned his arms to his side, police said. Hayes, 18, then picked up a large tree branch, pointed it at the man and said, “Empty your pockets, white boy.”

The two allegedly rifled through the victim’s pockets, then threw him to the ground and punched him “numerous times” in the head and back before running away, police said. Hayes and the boy are black; the victim is white.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



TSA’s Mission Creep is Making the US a Police State

This callous disregard for travelers’ rights merely paraphrases the words of Homeland Security director Janet Napolitano, who shares, with the president, ultimate responsibility for all TSA travesties since 2009. In November 2010, with the groping policy only a few weeks old,Napolitano dismissed complaints by saying “people [who] want to travel by some other means” have that right. (In other words: if you don’t like it, don’t fly.)

But now TSA is invading travel by other means, too. No surprise, really: as soon as she established groping in airports, Napolitano expressed her desire to expand TSA jurisdiction over all forms of mass transit. In the past year, TSA’s snakelike VIPR (Visual Intermodal Prevention and Response) teams have been slithering into more and more bus and train stations — and even running checkpoints on highways — never in response to actual threats, but apparently more in an attempt to live up to the inspirational motto displayed at the TSA’s air marshal training center since the agency’s inception: “Dominate. Intimidate. Control.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Van Jones: ‘Progressives Have Another Century to Win!’

(Rolling Stone) Van Jones, one of the most effective organizers and strategists on the left, is out with a new book. Rebuild the Dream, which debuted last week on the New York Times bestseller list, takes its name from the organization Jones helped found a year ago to stir up a grass-roots insurgency against the plutocrats we now call “the 1 percent,” and which now seeks to harness the insurgent energies expressed by the Occupy movement into lasting institutional reform.

Jones has some harsh words for his critics, those he dismisses as “cheap patriots” …

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why is it Necessary for the Federal Government to Turn the United States Into a Prison Camp?

The federal government could turn the entire country into one giant prison camp, but that would still not keep us safe. It is inevitable that bad stuff will happen in life. But we have a choice. We can choose to live in fear or we can choose to live as free men and women. Our forefathers intended to establish a nation where liberty and freedom would be maximized. But today we are told that we have to give up our liberties and our freedoms and our privacy for increased security. But is such a trade really worth it? Just think of the various totalitarian societies that we have seen down throughout history. Have any of them ever really thrived? Have their people been happy? Unfortunately, the U.S. federal government has decided that the entire country needs to be put on lock down. Nearly everything that we do today is watched and tracked, and personal privacy is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. Many of the things that George Orwell wrote about in 1984 are becoming a reality, and that is a very frightening thing. The United States is supposed to be the land of the free and the home of the brave. Sadly, we are rapidly becoming the exact opposite of that.

I don’t know about you, but I never signed up to live in North Korea. When I was growing up I was taught that repressive regimes such as North Korea are “the bad guys” and that America is where “the good guys” live.

So why do we want to be just like North Korea?

When they put in the naked body scanners at U.S. airports and started having TSA agents conduct “enhanced pat-downs” of travelers, I decided that I was not going to fly anymore unless absolutely necessary.

Then I heard about how “random bag checks” were being conducted at Metro train stations in the Washington D.C. area, and I was glad that I was no longer taking the train into D.C. anymore.

But now the TSA is showing up everywhere. Down in Houston, undercover TSA agents and police officers will now “ride buses, perform random bag checks, and conduct K-9 sweeps, as well as place uniformed and plainclothes officers at Transit Centers and rail platforms to detect, prevent and address latent criminal activity or behavior.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


100,000 British Women Mutilated

As many as 100,000 women in Britain have undergone female genital mutilations with medics in the UK offering to carry out the illegal procedure on girls as young as 10, it has been reported.

Investigators from The Sunday Times said they secretly filmed a doctor, dentist and alternative medicine practitioner who were allegedly willing to perform circumcisions or arrange for the operation to be carried out. The doctor and dentist deny any wrongdoing.

The practice, which involves the surgical removal of external genitalia and in some cases the stitching of the vaginal opening, is illegal in Britain and carries up to a 14 year prison sentence.

It is also against the law to arrange FGM.

Known as “cutting”, the procedure is traditionally carried out for cultural reasons and is widespread across Africa.

It is thought to be needed as proof of a girl’s “purity” for when she marries, but victims are rarely given anaesthetic and frequently suffer long-term damage and pain.

Research suggests that every year up to 6,000 girls in London are at risk of the potentially fatal procedure, and more than 22,000 in the UK as a whole.

The Metropolitan Police said since 2008, it had received 166 reports of people who fear they are at risk of FGM.

It is the same story for all 43 forces across England and Wales with no convictions for the offence ever taking place, according to The Sunday Times.

The newspaper added that only two doctors have been struck off by The General Medical Council since 1980.

According to Forward, a charity which campaigners against FGM, an estimated 100,000 women in the UK have undergone mutilation.

Supermodel Waris Dirie, who was mutilated as a child, is a vociferous opponent of the practice.

Calling for a crackdown on FGM, she said: “If a white girl is abused, the police come break down the door. If a black girl is mutilated, nobody takes care of her. This is what I call racism.”

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



100,000 Women Undergo Brutal Genital Mutilation Illegally in Britain (And Some of the Victims Are as Young as Ten)

As many as 100,000 women in Britain have undergone female genital mutilations with medics in the UK offering to carry out the illegal procedure on girls as young as 10, it has been reported.

Investigators from The Sunday Times said they secretly filmed a doctor, dentist and alternative medicine practitioner who were allegedly willing to perform circumcisions or arrange for the operation to be carried out.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



British National Party Leaders Hook Up to Produce Book on the ‘Islamization of Europe’

The British National Party have announced that they are selling a “great new book on the Muslim tide, and how to turn it”. The book is titled Inch’Allah? The Islamization of Europe, its author is Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter, and the English version is translated and edited by none other than the BNP’s own would-be führer Nick Griffin. Indeed, it would appear that Griffin’s role in the production of the book went even further than that — he is now boasting about the new sections he introduced to improve Dewinter’s original text.

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — Enthusiasm for Inch’Allah? evidently transcends the deep divisions within the BNP itself. Griffin’s leading political opponent in the party, Andrew Brons, has published a glowing review of the book on his own Nationalist Unity Forum, hailing it as “one of the most comprehensive and well-researched works on the Islamic colonisation of Europe yet published on the continent”. Mind you, that may have been before Brons realised Griffin had a hand in writing it.

Some of us will recall that the US Islamophobic bloggers Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer were sharply criticised by their former ally Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs for their participation at the Counterjihad Brussels 2007 conference alongside Filip Dewinter. Johnson accused Vlaams Belang of being white nationalists with fascist links.

Geller and Spencer indignantly denied this. Geller argued that “Vlaams Belang is the only party that has gone out of its way to support Israel. No political party in Belgium has supported Israel. Vlaams Belang has been the only party staunchly behind Israel for the past 10 years.” Spencer agreed that VB are “the only ones in Flanders standing against the jihad and for Israel”.

Given these expressions of support for Vlaams Belang, and their shared views on the threatened “Islamization” of the West, will Geller and Spencer be promoting the English edition of Dewinter/Griffin’s book in the US? And if not, why not? I think we should be told.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



France 2012: Anti-Politics in the Streets in Paris

(AGI) Paris — On the day of pre-elections silence, on the eve of presidential elections, youth go down in the streets in Paris.In the heart of Paris an anti-politics demonstration was set up by a crowd made up mostly of young people who walked across the city heralding, “They do not represent us!”, referring to the ten official candidates running to lead the Elysee .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Seven Arrested After October Riots in Rome

‘Day of Rage’ left dozens hurt

(ANSA) — Rome, April 20 — Italian police on Friday arrested seven people across Italy in connection with a rampage in Rome in October in which anti-capitalists torched cars and broke windows in the worst violence in the Italian capital for years.

The October 15 rioting by groups linking themselves to the so-called Indignati (Indignant Ones) staging a ‘Day of Rage’ against global financial elites left dozens of police and demonstrators hurt. On Friday security police raided homes in Rome, Teramo, Ancona, Civitanova Marche, Padua and Cosenza, targeting known anarchists as well as soccer hooligans.

“It’s an operation that will shine light on what happened,” said Interior Minister Annamaria Cancellieri.

A warrant issued by a preliminary-investigations judge said the arrests could lead to charges of “attempted homicide” for one incident, an attack on a police armoured car, which was torched.

Among those arrested in Teramo was a leftist militant, Davide Rossi, who narrowly failed to win a place in council elections for the Communist Refoundation party last year.

The seven taken into custody were later released to house arrest.

Another six were served orders not to leave their cities of residence.

Probes since the October violence have led to a total of 34 arrests and eight convictions but investigators intend to track down more people suspected of being involved in the trouble.

Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno thanked the police and prosecutors for their work on finding the perpetrators.

“This shows that even months after the event it is possible to find the culprits for these deeds, which must never happen in our city again,” Alemanno said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Alfredo’s: Rome Eatery With Heroic Past, Delicious Present

Owners helped Jewish families during World War II

(ANSA) — Rome — Italians named Alfredo often hear the glib exclamation Fettuccine! when they introduce themselves to foreigners, especially North Americans.

Alfredo Di Lelio, a Roman chef and restaurant owner from the early 1900s, may not have invented pasta al burro (pasta with butter), but his interpretation, the iconic Fettuccine Alfredo, carries his name and has been savored worldwide since the 20s. Millions of recipes are floating around, including one in the classic US cookbook Joy of Cooking and many believe that the creamy sauce is an invention of Italian Americans. “Not so,” the current owner of Rome’s famous Vero Alfredo restaurant, Isa Di Lelio, granddaughter of Alfredo I, told ANSA.

“My grandfather Alfredo’s pasta, made even richer with three parts butter instead of two, was prepared for his wife when she was pregnant with my father, before he added it to his restaurant’s menu in 1908”. Yet Alfredo’s rich and nutritious creation went on to feed much more than his wife and the paying public. “We went underground in 1944 when occupying forces in Rome began to round up Jewish families,” one of those people, 84-year old Donatella Limentani, told ANSA. “We had no game plan, no extra food supplies, we just knew that our only chance to live was to go into hiding”.

Alfredo’s son Armando, later known as Alfredo II, was a long-time friend of Limentani’s uncle Bruno and did not hesitate to help the family, along with many others in need. “The risks were not only imprisonment, but torture and even death. Regardless, they made sure we had food,” recalled Limentani, her voice wrought with emotion after more than 50 years. “In the worst of times, they may have only had two spoonfuls themselves, but one went to us”. Before the war, Armando and Bruno had been the classic, bon vivant friends, arm-in-arm, reveling in the finer side of Rome’s social life. It was, after all, a time when Hollywood stars flocked to the city and entertainment poured from the city’s many venues.

As early as the 1920s Hollywood personalities began to frequent Alfredo’s. Among the first were Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, who gifted the golden fork and spoon to Alfredo that have now become part of the restaurant’s logo. Upon returning to Hollywood, they gushed about Alfredo’s culinary finesse so much that the restaurant became a “must do” on the list of stars and VIPs visiting the Eternal City.

Some 90 years later, the significance of the golden cutlery has become even more symbolic. Eliana Pavoncello, daughter of Donatella Limentani, told ANSA: “I had been working with the restaurant for events, looking at the logo every day and seeing their cutlery, then, one day at my mother’s. “I realized that the knife I was about to set the table with was the same design as the one used at Alfredo’s — identical to the original gift from Pickford and Fairbanks,” she said, smiling. “It was like a bulb lighting up. One of the cornerstone symbols of the restaurant came from my grandparent’s store, Limentani’s. “Our families were somehow bonded even before they knew it”. To celebrate the daily sustenance they received as children in hiding, then 14-year old Limentani and her seven-year-old brother wrote a rhyme they would sing when their aunt Margaret would return from Alfredo’s restaurant with their daily bread. “It is a children’s song,” she reminisced. “But it was part of our ritual that kept us hopeful. It let our minds feel free… hunger is a physical sensation, but also the lack of freedom was insatiable. “In a time when it was hard to know who was truly your friend the proof of one family’s friendship came to us every day wrapped in a checkered table cloth”. Di Lelio said simply that: “my father was a generous person. I am moved by stories I hear about him to this day”. Fettuccine Alfredo is a ubiquitous part of Italian cuisine worldwide. Just as the restaurant on Piazza Augusto Imperatore, with its volumes of guest books and snapshots of stars, politicians and personalities spanning 10 decades, is engraved into Roman culinary history, so will Alfredo and son remain in the unwavering memories of the families they helped save. Rhyme by Donatella Limentani while in hiding, 1944: Dring Dring Dring Di chi e’ la suonatina Che sentiamo ogni mattina? E’ la tua Margaretina Con la borsa col faggoto Tu di corsa entri in cucina E ci porti da mangiare Con amore Margaretina.

Translation: Jingle jingle jing Whose is that ring We hear every morning? It is yours, little Margaret With your purse and tiffin you rush to the kitchen And you bring us our food With love, little Margaret.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Renaissance Library Impounded After Massive Book Theft

Thousands of volumes missing from Girolamini in Naples

(ANSA) — Naples, April 19 — One of Italy’s oldest libraries was impounded Thursday as part of a police investigation into thousands of stolen antique books. The Girolamini Library, known for its vast collection of writings on theology and philosophy, lost the books several days ago, according to Director Marino Massimo De Caro who reported the incident to police. Management of the building has fallen under the auspices of the director of the Vittorio Emanuele III National Museum in Naples for the time being. First opened in 1586, it contains roughly 160,000 volumes, 5,000 of which date back to the 16th century.

The library, which was famously frequented by 18th-century political philosopher Giambattista Vico, adjoins the Girolamini church complex and convent.

In addition to its trove of rare volumes, the library is treasured for four well-preserved 18th-century rooms. photo: archive pic of police in a library

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Balduzzi Signs Decree, C Bracket Drugs Also in Shops

(AGI) Rome — Medecines in the C bracket will be sold also in shops, not only in pharmacies, but only when “delisted”, which means when the obligation to have a prescription is abolished.

Health Minister Renato Balduzzi, signed today, within the 120 days deadline as the law prescribes, the decree implementing art. 32 of the “Salva Italia” decree-law, concerning the sale of C bracket medecines, which are those paid directly by the citizens. The decree was signed after technical assessment by the AIFA, the Italian agency for medecines.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Father of Pakistani Baby Girl Killed in Modena Arrested

(AGI) Modena — 32-years old Mohammad Tubassam ended up in jail accused of murdering his 2-years-old Pakistani daugther. The baby girl died on wednesday at Modena’s hospital after 13 days of sufferings. The baby girl had already been hospitalized in Miralndola last january for head injuries due to a fall. She came to Modena’s hospital with very serious injuries all over her bodies, including her head, that were immediately considered as incompatible with an accidental fall in the bathroom, as the mother said. The mother is now under investigation for child injury and abuse, but according to the evidence gathered she was in another room of the family’s house in Concordia. Police investigators are persuaded that the man acted on his own, once he was back from work and the baby girl was crying. He took the baby girl to the hospital himself, denying any abuse and supporting the mother’s version.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi: Maroni Good for Party, Those Who Took Money, Out

(AGI) Rome — In a surprise visit to Roberto Maroni’s electoral meeting Bossi declared, “They want to try and break the League.” The “Senatur” defended Maroni, “He is good for the League.” He then remarked, “We were a bit ashamed of what happened, but the people understood. If something went wrong it’s because there was deception.” “We believe in the League and the project. I resigned, a first step, but to tell the truth I’ve gone up in rank, from Secretary I’ve become President….”, explained the former Reform Minister, “We must be strong and show that it won’t pass. Our enemy is the centralism of Rome. Today the League is compact and is returniing to be a principal political force in the country.” Umberto Bossi continued, “If one gets to the bottom of things they discover than no-one has gotten rich. But for those who have taken money, it is right that they step aside.” . .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi Seeks Lega Nord Unity and Agreement With Maroni

(AGI) Arese — Asked whether he is planning to leave his Lega Nord party, Umberto Bossi said he actually wants to unite it.

“I want to unite the Lega Nord”, Umberto Bossi said when asked whether or not he is planning to leave the party and found a new one. “I want to reach an agreement with Maroni”, he added.

Bossi also confirmed that he has not yet decided whether or not to stand as candidate for federal secretary of the party.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: US Securities and Deposit Certificates Confiscated in Rome

(AGI) Rome — US securities with a face value of 1,5 billion Dollars and deposit certificates amounting to about 1000 tons of gold. This is the result of an operation performed by Rome’s tax police dubbed “Million Dollar” triggered by the suspicion that they were of doubtful origin. The operation took place both in the provinces of Rome and Viterbo and led to the reporting to judicial authorities of a man, 70, persistant offender, allegedly accused for introducing into Italy currency and securities which are probably forged.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Right Wingers in Europe Just Fired Off Two Huge Torpedoes

The big news out of the French election: Marine Le-Pen, the head of the far right wing National Front party, secured 20% of the vote in the first round of voting.

Le-Pen is now out of the race (the runoff on May 6 will be between Sarkozy and Socialist challenger Hollande), but a 20% showing for the anti-immigration, Euroskeptic candidate is a lightning bolt for France and all of Europe.

Sarkozy is now in a desperate situation, where he may have to pander to hardliner in order to win (a move that could alienate more moderate voters).

The other big event in Europe this weekend was int he Netherdlands, where a budget deal collapsed thanks to a revolt lead by another right winger: Geert Wilders.

From AFP:…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Senior British Diplomat Loses Eye After Being Mugged as He Walks Through a London Cemetery

A senior British diplomat has lost the sight in one eye after being attacked as he walked through a cemetery.

Bermuda’s new governor George Fergusson took a short cut through Hammersmith Cemetery at 7.30pm on Friday evening as he was late for a dinner party where his wife was waiting.

Keen to make up time, the father-of-three was searching for the address on his BlackBerry when he was punched so hard he fell to the ground.

The attacker failed to prise the mobile phone from his hand, but made off with a small quantity of cash, police said.

The 56-year-old, whose family has a proud history in the British Army and diplomacy, was left dazed and bleeding from his left eye.

The old Etonian was able to get to feet and call his wife Margaret to excuse his absence from the party before staggering to Charing Cross hospital for help.

Yesterday, he underwent surgery at the Western eye hospital in London, but it was too late to save his eye, it was reported in the Sunday Times.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



U.K. Police Refused to Chase Quad Bike Gang Who Stole Kayak … Because Thieves Had No Helmets

When Rebecca Jones directed police towards a gang of thieves making their getaway on quad bikes she naturally expected officers to tear off in hot pursuit.

But she was left speechless when they called off the chase moments later — on the grounds of health and safety.

They told her that they did not want to risk causing an accident because the gang were not wearing crash helmets and were driving wildly.

Instead, the officers simply gave up and let the thieves disappear into the distance with the £700 kayak they had stolen from Miss Jones.

The legal executive said the gang struck as she and her boyfriend joined her parents on the water of a weir on the River Dearne at Harlington, in South Yorkshire.

As the group prepared to set off, the quad bikers raced up and snatched her kayak before driving off with it strapped to one of their machines.

Miss Jones, 28, and her boyfriend, Mark Skirrow, 27, gave chase and tracked the thieves across fields in the hope that the police would take over once they arrived. ‘The police were called immediately and they also followed the gang and caught up with them on the road,’ said Miss Jones, from Swinton, near Rotherham.

‘But they had to abandon the pursuit because of health and safety concerns as the quad bikers were driving erratically and not wearing helmets.

‘My boat was stolen and there is nothing much I can do about it.’

The police are not understood to have made any arrests.

Miss Jones and her boyfriend had gone to meet up with her parents, both retired teachers, when the thieves pounced during the Easter holidays.

‘I stayed at Mark’s house and we went out for a few drinks,’ she said yesterday. ‘When we woke up the following morning the weather was so nice we decided to take our kayaks to the weir on the River Dearne. After arriving at the car park we unloaded our boats and got changed.’

She said they were never more than ten yards from their boats.

‘Moments later a group of quad bikers came tearing down the road and made off with my brand new boat. I was only standing on the other side of a single lane carriageway. After another member of the public had spotted them, we followed the group, who made off across the fields still with my kayak tied to the front of their bike.

‘The police were called immediately and they followed the gang and caught up with them on the road but then they called it off.’

Health and safety rules have been blamed for inaction by the emergency services in a number of incidents — many of them much more serious.

[…]

A South Yorkshire Police spokesman said of the kayak theft: ‘Officers were instructed not to begin a pursuit. An area search was conducted and all lines of enquiry were explored, unfortunately without gain.

‘South Yorkshire Police perform a risk assessment based on the circumstances of each incident.’

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



UK: Bundling Bearded Windbags on to Jets Won’t Solve Anything

Theresa May, one of nature’s soppy liberals, is struggling to seem decisive over the deportation of the Bethlehem-born windbag Abu Qatada. The trouble is, Mrs May isn’t even any good at pretending to be tough.

[…]

It has all gone wrong for Mrs May because she and her department are not very good at what they do. But really the British people ought to have seen through this fake controversy by now.

The real Islamist threat to Britain and the rest of Europe comes from uncontrolled mass migration from Muslim countries. Combined with our national refusal to defend our British, Christian culture, this is rapidly creating a powerful and influential Muslim vote which will increasingly change our country.

Given a few more decades, it will have profoundly altered this country. I have long suspected that this island will be more or less Muslim within a century, and it will be the fault of this generation. It would be perfectly legitimate for a respectable, law-abiding and civilised political party to act now to prevent this.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


The New Anti-Semitism

by Moshe Dann

It’s Jew-hating time, again. No cross-burnings or bomb-wearing psychos screaming for Allah. It’s sophisticated, draped by UN and EU glitz, banal reports about Israeli atrocities, and Palestinian liberation. It’s so holy, so morally pompous, and fashionable.

Criticizing Israel doesn’t lack for issues: “apartheid,” “war crimes,” “stealing Palestinian land,” “oppressing Palestinians,” “the occupation,” etc.

NGOs funded by European governments, the UN, and most Arab and Muslim organizations and countries, condemn Israel as a pariah state, unworthy of existence. In this pogrom of conscience they wear no hoods. Their masks are self-righteousness.

The mechanism for vilification and de-legitimization, Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) campaigns, is coordinated by the Palestinian BDS National Committee, an umbrella organization for dozens of Palestinian organizations, located in Ramallah and supported by the Palestinian Authority. A global movement, it is behind the spread of anti-Israel actions by churches, unions and student groups.

The mantra chants are easy: “End the Occupation,” “Justice for the Palestinians,” “Peace Now.” No need to think about complicated issues; just blame Israel. And Hate. Hate.

Anti-Israel campaigns overlap anti-Jewish sentiments. This explains why hate-Israel campaigns garner support from atheists, anarchists and even some Christians, why young people wrap themselves in checkered scarves, like Arafat, and come to Israel in order to fight alongside Arabs, some placing themselves in danger, and why EU countries with hard-hit economies spend hundreds of millions of Euros every year supporting anti-Israel organizations.

Backed by Islamists, especially Muslim Brotherhood-supported student organizations, hating Israel has become the campus rage. Meanwhile, university administrators have been obsessively neutral and Jewish organizations, excessively polite.

In addition, Israel has produced its own uber-critics — columnists who condemn Israel as “racist,” editors who recommend “raping” Israel, academics, literary figures, and artists who support BDS against Jews living in Judea and Samaria.

Hence, in order to understand de-legitimization, we need to distinguish between those who seek Israel’s destruction, in one form or another, and those with legitimate, honest criticism. As one of the pillars of democracy is freedom of speech, drawing the line between what is acceptable, and what is not, is often difficult. Self-criticism is essential; without it there cannot be growth. But self-criticism without limit, unbalanced and exaggerated, is self-destructive.

Challenging Israel’s identity as a nominally Jewish state might be acceptable if all states with official religions were rejected. Singling out Israel, therefore, is not only bigoted; it is a form of de-legitimization, a softer denial of Israel’s right to exist.

State-sponsored immorality

The soft deniers protest their link with hard-line de-legitimizers, arguing that they support Israel, but are critical of its “racist policies,” its “illegal occupation of Arab lands,” its “colonialism.” But the connection between criticism and full-blown hatred deepens when biased news stories and distorted rhetoric about Israeli “atrocities” and “war crimes” become self-defined truths, distortions of reality.

Decrying “the occupation as a moral disaster” for Israel therefore identifies Jews as immoral, a state-sponsored immorality, a legal and historical fraud that sharpens the sword of de-legitimization, justifies BDS campaigns, and anti-Jewish violence.

When the Gaza Strip is portrayed as “a vast prison,” for example, then attacking the warders is heroic, overthrowing the system that produced that prison is justified, and Hamas missiles become “self-defense.”…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Turkey: Coming Soon: ‘Feline Big Brother’ For Van Cats

Rare cats, two colour eyes, stars of reality show

(by Rodolfo Calo’) (ANSAmed) — ANKARA — Next month will see the launch of a kind of cat version of ‘Big Brother’ to celebrate this specially telegenic cat. The multimedia potential of the breed has been explained to ANSAmed by a leading expert in the field, Professor Fetih Gulyuz, director of the research centre dedicated to the Van at the ‘Centenary University’ on the banks of a very blue lake, that bears the same name as the cat, in eastern Turkey. As the professor said, “as far as we know, there are no other” breeds apart from the “Van Cat” having herterchromia of the eyes. The characteristic is apparently due to “a genetic anomaly” Prof.

Gulyuz notes, pointing out that “Van kedisi” has three kinds of pupil coloration: both yellow, both blue, and — most characteristic — “one blue and one yellow”. This rare feature is in danger of disappearing. As the Professor told the Anadolu press agency, the Van research centre was created specifically to safeguard the Van kedisi from extinction. As you can see from the Wikipedia article on this cat, the completely white version has not yet received recognition in Europe as a breed apart from the more common versions whose heads and tails are of a different colour. Although the rare white exemplars are rare, we will soon be able to enjoy watching them on the internet. As Prof. Gulyuz announces: “within the next two months”, a “live transmission” will start on a website currently under construction. According to the centre’s deputy in charge, Mehmet Karaca, twelve TV cameras will be located in various parts of the kennels. Dating back to 1997, there are just over one hundred cat residents at the moment and cameras will concentrate on interaction between the “mothers” (there are around eighty of these) and their kits. A two-storey building set next to two roofed-over cage compounds, the breeding kennel did not suffer any damage in the two earthquakes of last October and November that led to nearly 650 deaths and left 60,000 local families without their homes in the province of Van, which lies on Turkey’s border with Iran. As soon as four hours after the quakes, “the cats were back to their normal behaviour” the Professor says, and three of the four staff members “continued to feed them as ever: there was no problem here”. Throughout the human ordeal, the cats were never neglected. This cat is the symbol of the region of Van: its face is to be seen in the luminous displays on the entrance to the city and there is a four-metre high statue of the cat in the main thoroughfare. So proud is Turkey of this cat that even Ankara chose its dual-coloured eyes as a logo for a recent tourism campaign. The myth of the Van cat is further fed by the belief that — unlike any other cat — these ones love water. There is a tradition that it learned to swim by jumping off Noah’s Ark even before the Ark docked at its berth by Mount Ararat, and there are plenty of references to it on the Web as the “swimming cat”. But the Prof. is sceptical: “In my opinion, it’s a myth.

It hasn’t been proven by any scientific study” that this cat loves water. There is, the Professor says, no substance to the story that its soft fur sheds water. Just like a dog, finding itself in water, it will do its best not to drown, “but does that mean it enjoys swimming?”. Professor Gulyuz elaborates: Van cats “are sensitive”: “they love being treasured” and they enjoy the domestic life: but they are also very fond of “their freedom” and so “they have the need to wander,” in the garden, for example. The breeding station attached to the university is the only official breeding kennel for this cat. There are bureaucratic obstacles to exporting Van cats and the centre sells just 10-15 kittens a year at between 85 and 210 euros apiece. Private citizens or pet shops in the area have them on offer for around 50-60 euros.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Italian-Russian Fuel Deal Applauded by Terzi

‘Step forward’ for bilateral ties

(ANSA) — Moscow, April 20 — Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi said on Friday that the deal by Italian fuel giant Eni and electricity group Enel for natural gas production in Siberia represents a “step ahead” in bilateral relations between Italy and Russia.

Gas from the acrtic field in the autonomous district of Yamals-Nenets, located more that 3,000 kilometers from Moscow, could fill one-third of Italy’s annual fuel needs, said Terzi. But Terzi specified that the gas from the Eni and Enel joint-venture with Russian counterparts Novatek and Gazpromneft, called Severenergia, is not necessarily destined for the Italian market.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Nepalese Muslims Claim Their Rights in New Constitution

A campaign to raise awareness among political parties. Fear of anti-conversion laws. Muslims, Catholics and Protestants united against discrimination and persecution.

Kathmandu (AsiaNews) — Nepali Muslims have launched campaign to defend and respect the rights of all minorities in the new constitution. They threaten protests if the new constitution does not comply with such requests. In view of the deadline for submission of the text intended for May 27, Muslim community leaders have launched the National Muslim Alliance (Nmsa). The group consists of 31 representatives of various organizations and politics. Among them are also members of the Maoist and the Nepali Congress Party (Conservative Party). Yesterday, leaders of Nmsa handed over a memorandum to the Constituent Assembly complaining about the marginalization of minorities, including Christians, Catholics and Protestants.

Rahamutullah Miya, Nmsa secretary, said that “for years Muslims and Christians, were the country’s most affected minorities. The new constitution must secure our identity and our rights in the name of the secular state. Nepal is a confessional country, but the religions other than Hinduism continue to be persecuted. “ “The various religious groups — he adds — must unite into a single force. We invite all religious minorities, including Christians, to fight this battle with us.”

With the fall of the Hindu monarchy in 2007, Nepal became a secular state. The interim constitution guarantees freedom of worship, but prohibits proselytizing. However in recent years there have been several murders and attacks against religious minorities, usually at the hands of Hindu extremists. In 2008, gunmen of Nepal Defense Army (NDA) shot dead Fr. Prakah John, a Jesuit priest. On 26 April 2008, the NDA detonated a bomb inside the Birantnagar mosque, killing two people. On May 23, 2009, the same group, placed a bomb in the Catholic Cathedral of the Assumption in Kathmandu. The toll was two dead and 13 wounded. The threat of anti-conversion laws, proposed by some conservative parties, are also hanging over minority communities, which if approved will be included in the new penal code under consideration in parliament together with the constitution. The penalties include arrest and sentence of five years for those who preach and disseminate religious material that might offend the Hindu religion. Among the acts that could lead to arrest is the slaughter of cattle near Hindu sacred areas.

Before proposing the new laws the government failed to consult the religious minorities. The Catholic Church has learned of the law from the Nepali media. To lobby the authorities and raise public awareness, Catholics, Protestants, Muslims and Baha’is organized several events in 2011 and handed over a memorandum to the authorities asking for a revision of laws. In August, the Catholic Church translated the drafts of the new code and circulated the articles that violate religious freedom on the Internet.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



UK Aid Helps to Fund Forced Sterilisation of India’s Poor

Money from the UK’s Department for International Development has helped pay for a controversial programme that has led to miscarriages and even deaths after botched operations

Tens of millions of pounds of UK aid money have been spent on a programme that has forcibly sterilised Indian women and men, the Observer has learned. Many have died as a result of botched operations, while others have been left bleeding and in agony. A number of pregnant women selected for sterilisation suffered miscarriages and lost their babies.

The UK agreed to give India £166m to fund the programme, despite allegations that the money would be used to sterilise the poor in an attempt to curb the country’s burgeoning population of 1.2 billion people.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Untested Vaccines Causing New Wave of Polio-Like Paralysis Across India

(NaturalNews) The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is financially backing and publicly endorsing mass polio virus vaccinations in India. In case you didn’t hear him yourself, Bill Gates publicly announced that vaccines could help reduce the world population by 15%.

Gates also proclaimed that every newborn should be registered for vaccinations immediately to assure the goal of 90% of the population getting vaccinated for his “century of the vaccination.”

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation program in India was promoted as “The Last Mile: Eradicating polio in India.” The promotional video displayed numbers showing thousands of cases of polio in India decades ago, with the number of cases dropping to 42 by 2010. But it appears that wild polio virus stats have been traded for polio from vaccines and non-polio acute flaccid paralysis (NPAFP).

In India, over 47,000 cases of NPAFP were reported in 2011. The paralysis symptoms of NPAFP are practically the same as what’s attributed to “eradicated” wild virus polio. Apparently, vaccine polio viruses also cause polio paralysis.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


Fukushima is Falling Apart: Are You Ready?

Thirteen months have passed since the Fukushima reactors exploded, and a U.S. Senator finally got off his ass and went to Japan to see what is going on over there.

What he saw was horrific.

And now he is saying that we are in big trouble.

See the letter he sent to U.S. Ambassador to Japan Ichiro Fujisaki, Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and NRC’s Chairman Gregory Jaczko here.

But what is so ironic about this is that we have been in this heap of trouble since March of 2011. March 17th, to be exact, when the plume of radioactive materials began bombarding the west coast of California.

And Oregon. And Washington. And British Columbia. And later Maine, Europe, and everywhere in between.

Independent researchers, nuke experts, and scientists, from oceanography to entomology and everywhere in between, having been trying to sound the alarm ever since.

The scientists most upset are those who have studied the effects of radiation on health. I’ll say it again, so its really clear: we are in big trouble.

[…]

The Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, has only recently confirmed that there were three meltdowns, and they have been ongoing, unabated, for thirteen months, and no effort has been made to contain them.

[…]

In fact the kelp from Corona del Mar contained 40,000,000 bcq/kg of radioactive iodine, as reported in Scientific American several weeks ago.

If you don’t know your becquerels, its a lot. That’s what your pacific fish feed on. And that was only ONE isotope reported. There were up to 1600 different isotopes that have been floating around in our air, pouring out of the reactors, and steaming out of the ground, every second of every day, for 13 months.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Japan: TEPCO: Not Enough Money to Handle Fukushima Nuclear Reactor 4 Problems

The problems at reactor 4 are the greatest short-term threat to humanity and has the potential to destroy our world and TEPCO doesn’t have the money to fix them.

The problem at Fukushima nuclear reactor 4 which is being dubbed as the greatest short-term threat to humanity and has the potential to destroy our world and civilization as we know it.

Now nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen who is one of the only people providing objective scientific analysis about the Fukushima nuclear fallout believes based on his analysis of the problems that TEPCO simply doesn’t have enough money to deal with the issues there.

He says this at about 25:00 minutes into a recent program on WBAI’s Five O’Clock Shadow.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Taiwan Will Buy 4 US Warships to Deter China

(AGI) Taipei — Taiwan is ready to buy 4 warships from the US to face China’s menace. According to local media, a meeting took place last month between the US Defense secretary and president Ma Ying-jeou. If the deal will go through, Taipei’s navy will count 12 warships in total. This move could stiffen again the relationship with China, which had improved at the start of Ma Ying-jeou’s presidency in 2008.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Drug-Related Shooting in Mexico, 15 Killed in a Bar

(AGI) Ciudad Juarez — In Chihuahua, Northern Mexico, 15 people were killed in a bar. An armed commando entered the bar and opened fire on a group of people, potential rivals, perhaps, in the drug-trafficking control. This phenomenon, which has buckled Mexico, caused two more crimes in another bar, with a total death toll of 17. Since 2008, Chihuahua, and especially Ciudad Juarez on the border with Texas, are the cities where the war between gangs has been most atrocious, following by the attempt of repression trigerred by President Felipe Calderon two years before.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Second Hate Cleric is Allowed to Stay — and He’s So Dangerous He Was Banned From as-Level Chemistry

An Iraqi Muslim cleric suspected of being involved with Al Qaeda and radicalising young Britons has used the Human Rights Act to continue to live in the UK — despite Government efforts to deport him.

Taha Muhammad is regarded as one of Britain’s most dangerous security threats. He was even banned from studying AS-level chemistry because of fears he would use the knowledge to commit terrorist acts.

The decision to let him stay is another setback for Home Secretary Theresa May, already under pressure after attempts to deport Abu Qatada to Jordan descended into chaos.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


All the Morals of a Bulldozer

To be genuinely outraged about something, you need to actually believe in something. Without principles, outrage is just tactical anger, or bullying in plainer language. Principles, values and codes, are universal. That is if you are angry about a dog being mistreated by riding on top of a car, then you should at least be equally angry at dogs being eaten.

If a man shooting another man after a confrontation and not being charged for it angers you, then it should anger you regardless of the color of his skin. For that matter, if racism or sexism offends you, then it should offend you regardless of whether it is directed at a woman or a black man who is a liberal or a conservative.

It’s child play to notice that the game doesn’t work this way anymore. That the media engages in displays of tactical anger, serious-face inquiries into issues that they are concerned about only when they benefit their side, manufactured outrage that is not based on any deeply held beliefs, but only on the need to score some points.

[…]

Boiled down to its essence, the liberal message is that “we are good people, because they are bad people”. The new Democrats sticker which reads, “Not a Republican” aptly sums up this void. It follows that good people cannot be bad and that bad people cannot be good, and once you accept this message, no further ethics or morals are needed. The very goodness of your side is all the moral code you need.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Treacherous Treaties

So the interesting question is, do all treaties reduce the sovereignties of the nations that enter into them? I am certain the answer is yes. Treaties which are entered into in hopes of preventing wars ultimately expand them and nations find themselves fighting wars they never conceived of because an insignificant member of a treaty can somehow start a war that then extends to all of the treaty’s signatories.

In fact, World War I started in exactly that way. The war which killed more than 15 million and wounded more than 20 million was started by the assassination on June 28, 1914 of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, by a Yugoslav nationalist. Because of it, Austria went to war with Serbia. Alliances formed over previous decades, brought the major powers into the war within weeks. How many of these nations would have gone to war over that assassination had the treaties not existed? No one will ever know!

None of the nations except Austria had a hand in deciding to go to war. The decision for every nation involved, except perhaps the United States, was made in Vienna. By signing these treaties, each of these nations gave up their sovereignties. They were no longer masters of their own fates.

[…]

However balance of power treaties are not the only culprits. Trade agreements are just as bad. Look at what the Maastricht Treaty which established the European Union has done to Greece and threatens to do to other European countries. Today’s Quisling Greek government is now little more than a tool of Europe’s more prosperous states. When Greece’s former socialist Prime Minister George Papandreou proposed a popular referendum on the Greek sovereign debt bailout, the European Union scotched it. Now Greece no longer has the power to call an election that the Union objects to. Greece has even lost its democracy.

But the effect of trade agreements is far more extensive than the EU.

[…]

“According to the W.T.O., 125 of its 153 member countries have made varying degrees of commitments to the financial services agreement. Now, these pledges could easily be used to undermine new rules intended to make financial systems safer.”

So now, nations may not even have the power to regulate their financial institutions which, in fact, extends to their economies as a whole. The World Trade Organization rules all.

So how did that happen? Well, people have been trying to create a world government for a long time. To do that, nation states must be rendered effete. Consider what David Rockefeller said at a Bilderberg meeting in 1991:

“We are grateful to the Washington Post, The New York Times, Time Magazine and other great publications whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost 40 years. It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But the world is more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national auto-determination practiced in past centuries.”

Well given what the “intellectual elite and world bankers” did to the global economy in 2008, do you really want them to rule all? World government, in order to work, requires that ethnic and religious distinctions be expunged.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Trinity Versus Tyranny — Final Battle Over Fate of Man

We have a conundrum. While today Muslim nations are repressive, yet Islam boasts a rich history of intellectual achievements. So which claim is true? In fact, both represent certain historical facts. Islam was an incubator of past innovations, technologies and arts, as well as heirs of the Greek classical literary canon. But whether Islam was a creator of unique intellectual achievement is a different story.

According to Edward Hungerford, in an essay in the Atlantic Monthly, The Intellectual Mission of the Saracens, the legend of Islam’s creativity is overstated. Instead, he claims as Islam swept across the Middle East, etc, Muslims preserved learning. But for original scholarship they left practically zero record of novel discoveries or intellectual breakthroughs. Their innovations were borrowed from previous cultures. Hungerford states,

“The heights of culture actually attained were reached in spite of the restraints of Islam rather than through encouragement given by it. The religion of Mohammed, founded in opposition to liberal learning, never ceased to oppose that learning. Science made headway against a religious fanaticism which manifested itself in the destruction of libraries, the burning of condemned books, the persecution of philosophers. Imprisonment, banishment, popular violence, threats of house-burning, fears of death,—to these were men exposed who cultivated the ancient learning under the rule of princes, who, actuated either by their own prejudices or by the desire of popular favor, used their influence in the interest of religious intolerance.”

But, if true—Why would this be?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120421

Financial Crisis
» Albania: Economy Growing, But 60% Population Suffering
 
USA
» “Stand Your Ground” Law Not Invalidated by Zimmerman Shooting
» Chamber of Commerce — Change Agent Since 1912
» Cook Stoves and Climate Change
» Dershowitz Comments on the Zimmerman Case
» Gunman Who ‘Stalked Couples at Motels and Forced Them to Have Sex’ Is Caught… After Showing Up at Court Over Traffic Violation
» Muslim Students Celebrate Culture at Tate [Plaza]
» Obama’s Counterterrorism Chief Praises NYPD Operation That Targeted N.J. Mosques
» Prostitutes Involved in Secret Service Sex Scandal ‘May Have Been Underage’ As Senator Demands Investigation Into Involvement of Obama’s White House Staff
» South Florida’s Muslim Bashing
» What is Earth Day?: Earth Day and Agenda 21
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Bayrou: We Need a Technical Government Like Monti
» French Muslims ‘Likely to Vote for Far Left’
» Germany and Islam: Koran Study
» Italian Beer Getting Just Desserts at Home and Abroad
» Italy: Venetian ‘Gutenberg’ Hands Down Tradition
» Italy: Ducati to be Sold to Audi, Owners Confirm
» Italy: More Italian Readers Gather News From Internet
» Italy: N. League’s Bossi Did Not Know of Maroni Dossier
» Italy: Prosecutors Seize 350, 000 Euro From Northern League Notary
» Something Smells Funny? Gorgonzola Popularity Spawns Bogus-Zola
» UK Cab Company Boss Claims Cyclists Deserve to Die
» UK: Langley Green Church Converts to New Mosque
» UK: Muslim ‘Cultural Sensitivity’ Runs Amok
» UK: The ‘Omnishambles’ And the Power of Political Language
» UKIP Doesn’t Have a Grassroots and Has to Fight to Keep the Loonies Out. Wavering Tories Should be Careful
» Vatican and Breakaway SSPX Seek Common Ground
» We Can’t Reform the European Court of Human Rights, So Let’s End This Nonsense
 
Balkans
» Serbia: Roma People’s Position Improves
 
Mediterranean Union
» EU Project Offers Training to 1,200 Journalists
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Woman in Surgery Clinic, Dies After Kidney “Stolen”
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Jewish Studies Center, Soon Gay Rabbis in Israel
 
Middle East
» Bahrain Grand Prix: Protesters Block Roads as Teargas Fired
» Islam’s Sacred Geography
» Kuwait: Blasphemer Injured, MPs Demand Probe — Assailant Charged With Attempted Murder
» Kuwait: Islamists Propose Morality Police
» Qatar: Soccer Meets Politics at Doha’s Mohammed Abdul Wahhab Mosque
» Saudi Arabia: Narrowing Islam-West Cultural Gap
 
Russia
» ENI, ENEL Start Joint Production of Gas in Siberia
 
South Asia
» Bollywood Star Kidnapped and Beheaded by Two Colleagues
» ‘Enforced Disappearances’ Haunt Bangladesh
» For India’s Central Government, The Enrica Lexie Was in International Waters
» Indian Attorney Supports Italy’s Claim in Shooting Case
» India: Hindu Radicals Use the Law to Persecute Christians in Andhra Pradesh
» Indonesia: Latest Attack Damages Mosque in W. Java
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Cameroon: Army Deployed Against Poachers
» Gabon/OIC: Information Ministers From OIC Member States Issue a Final Communique at the End of the 9th Icim
» Nigeria: R-E-V-E-A-L-E-D! How Boko Haram Import Arms From Apapa Wharf, Borno
 
Latin America
» Wal-Mart Hushed Up Vast Mexico Bribery Case After Top-Level Struggle
 
Immigration
» Greece: Reception Centre to Open in Next Few Days
» UK: Illegal Immigrant Raped Young Woman Three Years After Judge Ordered Him to be Deported the 33-Year-Old Raped the Woman Twice and Battered Her So Severely She Had 17 Injuries
 
Culture Wars
» Irish Government TD (Member of Parliament) Blames ‘Fornication’ For Unwanted Pregnancies
» Why Hate Speech Should Not be Banned

Financial Crisis


Albania: Economy Growing, But 60% Population Suffering

(ANSAmed) — TRIESTE, APRIL 18 — The economic crisis has affected the majority of families in Albania, with 60% of Albanians saying that they have noticed a “significant” effect on the progress of the economy, compared to an average of 50% in south-eastern Europe.

The figures are included in the ‘Transition Report 2011’, by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), which presented the document on Albania in the capital Tirana today. The event was held at the House of Culture and was organised by the EBRD office in Tirana and the Central European Initiative (CEI), in collaboration with the Italian embassy.

The report states that suffering amid the economic crisis is felt despite the fact that Albania’s economy is growing, and is due to rise by 1.2% in 2012, the EBRD says. Since 1992, the CEI Fund at the EBRD has supported 27 technical assistance projects, worth a total of 6 million euros, in the energy, transport, agriculture and institutional development sectors.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


“Stand Your Ground” Law Not Invalidated by Zimmerman Shooting

Suppose some leftwing activists told you that you should not use guns because you have no right to protect yourself from a murderous criminal? If you’re like most right-thinking people, you would be outraged. Yet, liberals are using the shooting of Trayvon Martin as an excuse to say exactly that. They want to use the Martin case to repeal “stand your ground” laws.

A provision of Castle Doctrine legislation, “stand your ground” laws state that you don’t have to retreat from an attacker, that you can stay on your home or neighborhood premises and fight to defend yourself. That law replaced “duty to retreat” laws, which stated you must run away from your would-be murderer, so you do not kill him.

Leftists use the Martin case to urge repeal of “Stand your ground” laws which implies a revival of “retreat” laws. “Retreating” from your would-be murderer means not being able to use your gun to protect yourself. That, in turn, negates the right of self-defense. One example, of how liberals are arguing the “retreat” viewpoint is ex-President Bill Clinton.

That, of course, represents the false claim long made by liberals. It’s false because a lack of police training and the mere possession of a gun do not transform conscientious citizens into cold-blooded murderers. Lacking such training, civilians have their commonsense and deeply ingrained conscience that prevents them from becoming murderers. In fact, the data on shooting incidents between citizens and criminals shows that gun-owning citizens have thwarted crimes, protected themselves and protected their families from burglars. There are even cases where concealed carry permit-holders saved the lives of cops who were about to be murdered by thugs. So, time and again we see law-abiding gun owners continue being law-abiding. They don’t become the crazed murderers that dumb liberals say they will become.

Clinton’s concern about “Stand Your Ground” law “encouraging” murders reflects a poor understanding of that law. That law does not encourage murders. It protects self-defense killings. “Stand your ground” law enables a law-abiding gun owner to use a gun in his own self-defense—and protects him from being unjustly prosecuted for doing so. If you commit murder, “Stand” laws wont protect you from incarceration.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Chamber of Commerce — Change Agent Since 1912

In the 1930s and 1940s the Chamber of Commerce blanket organizations went for planning in a big way. Control of supply and demand was seen as the answer to “problems” of unequal distribution. Unequal distribution was seen as the main cause of war. The quotes that follow are but a few examples of plans for change proposed by the U. S. and International Chambers of Commerce.

“America thus far has trusted to rugged individualism, but now that rugged individualism is selling below par, America is beginning to think more realistically. Men like John Dewey, Charles A. Beard, and Stuart Chase are spreading the idea of planning. Mr. Swope of the General Electric Company has widely publicized his plan to organize the various industries in national units under government supervision. According to Mr. Swope’s plan, industries employing over fifty men and failing to come into the plan within three years would be compelled to do so.

“The United States Chamber of Commerce has conducted a national referendum on a programme and, as a result, the Board of Directors has voted in favour of a national voluntary economic council. The Chamber would modify the anti-trust laws so as to legalise combinations that could control supply in relation to normal demand. Government tribunals are called for, with power to control production in certain natural resources, such as coal, oil, lumber, and copper. The plan also includes private and voluntary unemployment insurance. The plan of the Chamber of Commerce is interesting, as showing the growing recognition of the need for planning. Excepting the Russian system, the ‘New Deal’ is the world’s largest effort at planning.”[1]

In 1933 the U.S. Chamber of Commerce was a leading promoter toward restoring diplomatic relations with Russia:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cook Stoves and Climate Change

The United States was in the platinum donor category with $5 million dollars, the Department of Energy, EPA, the Department of State were in the gold donor category with $1-5 million each, along with socialist European nations such as economically troubled Spain and Ireland, the World Bank, and many UN affiliates.

The Department of Energy awarded “Clean Biomass Cookstove Technologies” grants of $100,000 and $750,000 at a time when our country could ill-afford it, unemployment was at an all time high, taxpayers were unhappy, and the administration was demanding that we reduce our consumption of energy.

According to Washington Post, the U.S. has pledged $105 million in the last two years toward the project and Hollywood provided a spokesperson, Julia Roberts. Replacing cook stoves with “clean cook stoves” with chimneys would help 100 million households by 2020.

The “science” provided under the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves consisted of two articles, one published in Le Monde by Bertrand d’Armagnac on November 13, 2011, and another published in Bloomberg by Jonathan Alter on November 24, 2011.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Dershowitz Comments on the Zimmerman Case

To begin with, George Zimmerman, accused of 2nd degree murder in the death of Trayvon Martin, may have been at least partially vindicated by a photograph which shows the back of Zimmerman’s head badly injured and bleeding.

[…]

Professor Alan Dershowitz of Harvard Law School stated upon release of the arrest affidavit that it was “so thin that it won’t make it past a judge on a second degree murder charge … everything in the affidavit is completely consistent with a defense of self-defense.”

After the release of the photo, however, Dershowitz went much further, telling Breitbart News that if the prosecutors did have the photo and didn’t mention it in the affidavit, that would constitute a “grave ethical violation,” since affidavits are supposed to contain “all relevant information.”

Dershowitz continued, “An affidavit that willfully misstates undisputed evidence known to the prosecution is not only unethical but borders on perjury because an affidavit swears to tell not only the truth, but the whole truth, and suppressing an important part of the whole truth is a lie.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Gunman Who ‘Stalked Couples at Motels and Forced Them to Have Sex’ Is Caught… After Showing Up at Court Over Traffic Violation

A man who police believe has been following couples into several New Jersey hotels, forcing them to have sex with one another before he sexually assaulting the women has finally been caught.

Rasheed Powell, 36, has been charged with 10 counts of first-degree aggravated sexual assault.

Police believe Powell targeted at least six couples that were checking into hotels along Routes 1&9 and were able to catch him when he arrived at court for a traffic violation.

‘Powell is clearly a sexual predator who acted quickly and viciously,’ Union County First Assistant Prosecutor Albert Cernadas Jr said to the Star-Ledger.

Powell would allegedly target couples as they walked toward their rooms.

When they entered the room, he would force his way inside and, at gunpoint, order the man and woman to perform sexual acts on one another as he watched, police said.

He would then lock the man in the bathroom so he could sexually assault the woman, authorities claim.

Powell stalked the Swan and Benedict motels in Linden, NJ, and the Royal Motel in Elizabeth, NJ, beginning his attacks on weekend nights in early March and continuing until last weekend, police said…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Muslim Students Celebrate Culture at Tate [Plaza]

The Muslim Culture Fest brought students together Thursday in the Tate Plaza. The all-day event was hosted by the Muslim Student Association, and aimed to educate students about the religion and its diverse culture. “A lot of times people will stop by and say they’ve learned things they never knew, so being a part of that is really great,” said Umarah Ali, a junior from Augusta and president of MSA.

The first culture fest since 2010, this year was different in that many more countries, including China and Italy, were represented in the informational posters and food. “This year we really want to broaden the culture and show that the religion goes beyond just a few countries,” Ali said. “People don’t realize they come from all over the world.” MSA also wants the event to show students a different part of Islam.”It spreads the message of Islam, the real one that the media doesn’t portray — the peaceful side,” said Rafah Zaigham, a junior from Athens.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Counterterrorism Chief Praises NYPD Operation That Targeted N.J. Mosques

President Obama’s top counterterrorism adviser praised the New York Police Department’s work on Friday, saying the agency has struck an appropriate balance between keeping people safe and protecting their rights. “It’s not a trade-off between our security and our freedoms and our rights as citizens,” John Brennan said in an appearance at NYPD headquarters. “I believe that the balance that we strike has been an appropriate one. We want to make sure that we’re able to optimize our security at the same time we optimize those freedoms that we hold and cherish so deeply.”

The comments from the top counterterrorism official in the White House following months of debate over an NYPD domestic intelligence operation that placed Muslim businesses, student groups and mosques, including one in Paterson and several in Newark, under surveillance. The Associated Press revealed the details of the program in a series of articles that won the Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting earlier this week.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Prostitutes Involved in Secret Service Sex Scandal ‘May Have Been Underage’ As Senator Demands Investigation Into Involvement of Obama’s White House Staff

The prostitutes involved in the Secret Service scandal that cost six agents their jobs may have been underage, according to a new report.

A Colombian government official told a newspaper group that investigators from the Colombian attorney general’s office have questioned employees of the hotel in question, and the taxi driver who drove home the woman who triggered the scandal, to find out more.

The U.S. agents and military personnel involved could face criminal charges if is proven that they had sex with girls under the age of 18.

When Darrell Issa, the Republican chairman of the House Government Oversight and Reform Committee, was asked if any of the men had done so, he said neither he nor Mr Sullivan could be certain.

‘In the case of the 11 agents, the primary determination is you can’t determine to charge or not charge somebody until you know whether a crime is committed,’ he said, according to The Daily Beast.

‘Under U.S. law, if any of these women are under 18—I can tell you we do not know and Director Sullivan does not have actual contact/picture matched up to verify that as far as I know. When he does, I would expect a call, because that would be a relief to many of us to not have on top of everything else.’

Issa stressed that it was a crime to sleep with minors abroad — although there is no suggestion that any of the men who have been named did.

‘U.S. laws passed in 2003 and 2006 were designed to prevent sex vacations causing harm to underage women,’ the Republican Representative added. ‘We have to respect some things, but going internationally anywhere to have sex acts underage is prohibited under U.S. law.’

It comes as a senior Republican, Senator Charles Grassley, urged the investigation to extend to presidential staff who were preparing for Barack Obama’s visit.

Also on Friday, Mr Obama received a personal briefing on the state of the investigation from Mark Sullivan, director of the Secret Service.

Mr Grassley urged investigators to check hotel records for White House advance staff and communications personnel who were in Cartagena for the Summit of the Americas.

In a letter to Mr Sullivan and the inspector general at the Homeland Security Department, Mr Grassley asked whether hotel records for the White House staffers had been pulled as part of the investigations.

He wrote: ‘Have records for overnight guests for those entities been pulled as part of the investigation? If not, why not?’

Additionally Mr Grassley, top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, asked whether rooms were shared by Secret Service, the communications agency and the presidential advance staff.

After three agents resigned on Friday, the number of men forced out by the scandal rose to six.

Five more are suspended during the investigation, while one man has been cleared of serious misconduct but could still face disciplinary action.

Mr Sullivan visited the White House late on Friday to brief Mr Obama in the Oval Office.

Meanwhile, the lawyer of the two ousted Secret Service supervisors David Chaney and Greg Stokes said that President Barack Obama’s safety was never at risk and criticized leaks of internal government investigations in the case, signaling their strategy for an upcoming legal defense.

Lawrence Berger said he could not comment on the woman’s claims about being paid for sex, but added: ‘I don’t think anything she has said is material to any of the issues I am pressing with my clients.

‘Nothing that has been reported in the press in any way negatively or adversely impacted the mission of that agency or the safety of the president of the United States.’

The scandal came to light when a 24-year-old high-end escort fought with an agent who slept with her at a Colombian hotel but then refused to hand over the $800 they had agreed upon…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



South Florida’s Muslim Bashing

by Shabbir Motorwala

Last year U.S. Rep. Peter King of New York had a congressional hearing on “Radical Muslims in America.” One of the issues debated most during that hearing was assimilation of Muslim youth in American society. What is assimilation, exactly? How is assimilation defined? One positive that emerged from the hearing was that Minnesota law enforcement officials praised the Muslim community’s outreach as well as cooperation with law enforcement. Locally, U.S. Attorney Wifredo Ferrer and John Gillies of the FBI praised the outreach by local Muslim organizations going so far as to specifically mention that the outreach by the Coalition of South Florida Muslim Organizations (COSMOS) should be a model for the entire country.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



What is Earth Day?: Earth Day and Agenda 21

Officially, Earth Day, correctly termed “International Mother Earth Day” was established in 2009 by the UN’s General Assembly under Resolution A/RES/63/278 and the “International Mother Earth Day promotes a view of the Earth as the entity that sustains all living things found in nature. Inclusiveness is at the heart of International Mother Earth Day; fostering shared responsibilities to rebuild our troubled relationship with nature is a cause that is uniting people around the world.” (Wikipedia)

The true origins of Earth Day date much further back in history, perhaps to the flower children generation of the 1960s. At the 1969 counterculture music festival at Woodstock, near Bethel, NY, some 500,000 city dwellers congregated for a three-day event. It was a giant love-in of music and “nature.”

[…]

Now, the UN has found a new goal in Agenda 21 with its symbolic Mother Earth Day (MED), set for April 22nd. While nature slowly re-awakens from its winter slumber, the MED will mostly be celebrated by the flower children left over from the sixties and by the new socialistic-inclined cadre of Agenda 21 proponents. Agenda 21 intends to de-carbonize and to de-industrialize the world to conditions prevailing in the 1800’s, preferably under an UN mandate of world governance. The numerous Agenda 21 goals include the elimination of individuals’ right to property.

April 22nd also happens to be Vladimir Lenin’s birthday — perhaps not coincidentally — as noted by Alan Caruba in a recent post. Comrade’s Lenin promise of “Peace, Bread, and Land” was the initial stage of the collectivization of agriculture as later finalized by Josef Stalin. A more recent example of the collectivization of agriculture was under Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


France: Bayrou: We Need a Technical Government Like Monti

(AGI) Rome — Francois Bayrou said the road to a new government in France is the one drawn out by Mario Monti in Italy. The centrist presidential candidate explained to MoDem: “In France we could have a selected government like yours and for me it is a very interesting experience because it is a technical government of national unity.” “In Italy,” he added, “the three big forces have said ‘we must work together to get out of this situation’ and have put their trust in Monti who must take the necessary decisions. But it is a government that has political support. There is political agreement, even if implicitly. In France, we might decide something similar during the elections.

There is a dangerous bipolarisation that reinforces the weight of the extremists. The right is put under pressure by the extreme right and the left by the far left. The only political force that resists the extremists is the one that I represent before the French people. Neither the left nor the right can get us out of this by themselves.” .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



French Muslims ‘Likely to Vote for Far Left’

Al Jazeera speaks to M’hammed Henniche about the reaction of France’s Muslims to politicians’ preoccupation with Islam.

Le Raincy, France — Throughout the duration of the campaign for France’s presidency, one issue has come up over and over again.

Islam, and whether it has a place in French society, has been a favourite issue of the two right wing candidates, the National Front’s Marine Le Pen and Nicolas Sarkozyof the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). Al Jazeera’s Yasmine Ryan spoke with M’hammed Henniche, head of the Union of Muslim Associations of Seine-Saint-Denis (UAM 93) [Fr], about how all the negative attention had affected Muslim voters in the run up to the first round of voting — to be held on Sunday, April 22.

Yasmine Ryan: Why do you think there has been so much focus on Muslims during the campaign, even before the shootings in Toulouse carried out by Mohamed Merah?

M’hammed Henniche: The problem is that for nearly two years, we [French Muslims] have really been at the centre of the French political conversation. The headlines in all the newspapers for the past two years have been “Muslims, Muslims, Muslims”. It’s difficult to understand why this is the case in France, when there hadn’t been any attacks, there hasn’t been any “French September 11”. The constant television debates on the full veil [the burka or chador] lasted a year. Then they passed the law, and we said: “Fine, even if we do not agree with it, let’s just move on.” Then they said we should not build mosques with minarets, and we said: “That’s fine, we will build mosques without minarets.” Then they continued, saying Muslims were praying in the streets, as if we even want to pray in the streets. That created lots of problems and they passed a law banning praying in the streets.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germany and Islam: Koran Study

Some Germans worry about the distribution of free Korans

THE Gideons in Germany give away 2,000 Bibles a day and nobody complains. The Koran is another matter. A group called the True Religion has handed out 300,000 copies, many from “information stands” in shopping areas. All told, it wants to give away 25m in German-speaking Europe. Intelligence agencies are alarmed; politicians have condemned the plan. The printing firm has even cancelled its contract. “The public pressure was too great,” it explained.

The problem, critics say, is not the gift but the giver. The True Religion espouses Salafism, a fundamentalist branch of Islam. Its leader is Ibrahim Abu Nagie, a Palestinian-born, Cologne-based preacher with intolerant views and a knack for getting others to embrace them. The Cologne prosecutor wanted to try him for inciting violence against Christians and Jews but could prove nothing worse than predictions that they would end in hell. The case was dropped in January.

[…]

The True Religion is seen as a propaganda-based “political” Salafist group, not a violent “jihadist” one. But even the political variant can inspire violence. Arid Uka, who murdered two American soldiers last year, had internet contacts to groups similar to Mr Abu Nagie’s. When the Koran row broke, supporters of its distribution posted a video cursing critical journalists as “apes and pigs”. Fundamentalists are delighted by the shift in attention away from their ideas to their rights. “Where is religious freedom? Where is your democracy?” demands a spokesman in a video posted on the True Religion website. Pro-NRW, an anti-Islam party that is standing in the state election taking place on May 13th, wants to display caricatures of Islam near mosques. That could win the Salafists even more recruits than handing out any number of free Korans.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italian Beer Getting Just Desserts at Home and Abroad

Big brands winning fans overseas, craft-beer scene thriving

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — Italians are not famed for being a nation of great beer makers or drinkers. But Italy’s brewers have developed a proud tradition of producing fine beers over the last 200 years which is finally getting its just desserts at home and abroad. If you had asked people what their favourite Italian drink was a few years ago, for example, the most popular tipples would have been a drop of Chianti or Barolo, or perhaps a tot of a spirit like grappa or amaretto. Nowadays, the answer is increasingly likely to be an ice-cold glass of a beer such as Peroni, Nastro Azzurro or Moretti. On the home front, Italy’s rich variety of crisp, refreshing pale lagers is even starting to rival wine as the nation’s most popular accompaniment when Italians dine out.

Indeed, beer is neck-and-neck with wine as the favourite choice to go with dinner at weekends, according to Italian beer-producers’ association Assobirra. And around two-thirds of that beer is made in Italy, says Assobirra, whose members produce 98% of the nation’s brews. The international success story is impressive too.

Spearheaded by Peroni, which was taken over by London-based brewing giant SABMiller in 2005, Italian beer exports have doubled over the last five years. “For over a century our light lager with a relatively low alcoholic content has accompanied the Italians and this type of beer continues to be the most popular with them,” said Assobirra Director Filippo Terzaghi. “But we are pleased to see that Italian beer is increasingly becoming synonymous with lager abroad too. “Our companies export over 1.7 million hectolitres a year, twice as much as five years ago, and it’s being appreciated more and more in nations with great beer traditions — Great Britain, France and the Netherlands in Europe and countries like the United States, Australia and South Africa further afield. “We hope this trend can continue”. Foreigners are probably most familiar with brands such as Peroni and Nastro Azzurro, which belong to the same group, and Moretti with its distinctive label featuring a mustachioed Alpine gent in a hat. They are all smooth, well-balanced drinks, but there are plenty of other fine ones to enjoy. Menabrea, produced at the northern town of Biella in Piedmont, is one of the best with its distinctive, slightly sour aftertaste that has helped win it a host of international prizes. Another top northern beer is Forst Premium, a zestful brew that its producers from the mostly German-speaking South Tyrol near Austria promise “offers a sense of freshness and joie de vivre”. Other great lagers include Trieste’s Theresianer Premium, Sardinian brew Ichnusa and Friuli-Venezia Giulia’s Castello. All the aforementioned beers are pale lagers, but Italy also produces a big range of dark ‘red’ lagers that have a stronger, more bitter flavor and higher alcoholic content.

Examples include Moretti’s La Rossa, which has a caramelised flavour and the aroma of roasted malt, and Forst’s Sixtus. Italy has a thriving microbrewery scene for those seeking something different too. Good Italian craft beers include Almond 22, whose flavor is enriched by honey and spices, the Baladin company’s Isaac and its punch-packing Elixir, and the herb-hinted Admiral, one of the highlights of the range served by the 32 Via dei Birra brewery. Views of beer are changing so much that some Italian chefs are encouraging Italians to drink it with more dishes than its traditional food partner here — pizza. “I often recommend a lager for cold, more delicate dishes, especially when it’s hot,” said Sandra Salerno, a personal chef and foodblogger. “It can stand up to being paired with salami, Parmesan and other rich cheeses. “I tell the skeptics to try it with artichokes, squid and shrimp and then see what they think”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Venetian ‘Gutenberg’ Hands Down Tradition

Gianni Basso fashions handmade prints using methods of past

(ANSA) — Venice, April 17 — Hugh Grant and Marisa Tomei are appearing together, albeit not in a new Hollywood film. The movie stars are just two of the elite clients whose business cards adorn the Venice shop window of master printer Gianni Basso, the man who fashions handmade prints using the methods and instruments of the Gutenberg era. “I simply don’t like modern electric printers,” he tells ANSA. “They have no soul. To make prints by hands is poetry”.

Perhaps such is the quality that attracted clients like the late Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky and contemporary author Danielle Steele. Basso’s presses and plates are pre-industrial, recalling the 16th century when Aldus Manutius copied numerous works from the Greek and Latin secular canon to type for the first time in history, turning Venice into one of Europe’s great renaissance printing capitals. When he was just 15, Basso studied his craft on the Venetian island of San Lazzaro, known for its printing heritage and the ancient library where Lord Byron studied Armenian in 1816. Thirty years ago, Basso recuperated several presses from the island and elsewhere in Venice and brought them to their current location in the historic Calle del Fumo, or “Alley of Smoke,” a reference to a string of workshops that still line the walkway. In today’s era of mass information, Basso says his clients are interested in the personal, handmade touch he instills in his craft work, something he says is lacking in xerox copies and digital prints. Despite a global recession, and the ever-increasing trend to mechanize and reduce cost, Basso says business is booming. “I don’t even advertise. The quality of my work is what keeps people coming,” he says as he pulls down a series of 35 incised plates from the first printed edition of Pinocchio. The exquisite renderings of Geppetto and Jiminy Cricket, dating to 1880, catch the eye of four visitors who promptly insist on purchasing a series of Pinocchio prints. Basso’s antique workshop on the north side of Venice is charmingly quaint at 30 square meters, barely large enough for his six printers, himself, and his 25-year-old son Stefano, who until two years ago was studying to become a marine biologist. “I liked coming into my father’s shop more than the sea,” he says as he organizes the inverse typeset on his workbench.

“Printing seems to be in my blood,” he adds with a grin. “The poetry continues”. Gianni and Stefano Basso are located at 5306 Calle del Fumo, Venice 30121, Italy.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Ducati to be Sold to Audi, Owners Confirm

Iconic motorcycle company reported to go for 860 million euros

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — The investment fund that controls Ducati confirmed Wednesday that it has reached a deal to sell the Italian motorcycle company to German automobile-maker Audi. Media reports said that Audi and its parent company Volkswagen had agreed to pay 860 million euros to buy the Bologna-based brand from the outgoing owners Investindustrial. “Ducati is known worldwide as a premium brand among motorcycle manufacturers and has a long tradition of building sporty motorcycle,” Audi Chairman Rupert Stadler said in a statement.

“It has great expertise in high-performance engines and lightweight construction, and is one of the world’s most profitable motorcycle manufacturers. That makes Ducati an excellent fit for Audi”.

The motorcycle company was founded by Adriano and Marcello Ducati in Bologna in 1926. It initially built parts for radios and did not move into the two-wheeler market until 1949.

Ducati, who are sometimes seen at motorcycling’s equivalent of Ferrari, employs 1,100 people and sold some 42,000 motorcycles in 2011, generating revenue of around 480 million euros.

Its elite range of machines includes cruisers, supermotos, adventure bikes, naked bikes and superbikes.

The deal makes Ducati Audi’s third Italian operation after it acquired legendary sports carmaker Lamborghini and design enterprise ItalDesign.

Ducati’s sexy image is boosted by its race division, which competes in the MotoGP championship and Superbike World Championship. The team has won the Superbike manufacturers’ championship 17 times and the pilots’ title 14 times.

Ducati won the 2007 MotoGP world title with Australian Casey Stoner but they are struggling in the class at the moment despite the arrival of Italy’s nine-time world champion Valentino Rossi last season.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: More Italian Readers Gather News From Internet

Daily papers suffering losses in earnings and advertising

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — Online news readership shot up 50% between 2009-2011, said a report by the Italian newspaper publishers association FIEG on Wednesday.

In 2011, six million readers preferred to glean their news from papers’ Web editions as compared to four million in 2009.

Daily newspapers still garner 22 million readers, while weekly magazines tally in at 33 million, but dailies suffered a 2.2% drop in earnings and 5.7% drop in advertising.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: N. League’s Bossi Did Not Know of Maroni Dossier

(AGI) Alessandria — Northern League leader Umberto Bossi, when asked if he know of the dossier on Moroni, answered “no”.

Bossi, having just arrived in Alessandria for an electoral appointment added, “If they had asked me before they would have finished sooner, because I knew that Maroni had the boat. I knew where he had it too, he had it in Sicily.” And to those who asked him if he thought there were dossiers on other persons Bossi responded, “I don’t think so. I hope not. I hope the film comes to an end. This is a bad movie, but it is a movie.” “I don’t know,” was Bossi’s answer this evening to the question of whether he would run again for the leadership of the Northern League. “The Federal Council has expelled him. I don’t want to comment.” .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Prosecutors Seize 350, 000 Euro From Northern League Notary

(AGI) Milan — Prosecutors investigating electoral funds have reportedly seized 350,000 euro from Northern League’s the notary in Rovigo. According to reports, the amount seized is part of a 1.2 million euro investment made in Cyprus by the consultant Paolo Scala, also under investigation with the party’s former treasurer Francesco Belsito and entrepreneur Stefano Bonnet. Of that sum, only 850,000 euro were allegedly brought back to Italy. In the meantie, this afternoon prosecutor Paolo Filippini questioned Northern League representative Pierluigi Stiffoni.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Something Smells Funny? Gorgonzola Popularity Spawns Bogus-Zola

As Gorgonzola exports begin to boom, formaggio fraudsters try to get a cut of the action with fake versions of the cheese. One trick is to give the imitation variety a name that has a familiar ring.

All over Europe, the whiff of Gorgonzola is getting stronger and stronger. Thanks to aggressive advertisement campaigns featuring top chefs, sales of the zesty, blue and green-marbled cheese are rising fast. For instance, sales in Poland have increased 82% over the past year…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



UK Cab Company Boss Claims Cyclists Deserve to Die

(AGI) London- UK cab firm boss John Griffin claims cyclists deserve to die. The head of Addison Lee, which has a team of 3,500 drivers, made this inflammatory statement less than 2 weeks before the election for London’s mayor, which will be held on May 3. Mr Griffin has it in for cyclists because, according to him, they are irresponsible and feel that they are above the highway code. His words triggered a heated controversy; last year alone, 16 cyclists were killed in London.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



UK: Langley Green Church Converts to New Mosque

A MUSLIM group has purchased a church — which has now become a mosque.

The building in Langley Drive, Langley Green was used by the Elim Pentecostal Church. It was sold to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Association, with the church moving services to Ifield. The building’s new residents are already using it for prayers — and an open day is being held, as part of plans to make the mosque as welcoming as possible to the whole of the local community. Ahsan Ahmedi said the association took steps to avoid any ill feeling over the change of use. He said: “One of the conditions we asked was it was put in writing that the church was happy for us to use the building as a mosque. Christianity is the main religion in England and it is very important for us not to hurt other people’s religious feelings.”

Simon Newham, team rector of the Ifield parish, said it was not unusual for churches in Crawley to be multi-faith centres. He said: “St Leonard’s in Langley Green is used as a multi-faith centre and we as a parish are involved in an inter-faith group. “There has been a lot of work between religious groups in Crawley for some time. It allows for various cultures and faiths to live together and work together.

“Because we come into contact with different groups we have developed an understanding of differences and similarities.”

Because the building itself is fairly modern there is very little which needs to be done to change it from a church to a mosque. Some subtle adjustments will be made such as new carpets. The church has been paid for by the 150 members of Crawley’s Ahmadiyya community. The open day will be held on May 2 and invites are being sent to neighbours of the new mosque. There will be an exhibition on the day about Islam and the Ahmadiyya faith, a reformist movement founded in India near the end of the 19th century.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim ‘Cultural Sensitivity’ Runs Amok

by Soeren Kern

The largest university in London plans to impose a ban on the sale of alcohol on campus to accommodate the “cultural sensitivity” of its Muslim students. London Metropolitan University’s Vice Chancellor, Malcolm Gillies, says it would be unwise to “cling” to a “nostalgic” view where the vast majority wants alcohol to be available. Instead, he says that he believes the university should take account of diverging views, namely those of Muslims, who now comprise 20% of the university’s 30,000 students. “Many of our students do come from backgrounds where they actually look on drinking as a negative. We therefore need to rethink how we cater for that 21st-century balance,” Gillies declared in an interview. “What we don’t want is the tyranny of a majority view,” he added.

Gillies’ proposals to re-engineer social life on campus have, not surprisingly, generated a mostly negative response from students, many of whom say a ban on alcohol smacks of politically correct pandering run amok. Muslims, too, are unhappy with Gillies. Far from thanking him for his multicultural activism, Muslims say they are “offended” by his “generalizing about their beliefs.” To be sure, London Metropolitan University is not the first institution in Britain to bend over backwards to avoid “offending” Muslims. In fact, hardly a day goes by in which Britons are not surrendering some aspect of their culture and traditions — not to mention their rights of free speech and free expression — in order to make Britain safe for Islam.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The ‘Omnishambles’ And the Power of Political Language

by Allan Massie

“Omnishambles”, appropriated from “The Thick of It” by Ed Miliband to describe the Government, is not a bad word, if a bastard one. Not that anyone cares much about that these days, when there are fewer classically educated pedants about. (They used to deplore television — the word, not the thing, though doubtless that too — because it was a hybrid: tele being Greek, vision Latin.) Omnishambles is a hybrid too, and the words “shambles” has come to mean simply a mess or muddle, and has more or less lost its more vivid meaning of a fleshmarket, slaughterhouse, or place of carnage. But omnishambles is OK. It says neatly what most of us think of most governments. The only wonder is that Ed Miliband dares to use it, thus inviting the suggestion that he should look in the mirror.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UKIP Doesn’t Have a Grassroots and Has to Fight to Keep the Loonies Out. Wavering Tories Should be Careful

by Damian Thompson

The United Kingdom Independence Party is so obsessed with race, immigration and Islam that it might as well merge with the BNP. That’s the opinion of a professor at the London School of Economics. No surprise there, you’re probably thinking. The LSE, like the rest of London University, is crawling with Left-wing dons who suck up to radical Muslims. Of course they hate Ukip, which this week edged into third place in the opinion polls. But hang on a moment. The LSE professor I’m quoting actually founded Ukip. Alan Sked is an expert on the 19th-century Habsburg empire; in 1991 he set up a new party, then called the Anti-Federalist League, as a Eurosceptic alternative to the muddled Tories. It fielded candidates in the 1992 general election and as a result may have cost Chris Patten his seat, a historic achievement by any standards. To cut a long story short, Sked fell out with Ukip after the 1997 election, saying that he’d created a Right-wing monster. He’s stuck to that line ever since. The stuff about Ukip merging with the BNP (“which it increasingly resembles”) comes from a letter to The Times in 2010.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Vatican and Breakaway SSPX Seek Common Ground

By Peter Wensierski in Rome

The Vatican may be close to a deal with the breakaway Society of St. Pius X.

For decades, the ultra-conservative Society of St. Pius X has been on the outside of the Catholic Church and looking in. Now, with Pope Benedict XVI intent on healing the schism, the group — known as SSPX — has written a letter that could pave the way for an agreement.

For the pope’s 85th birthday on Monday, his own brother showed up in Rome empty handed. But the brothers of the controversial Catholic splinter group Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) were more generous. They sent a letter — and its contents may be the greatest gift yet to the papacy of Benedict XVI. The pope has long wanted to heal the schism with the SSPX and bring the conservative followers of the late French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre back into the fold. That hope may now become reality.

The Catholic traditionalist Lefebvre founded the SSPX in 1969 in answer to the reforms pushed through by the Second Vatican Council, also known as Vatican II, earlier that decade. The group has grown to include tens of thousands of followers and hundreds of priests — a “painful wound in the body of the church,” Benedict XVI has said.

Even when SSPX Bishop Richard Williamson made global headlines in 2009 by publicly denying the Holocaust, the pope remained steadfast. Indeed, talks between the Vatican and the SSPX continued a short time later once Williamson, a native of Great Britain, had been marginalized. Now, it looks as though an agreement may be imminent.

Not everyone in the church is likely to be pleased by such a rapprochement. Liberal and left-leaning Catholics have long been opposed to the idea of allowing the SSPX back into the fold, granting them the right to once again consecrate priests and letting them celebrate mass according to the old rites. The Bishops’ Conference of France is likely to protest as well. But the German pope Josef Ratzinger is determined.

Utmost Discretion

The friendly letter from the SSPX to Benedict XVI arrived at the Vatican during Easter. In the Vatican’s Secretariat of State — the source of several documents that were leaked in recent months in the so-called “Vatileaks” scandal — has classified the SSPX letter as secret and the issue is being handled with the utmost discretion. It is only to be made public following the pope’s birthday celebrations.

Sources say that the letter is currently being analyzed. Not everyone within the Secretariat is supportive of Benedict’s desire to reunite with the SSPX. Currently, talks with the St. Pius brothers are focused on several outstanding details as well as the timing of the pending agreement.

Following lengthy negotiations between the Catholic Church and the SSPX regarding a possible reunification, the Vatican had requested a response by Sunday. Specifically, the SSPX was to rethink its strict opposition to the Second Vatican Council — which began 50 years ago this year — as well as “several doctrinal principles and criteria relating to the interpretation of the Catholic doctrine.”

Cardinal William Levada, in his position as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, had communicated the ultimatum to SSPX leader Bishop Bernard Fellay during talks at the Vatican and asked him to once again reexamine its positions.

The new letter is significant in that it seeks to tone down the conflict. Points of disagreement are no longer to be seen in terms of who is “more Catholic” than the other. The letter makes clear that conflicting positions on Vatican II is “not decisive” for the future of the Catholic Church. In short, the Society of St. Pius X is no longer demanding that the Vatican II reforms be repealed…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



We Can’t Reform the European Court of Human Rights, So Let’s End This Nonsense

by Charles Moore

The interminable Abu Qatada affair proves Britain needs to bring home the rule of law.

Yes, there is even a European Convention on the Calculation of Time Limits. And yes, Theresa May, the Home Secretary, acting on poor advice from government lawyers, appears to have misunderstood it. The Convention was drawn up in 1972 by the Council of Europe “to achieve a greater unity between its members, in particular by the adoption of common rules”. It defines the dies a quo and dies ad quem — the start and end of any time-limit. Forty years on, it would seem that the desired unity has still not been achieved, so instead we got the dies irae. Mrs May and her team believed they had pulled off a parliamentary coup on Tuesday — when, she thought, the dies ad quem had passed — by saying she was going to deport Abu Qatada without any more appeals to Strasbourg. Piqued, Strasbourg seems to have hurried to tell Abu Qatada’s lawyers that they did, in fact, have time. His appeal was duly lodged on Wednesday night.

As Mrs May implicitly admitted, the whole thing was a piece of nonsense anyway, since the end of the time-limit would not have meant that all appeals to Strasbourg were automatically ruled out. She was really only looking for good political theatre, and she got it. But on Thursday, it was replayed as farce. All of which makes Westminster-watchers gleeful. What does this say, they ask, about her judgment, about Home Office official competence, dingy legal advisers and an accident-prone Coalition? All such questions are reasonable or, at least, inevitable.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia: Roma People’s Position Improves

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, APRIL 20 — The position of the Roma people in Serbia has improved thanks to the Decade of Roma Inclusion, it was said Friday at the opening of a three-day congress of the World Roma Organization — Romanipen.

“The position of the Roma people in Serbia has significantly improved during the Decade of Roma Inclusion, but I am confident that many members of the Roma population have reasons to be dissatisfied,” said Slavica Denic, the state secretary in the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights, Public Administration and Local Self-Government.

The members of the Roma population can be dissatisfied bearing in mind that there are still unhygienic settlements in Serbia, that few children go to kindergartens and that quite few Roma people are employed, Denic said at the congress held at the Serbian parliament building. However, Serbia can be proud of the improvement in the field of education. Since 2003 the country got more than 1,000 Roma graduates, she underlined.

Denic qualified the congress as important, since it brought together representatives of 25 countries with the aim to exchange experience and find solutions jointly.

President of the World Roma Organization Jovan Damjanovic said that the Decade of Roma Inclusion “has yielded results” in Serbia.

“We have to get to grips with problems and bring about an intellectual Roma revolution,” Damjanovic said. He underlined that there are 12 to 15 million Roma people in Europe, but that they do not have any status.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU Project Offers Training to 1,200 Journalists

‘Media Neighbourhood’ targets 17 neighbouring countries

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, APRIL 17 — The European Commission has officially launched a project aiming to offer world-class training to over 1,200 journalists across 17 EU neighbouring countries and territories over the next three years.

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), ‘Media Neighbourhood’ is implemented by BBC Media Action, which is leading a consortium of international media organisations to deliver journalism training and networking activities. “This — Alice Morrison, Team Leader for Media Neighbourhood said — is a broad and ambitious project. We’ll be offering the opportunity for world-class training to a diverse group of journalists and editors across an enormous geographical area. It is a chance to really make a difference by boosting skills, especially in the areas of media independence and online media”.

A particular focus will be given to freedom of expression and its role in countries engaged in the process of democratisation.

The project has a budget of 4.5 million euros and the consortium delivering it is BBC Media Action, IREX Europe, Fondation AFP, L’Orient-Le Jour, CFI, French Televisions Group, LDK and the Media Development Center. The focus countries are: Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Egypt, Georgia, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Moldova, Morocco, Palestinian Territories, the Russian Federation, Syria, Tunisia and Ukraine.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Woman in Surgery Clinic, Dies After Kidney “Stolen”

Aged 47, dies after serious infection

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, APRIL 17 — A woman admitted to a private clinic for the removal of her gall bladder is said to have had a “kidney” stolen and died a few hours later in a hospital in Oran after her condition worsened. The extraordinary story has been reported in the online edition of the newspaper Le Temps d’Algérie. The 47-year old woman had been admitted to the private clinic in the City to have her gall bladder removed. Her condition gradually deteriorated following the operation and it was decided that she would be transferred to the department of nephrology and urology at the hospital in Oran, where she immediately underwent emergency treatment, which proved unsuccessful.

When doctors at the hospital realised that a kidney had been stolen from the woman (or removed without her knowledge, as an inquiry will now be asked to show), a report was sent to the chief prosecutor of Oran, who was told by relatives of the victim, still in shock at the news of the “theft” of the organ, that the woman had gone to the clinic to have her gall bladder removed after a series of routine tests. The inquiry will not shed light on the incident and, above all, show how the woman’s kidney was “stolen”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Jewish Studies Center, Soon Gay Rabbis in Israel

Stir in Jerusalem among orthodox rabbis

(ANSA) — JERUSALEM, APRIL 20 — A well-known institute for Jewish studies (the Schechter Institute in Jerusalem) established yesterday that homosexual and lesbian students will be allowed to follow studies as early as next year. The decision has immediately caused a controversy.

The innovating current of Judaism, with a strong spirit of modernisation, has much influence in the U.S. but not so much in Israel.

And yet the decision — supported by 17 votes and just one abstention — has found a large group of followers in Jerusalem, where the orthodox establishment continues to see homosexuality as a “repulsive” phenomenon that has to be fought. The orthodox current also opposes the appointment of female rabbis.

Newspaper Haaretz, which carries this story on its front page, specifies that the innovators in Israel agree with the choices that were made years ago by the U.S. branch of Judaism. The two currents, the newspaper continues, were about to break apart, but now the rift seems to be healed. “This is an important development for ‘halacha’ (orthodoxy)” rabbi Mauricio Belter, president of the Council of innovating rabbis in Israel, told the newspaper. “We have all been created in the image of the Lord, and therefore we are all equal.” The religious press expects that these new developments will widen the gap in Israel between Jews that support modernisation (most of them from the U.S. and South America)and the more orthodox rabbinate in Jerusalem.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Bahrain Grand Prix: Protesters Block Roads as Teargas Fired

Anti-government protesters in Bahrain flooded a main highway in a march stretching for miles and security forces fired tear gas in breakaway clashes as the country’s leaders struggle to contain opposition anger ahead of the Grand Prix.

The government allowed the massive Friday demonstration in an apparent bid to avoid the hit-and-run street battles that are the hallmark of the Gulf nation’s 14-month uprising — and an embarrassing spectacle for Bahrain’s Western-backed rulers as F1 teams prepare for Sunday’s race. But violence flared as small groups in the march peeled away from the route to challenge riot police, who answered with volleys of tear gas and stun grenades. Some protesters sought refuge in a shopping mall and nearby shops about 12 miles north of the Formula One track, where practice runs took place and Bahrain’s crown prince vowed the country’s premier international event would go ahead. Last year, a wave of anti-government protests by the island’s Shiite majority and a crackdown by the Sunni rulers forced organisers to cancel the 2011 Bahrain GP.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Islam’s Sacred Geography

by Talmiz Ahmad

A lavishly illustrated coffee table book combines high standards of scholarship to produce the most valuable compendium on the Hajj

Every principal world religion has pilgrimage as a significant tenet. This pilgrimage is central to the “sacred geography” of the faith and provides an opportunity to the believer to traverse this physical space and seek to interact directly with the Divine. Hajj, one of the five pillars of Islam, attracts a few million Muslims every year from all over the world to the town of Mecca, about 70 kilometres from the port city of Jeddah on the Red Sea.

Hajj can be approached in terms of its complex history; the belief system that is its motive force; the journeys that have been undertaken by pilgrims over the last 1,500 years from different parts of the world, and the arrangements made for the hundreds of thousands of pilgrims who congregate at the same time in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina. All these aspects are presented in the book in some detail.

The book begins with an excellent introduction by the distinguished scholar of religion and Islam, Karen Armstrong. She looks at the place of pilgrimage in different religious traditions and points out that all pilgrimages are made up of arcane rituals that have a unique symbolic value for the believer even as they seem “hopelessly archaic” to the outsider. A study of the Hajj, she concludes, will enable us not only to learn about Islam but also “to explore untravelled regions within ourselves”.

[…]

HAJJ — JOURNEY TO THE HEART OF ISLAM

Editor: Venetia Porter

Publisher: Lustre (Roli Books)

Pages: 288

Price: Rs 2,975

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Kuwait: Blasphemer Injured, MPs Demand Probe — Assailant Charged With Attempted Murder

KUWAIT: A prisoner who attacked his cell mate who is jailed for blasphemy now faces attempted murder charges after being referred to the Public Prosecution Department for further actionto be taken, according to news reports received yesterday .

Hamad Al-Naqqi, who has been charges with posting offensive remarks against Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) on Twitter suffered minor injuries on Thursday afternoon after he was attacked with a sharp object. According to a security source, a dispute arose between Al-Naqqi and his attacker when the former refused to join inmates for Al-Asr (afternoon) prayers. The attacker reportedly stabbed him three times before other inmates and security officers stepped in to break up the fight. Al-Naqqi was treated for minor wounds which did not require hospitalization. Meanwhile, the attacker, who was heard repeating the word ‘infidel,’ according to the source, was placed in solitary confinement.

The suspect confirmed the attack during interrogation, saying that he was provoked by the ‘insults’ Al-Naqqi spewed against him during their dispute. He remains in custody pending further action,reported Al-Jarida.

The Ministry of Interior confirmed the incident in a statement released late Thursday. They noted that ‘necessary legal measures’ were taken against the attacker. In the meantime, Al-Naqqi’s attorney Khalid Al-Shatti told Al-Qabas that authorities from the Central Jail refused to meet his client following the attack.

According to a security source, the attacker’s name was present in the list among those benefiting from Amiri amnesty. According to its terms, his original seven year jail term was commuted to three and a half years, adding that the recent incident will surely cost him the amnesty, reported Al-Qabas.

Meanwhile, three Shiite MPs commented on the incident by holding the ministry responsible for the inmate’s safety, and demanded that a complete investigation be held into the case. “The Ministry of Interior should held accountable for the provocation and attempted murder of Hamad Al-Naqqi,” said MP Adnan Al-Mutawa’a . He insisted the fight was not spontaneous. Meanwhile, MP Saleh Ashour demanded that efforts be made to maintain Al-Naqqi’s safety as well as an investigate the reasons behind “why he was placed in the same cell as high risk prisoners,”

In the meantime, MP Abdulhameed Dashty claimed to be in possession of evidence to prove that senior ministry official Khalid Al-Dayeen was responsible issuing orders to transfer Al-Naqqi to the Central Jail “using his connections with extremist MPs,” reported Al-Watan.

           — Hat tip: R [Return to headlines]



Kuwait: Islamists Propose Morality Police

KUWAIT: Six Islamist MPs yesterday submitted a draft law calling for the establishment of a special committee that exclusively deals with public morality crimes. It also calls for a special police force to handle such crimes.

The bill, submitted by MPs Mohammad Hayef, Jamaan Al-Harbash, Osama Al-Munawer, Mohammad Al-Hatlani and Bader Al-Dahoom, proposes setting up a ‘Morality Crime Public Prosecution Department’ under the jurisdiction of an Attorney General to deal with felonies and misdemeanors related to committing public immorality.

It also stipulates the establishment of a special Ministry of Interior (MoI) police department to take legal measures to prevent crimes of public immorality. The department will be headed by a lieutenant-general, who will assisted by a number of officers and policemen, according to the draft law. The bill will be reviewed by National Assembly committees before being put up for voting.

In the explanatory note, the lawmakers said the bill aims at unifying authorities investigating all public morality crimes. Presently, serious morality crimes and felonies are investigated by the public prosecution department while minor crimes are investigated by the Ministry of Interior investigation department. Unifying investigations into these crimes under the public prosecution department is in line with modern legislation, which authorize the public prosecution department to investigate all types of violations.

The lawmakers said the draft law also aims at creating a special department in the MoI to be fully devoted to combating public morality crimes. The bill does not define public morality crimes or name them.

MP Harbash, head of the National Assembly educational committee, said yesterday it has carried out all necessary amendments to the law calling to establish the Jaber University of Technology. The law for the university was approved by the Assembly about two weeks ago in the first reading, but the second and final vote was postponed until the amendments are carried out. The law stipulates the establishment of the Sheikh Jaber University for Science and Technology to specialize in technology.

Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Sabah said yesterday that all questions about the foreign transfers issue have been answered, and that the parliamentary investigation committee will be provided with all of the necessary documents. Opposition MPs accused former Prime Minister, Sheikh Nasser Mohammad Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, of transferring millions of dinars of public funds into his private overseas bank accounts.

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]



Qatar: Soccer Meets Politics at Doha’s Mohammed Abdul Wahhab Mosque

Qatar’s increasing engagement in European soccer and international sport is just one leg in the small Gulf State’s high-risk attempts to position itself as a global player ‘on the right side of history’, James M. Dorsey writes in his analysis on the Gulf State’s growing influence in international sport.

A multi-domed, sand-coloured, architectural marvel, Doha’s newest and biggest mosque, symbolizes both Qatar’s bold storm into the 21st century and the pitfalls that that march entails. It’s not the mosque itself that raises eyebrows but its naming after an 18th century warrior priest, Sheikh Mohammed Abdul Wahhab, the founder of Islam’s most puritan sect. Ironically, the mosque owes its naming to the debate Qatar’s winning of the right to host the 2022 World Cup has sparked. It is a debate that goes to the heart of the energy-rich Gulf state’s identity and the place its ruler, Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al Thani, wants to carve out for his tiny city-state.

The World Cup constitutes a centrepiece of a strategy that seeks to reshape the identity of the world’s only state outside of Saudi Arabia that adheres to Wahhabism, one of Islam’s most austere and restrictive interpretations of Islam; position Qatar as a global player capable of punching above its weight; create opportunities to leverage its enormous wealth in a bid to reduce its reliance on the export of one commodity; and enhance its security by establishing mutually beneficial relations with friend and foe and ensuring that it is at the cutting edge of history.

The sports leg of Qatar’s broader, high-risk geo-political, economic and media strategy — involving the creation of a world class airline, Qatar Airways; Al Jazeera as a cutting edge global broadcaster; a far more liberal interpretation of Wahhabism than that of Saudi Arabia and support for many of the popular uprisings sweeping the Middle East and North Africa — is emerging as a driver of imminent restructuring of the region’s soccer landscape as well as of social change.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia: Narrowing Islam-West Cultural Gap

The two-day seminar, to be organized by the Ministry of Higher Education in collaboration with the King Abdul Aziz University, is another major step in support of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah’s call to promote interfaith and intercultural dialogues as a means to establish world peace.

The discussions on the first day of the seminar today will focus on Arab and Islamic studies at French and European universities. The topic will cover the extent of Arab and Islamic cultures being taught in the universities and institutes of higher learning. It will also discuss intellectual and historical achievements that led to conflicting viewpoints on understanding Arab and Islamic cultures and the emergence of contemporary concepts that did away with the Orientalist approach to understand the Islamic culture.

Another of the seminar’s major topic of discussion is the role of translation in bringing Islamic and Arab thought to Europe. The topic aims to discuss the role of translation in enabling scientific and intellectual contacts between the West and the Arab Islamic East. The topic will also be discussed from the perspective of exchange of knowledge between civilizations. It will also shed light on the important stages of development of the translation movement down the centuries between the two civilizations on the one hand and the intellectual and scientific motivations that led to vast accomplishments in translation on the other. The session will also explore the role played by translation in bringing about close relations and constructive exchange of ideas between the two civilizations, or, to the contrary, the growth of misunderstanding and the clash between the two civilizations.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Russia


ENI, ENEL Start Joint Production of Gas in Siberia

First time ever for fuels, electricity groups

(ANSA) — Rome, April 20 — Italian fuels giant Eni and electricity group Enel have started producing natural gas for the first time in their history, at a field in Siberia.

The Samburskoye arctic field, more than 3,000 km from Moscow, is in the autonomous district of Yamals-Nenets, the world’s biggest gas-production area.

Eni and Enel have sizeable stakes in an Italian-Russian consortium.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Bollywood Star Kidnapped and Beheaded by Two Colleagues

(AGI) London — A tragic end for 26-year-old Bollywood star Meenakshi Thapar, who has been kidnapped, killed and beheaded by two actors who wanted to ask her family for 1.5 million rupee (22,000 Euro) ransom. According to the Daily Telegraph, the young woman was convinced by her two colleagues, 36-year-old Amit Jaiswal and his lover Preeti Surin to join them on a trip to Gorakhpur, a small town along the border between India and Nepal. Here the girl was kidnapped and shut in a hotel room. The victm’s mother managed to put together 60,000 rupees, but the sum was considered insufficient by the kidnappers. The two lovers strangled the girl, then beheaded her, and departed leaving the body and the head in two different places of the small town.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



‘Enforced Disappearances’ Haunt Bangladesh

Over a few horrifying hours one night last December Sabira Islam went from dancing with her husband at a party to frantically searching the streets of Dhaka after he had been abducted. His body was found on the outskirts of the Bangladeshi capital early the next morning — he had been strangled. Nazmul Islam was a local leader of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and his wife is convinced his death was politically motivated. But she says she has lost her faith in Bangladeshi justice: “On the night when my husband was abducted, I went to the police and pleaded with them to find him. But no-one helped us. Even two months after… we don’t have any clue regarding his murder,” Mrs Islam says.

Nazmul Islam’s murder was not an isolated incident. Human rights groups say it is just one of a growing number of “enforced disappearances and secret killings” in Bangladesh. Almost four months on and the anger over disappearances is intensifying in Bangladesh. The main opposition has called for a countrywide strike on Sunday to protest against the disappearance of a senior leader in Dhaka a few days ago.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



For India’s Central Government, The Enrica Lexie Was in International Waters

A Kerala High Court lawyer confirms that the Indian government has submitted a note to the Supreme Court saying that Kerala state police did not have the authority to stop the oil tanker or arrest the Italian marines. In his response, Kerala’s Chief Minister said, “We took every action after consulting the central government. The incident took place inside our territory. We have all rights to take action.”

Kochi (AsiaNews) — Italian oil tanker Enrica Lexie was not in Indian territorial waters at the time of the incident that claimed the lives of two Indian fishermen, the Indian government said in a note submitted to the Supreme Court of India. Kerala High Court lawyer Vincent Panikulangara confirmed the report to AsiaNews.

In its submission, Indian authorities explained that Kerala police did not have authority over the Italian oil tanker, or jurisdiction to investigate the incident.

In his response, Kerala Chief Minister Oomen Chandy, said, “We took every action after consulting the central government. The incident took place inside our territory. We have all rights to take action.”

For the lawyer, “The whole affair comes down to one factor, namely location, where was the ship was when the fishermen were killed?”

“If the Supreme Court accepts the central government’s argument, the marines will not have to face a trial under our law,” he told AsiaNews. “However, we will know more about it only later.”

In the meantime, Italian authorities and the families of the dead fishermen reached an out-of-court settlement. Italy will pay 10 million rupees for each victim (€ 145,000, US$ 190,000).

“This financial agreement is not the ‘right thing to do,’ but is part of the legal process,” Panikulangara explained. “Only civil cases launched by a victim’s next of kin, like in this case, can be settled out of court.” (GM)

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Indian Attorney Supports Italy’s Claim in Shooting Case

‘Police lacked authority in international waters’

(ANSA) — New Delhi, April 20 — An Indian state attorney on Friday said police in southern India did not have proper jurisdiction to block an Italian tanker after the shooting deaths of two Indian fishermen, allegedly by two Italian marines on anti-pirate watch aboard the vessel.

“It did not have the authority because the incident occurred in international waters,” said the attorney arguing at the Indian supreme court in New Delhi. The argument supports the position of Italy, which claims it should have jurisdiction for the case, not India, as the incident took place aboard an Italian vessel in international waters.

Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone have been at the centre of a diplomatic row between the countries since being detained in February after an incident that took place while they were guarding the Enrica Lexie tanker. The pair are being held in a special section of a jail in the city of Thiruvananthapuram.

The Italian government also believes that, regardless of who has jurisdiction, the marines should be exempt from prosecution in India as they were military personnel working on an anti-piracy mission.

Italy has said the marines fired warning shots from the Enrica Lexie after coming under attack from pirates.

It said they followed the proper international procedures for dealing with pirate attacks, which are frequent in the Indian Ocean.

The Indian authorities, on the other hand, said the marines failed to show sufficient “restraint” by opening fire after mistaking the fishermen for pirates.

Indian ballistic experts said earlier this month that the bullets recovered from the bodies of fishermen are compatible with Beretta rifles confiscated from the Enrica Lexie.

Italy has said it would like another ballistics test. photo: Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



India: Hindu Radicals Use the Law to Persecute Christians in Andhra Pradesh

The Indian state does not have any anti-conversion law, but enforces three ordinances that ban non-Hindus from proselytising near Hindu temples. A Pentecostal clergyman could go to jail because of calendars found in his possession. Meanwhile, a court convicts 11 Christians on forced conversion charges that date back to 2007.

Mumbai (AsiaNews) — Even without anti-conversion laws, ultranationalist Hindus have a legal tool to persecute Christians, said Sajan George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC), namely the Worship or Prayer (Prohibition) Ordinance of 2007, which empowers the State to prohibit propagation of other religions in particular places of worship or prayer than the religion traditionally practiced there. Recently, a group of activists from the Rashtriya Sawayamsevak Sangh (RSS) used it to demand the arrest of Rev Ahron, a Pentecostal pastor accused of trying to convert Hindus near the Hindu temple in the city of Dharmapuri.

On Monday, the clergyman was visiting the city to meet Kople Easwar, a member of the state’s legislative assembly. As he waited for his friend, a group of Hindu radicals saw him and the pocket calendars he carried.

After attacking him, they forced him to hand over the calendars and dragged him to a police station, where they filed a complaint against him on the basis of Government Order 746, which bans propaganda by other religions near the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams temple and 19 other Hindu temples across the country.

For the GCIC president, these ordinance and orders “violate rights protected by the Indian constitution.” For this reason, the “chief minister of Andhra Pradesh should change them.”

On a related story, a local court convicted 11 Christians from the village of Kyatamballi on the basis of these rules on charges of forced conversions that go back to 2007.

Two of the accused received a 20-month sentence and 5,000-rupees (US$ 100) fine. The other nine were given a 12-month sentence and a 2,000-rupee fine (US$ 45) each. (NC)

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Latest Attack Damages Mosque in W. Java

A crowd of around 150 people from various Islamic organizations, including local residents, reportedly vandalized on Friday the only mosque left for Ahmadiyah followers in Singaparna, Tasikmalaya, still used to hold their prayers. The attack was reported to have taken place around 10 a.m. Ahmadis Enda Juanda said the situation was tense from around 9 a.m. as the crowd began to assemble and some began wearing white and green robes. “They shouted and yelled, but only at the start, before they eventually started throwing rocks, shattering glass windows, and breaking into the mosque,” Enda told The Jakarta Post by phone. Enda was inside the mosque with fellow Ahmadis Didi, while around 25 others were watching the attack from outside the mosque. He said the crowd burned carpets and praying mats. He fled with Didi when the attackers tried to chase them. “I knew I had to save my life. I’m sure there is nothing wrong with my faith,” said Enda.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Cameroon: Army Deployed Against Poachers

(AGI) Yaounde’ — The Cameroon government deployed the army against the poachers hunting in the Bouba Ndjida National Park.

Some 120 soldiers will be added to the park rangers interdicting the entrance of poacher illegally crossing from bordering Sudan and Chad. The troop deployment is part of a plan — which includes better water and vegetation management — to protect the elephants and avoid their migration toward non protected areas.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Gabon/OIC: Information Ministers From OIC Member States Issue a Final Communique at the End of the 9th Icim

LIBREVILLE (Gabon),29 Jumad Al-Awwal/20 April (IINA)-Concluding the 9th session of the Islamic Conference of Information Ministers (ICIM) Friday in Libreville, Gabon, the Ministers or their representatives from 57 member States of the Organization of the Islamic Cooperation (OIC),issued the following final communiqué:

I. At the kind invitation of the Republic of Gabon, the 9th Session of the Islamic Conference of Information Ministers (ICIM) under the theme “Information Technologies in the Service of Peace and Development” was held in Libreville, Republic of Gabon on 19 and 20 April, 2012 under the distinguished patronage of H. E. Ali Bongo ONDIMBA, President of the Republic of Gabon.

[…]

VII) The Secretary General of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, delivered a statement which he started by expressing profound gratitude to the Republic of Gabon and the wise leadership of His Excellency President Ali Bango Andimbam who continued on the path of his late father El Haji Omar Bango in the fields of development, reform and progress which has made the Republic of Gabon a modern and prosperous country. He lauded the efforts of the Republic of Gabon in making excellent arrangements for the 9th Session of the ICIM. The Secretary General stressed the continuous support of the OIC for the question of Palestine and Al-Quds Al-Shareef which is a top priority for the OIC. He condemned the judaization of the city of Al-Quds, the construction of Israeli settlements and the continued unjust blockade of the Gaza Strip which flout all international laws. The Secretary General touched upon the issue of Islamophobia which fuelled by misconceptions about Islam and Muslims and incites hatred and discrimination against them on religious and ethnic grounds. He emphasized the initiatives of the OIC and the UN in this regard. He underscored the need to come out with innovative ideas for the restructuring the International Islamic News Agency (IINA) and the Islamic Broadcasting Union (IBU) which represent OIC’s media arm. On the other hand, the Secretary General insisted on the need to attach special importance to the African continent from the media, commending the proposals made to the session in this regard. The Secretary General called upon the Member States to support the different other draft resolutions submitted to the session for consideration.

[…]

XIV) The Conference noted the utmost importance of the recommendation made by the Kingdom of Morocco on Countering Defamation of Religions and called on OIC Member States to support tabling the proposal at the UN so that a draft recommendation could be adopted calling on all States to respect the image of religions in all the various media and not to cause prejudice to religious symbols and sanctuaries, in demonstration of Islamic solidarity.

[…]

XVI) The Conference discussed and lauded the proposal submitted by the OIC General Secretariat upon the request of the Islamic Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (ISESCO) on the adoption of the “Draft Course in Training Journalists to Counter Stereotypes about Islam and Muslims in Western Media”. It called upon the Member States to implement the course in coordination with the OIC General Secretariat and ISESCO.

[…]

XX) The ICIM praised the efforts exerted by the OIC Secretary General and the close coordination with the authorities concerned in the Republic of Gabon in order to ensure that the conference is held under the best conditions possible, which in turn ensured its anticipated success to further serve joint Islamic media action.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: R-E-V-E-A-L-E-D! How Boko Haram Import Arms From Apapa Wharf, Borno

DETERMINED to consolidate and perpetrate their reigns of terror in the northern states of the country against all known security apparatus put in place by the federal government, members of the Islamic fundamentalist sect otherwise known as Boko Haram, now move their arms and ammunition from one state to another in petrol tankers. Crime Guard authoritatively scooped that the group also uses designated mosques as their armory. According to sources, most of the sect’s weapons entered the country through the Apapa Wharf and the northern borders of Chad, Mali and Niger Republic and are evacuated into tankers with the alleged assistance of some members of the authorized security agents at these borders suspected to be members of the group.

Camels to the rescue

The tankers would normally sail through all checkpoints until they get to their destination where the contents are again evacuated into designated mosques. Camels are said to be equally used in this movement of arms and ammunition. Sources said a curious policeman attached to Wuronu Division in Borno state stopped some of these beasts of burden normally loaded with grains coming into the country through these northern borders only to discover l54 ammunition and two AK 47 Assault riffles carefully hidden in babaringa of two members of the sect escorting the camels. Both the animals and the sect members were arrested and have been transferred to the Force headquarters, Abuja for further investigation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Wal-Mart Hushed Up Vast Mexico Bribery Case After Top-Level Struggle

An investigation by The New York Times examines a vast bribery case by Wal-Mart in Mexico and describes a prolonged struggle within the company that pitted its much publicized commitment to the highest moral and ethical standards against its relentless pursuit of growth.

Wal-Mart became aware of the situation in Mexico from a former executive, who explained how the company’s Mexican division had orchestrated a campaign of bribery to win market dominance. But instead of deciding to expand an internal investigation, Wal-Mart’s leaders decided to shut it down.

[Return to headlines]

Immigration


Greece: Reception Centre to Open in Next Few Days

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 20 — The first Greek reception centre for illegal immigrants will open in the next few days in the area of Amigdalesa in the outskirts of Athens. The Greek minister for citizens’ protection Michalis Chrisochoidis gave the news at the end of a meeting with the Finnish interior minister Paivi Rasanen and Ilkka Laitinen, Executive director of Frontex, the European agency for border control. A memorandum between Greece and Frontex was signed during the meeting which signals the cooperation between both parts and the support from the EU with regards to border control in Greece.

“The first reception centre” said Chrisochoidis “will be able to host about 1,000 people. Their transfer will be initiated at the start of next week.” The centre in Amigdalesa is situated nearby the Greek police officers’ school. “We want to prove there’s no risk involved for anyone and that we all have to support this effort in order to solve the problems which arise from immigration” the minister concluded.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Illegal Immigrant Raped Young Woman Three Years After Judge Ordered Him to be Deported the 33-Year-Old Raped the Woman Twice and Battered Her So Severely She Had 17 Injuries

The Home Office came under fire yesterday when it emerged an illegal immigrant brutally raped a young woman — three years after a judge ordered him to be deported.

Abdikarim Abbas Abdisamad, 33, originally from Somalia, befriended a 24-year-old woman in a nightclub claiming he had just lost his job and was penniless.

The victim took pity on Abdisamad and invited him to her home where he raped her twice and battered her so severely she suffered 17 separate injuries.

He was jailed for ten years after being convicted of rape at Coventry Crown Court on Monday.

But during the hearing, it emerged Abdisamad was already a convicted criminal and a judge had ordered his deportation in 2009 when he was jailed for six months for grievous bodily harm.

But he was allowed to remain in Britain because of his immigration status and civil war in his home country of Somalia.

Now bungling Home Office officials are working to finally deport him.

Alp Mehmet, vice-chairman of Migration Watch, said: ‘Anyone who doesn’t have the right to be here who has been told to get out should leave and leave quickly.

‘In essence I would say that those who have no right to be here and who have been sentenced for horrific crimes should go quickly.

‘Unfortunately we do have to abide by certain agreements. We should do rather more to change the attitudes and rules and regulations that prevent some people being deported.

‘I think there are far too many obstacles put in our way that need to be removed.’

Abdisamad, who gave the court an address in London, was in the country on a working visa.

The Home Office say that to deport a criminal, certain criteria needed to be met and in Abdisamad’s case that had not happened.

But they refused to reveal what part of his immigration status prevented his removal.

A spokesman said: ‘We always seek to remove foreign offenders convicted of a serious crime once they have been punished.

‘That is why we removed more than 4,500 of them last year.

‘Removal can be a challenging process and we have to operate within the law.’

Abdisamad’s rape victim suffered a broken cheekbone and several deep cuts — requiring stitches after the attack.

He was arrested in October after police used items left in his victim’s home in Coventry to trace him to a location in London.

Det Con Sunita Sharma, from Coventry Public Protection Unit, said: ‘To see this man be given such a long custodial sentence is extremely satisfying for both his victim and those of us who have investigated the case and supported her throughout.

‘The young lady thought he was a genuine guy, down on his luck and unaware of what fate lay in store.

‘She has been left afraid to stay in her own home and unable to trust her own judgement or any man again.

‘I hope this sentence offers some relief to the victim, and we admire her courage in speaking up to bring her attacker to justice.’

Abdisamad, who admitted one count of rape but was found not guilty of another, was also put on the sex offender’s register for life.

A count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm was ordered to lie on file.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Irish Government TD (Member of Parliament) Blames ‘Fornication’ For Unwanted Pregnancies

‘Unwanted pregnancies caused by fornication’

A Government TD has blamed “fornication” as the single biggest cause of unwanted pregnancies and questioned what damage the sale of condoms has done to society.

Mayo TD Michelle Mulherin’s comments came as she and coalition colleagues voted down a private members bill to allow abortion in Ireland to save the life of the expectant mother.

The constituency colleague of Enda Kenny shocked observers as she claimed women did not own their own sexuality in the same manner that men did. She raised questions about whether the legalising of homosexuality had been damaging to society.

Ms Mulherin stood over her comments last night and said she had received massive response, both positive and negative.

The proposed bill brought by Independent TDs to offer abortion in limited cases to avert risk to pregnant women’s lives was defeated by 111 to 20 votes.

Ms Mulherin said the legislation could not just be passed because of “sad stories” about women who had procedures. She welcomed the chance to speak on “a very sensitive issue, particularly for women because women do not own their own personal physical integrity and sexuality in the same manner that men do”.

She said she was against abortion in any form.

Ms Mulherin went further and questioned what changes to society had arisen from the legalising of the sale of condoms and their sale from vending machines.

“Moreover, how destructive was that change, if at all, given these were foundations of our religious beliefs in the past? Homosexuality is yet another example of this,” she said.

“Abortion as murder, and therefore sin, which is the religious argument, is no more sinful from a scriptural point of view than all other sins we do not legislate against, such as greed, hate, and fornication; the latter — fornication — being probably the single most likely cause of unwanted pregnancies in this country.”

When contacted last night, the first-time TD stood over her remarks: “I was basically asking has that been destructive or has it not. How has society brought us to this point?”

She said her speech was about opening debate about abortion and sexuality.

“I don’t have a problem about the legalising of homosexuality. I’m putting the questions out there.”

Socialist Party TD Clare Daly had launched the bill this week, saying the State had failed to legislate for the X court case in 1992, where judges ruled abortion was legal where a pregnancy posed a real and substantial risk to a woman’s life.

It was a “ludicrous suggestion” that passing the bill would “open the floodgates” and lead to abortion on demand, Ms Daly claimed.

Coalition partners Labour and Fine Gael voted it down, saying ministers would await the outcome of an expert group. Fianna Fáil also opposed the bill while a number of Independents refrained from voting. Rebel Labour party member and TD Patrick Nulty voted in favour of the bill.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Why Hate Speech Should Not be Banned

by Kenan Malik

I gave an interview last year to Peter Molnar for a book on the regulation of hate speech that he was editing with Michael Herz. The book comes out of a series of conferences and seminars organised by New York’s Cardozo School of Law and the Central European University in Budapest. (I presented a paper at a seminar in Budapest). Other contributors include Jeremy Waldron, Ronald Dworkin, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Nadine Strossen and Bhikhu Parekh. The book is finally published this month under the pithy title of The Content and Context of Hate Speech: Rethinking Regulation and Responses . And here is the interview.

Molnar: Would you characterize some speech as ‘hate speech’, and do you think that it is possible to provide a reliable legal definition of ‘hate speech’?

Kenan Malik: I am not sure that ‘hate speech’ is a particularly useful concept. Much is said and written, of course, that is designed to promote hatred. But it makes little sense to lump it all together in a single category, especially when hatred is such a contested concept.

In a sense, hate speech restriction has become a means not of addressing specific issues about intimidation or incitement, but of enforcing general social regulation. This is why if you look at hate speech laws across the world, there is no consistency about what constitutes hate speech. Britain bans abusive, insulting, and threatening speech. Denmark and Canada ban speech that is insulting and degrading. India and Israel ban speech that hurts religious feelings and incites racial and religious hatred. In Holland, it is a criminal offense deliberately to insult a particular group. Australia prohibits speech that offends, insults, humiliates, or intimidates individuals or groups. Germany bans speech that violates the dignity of, or maliciously degrades or defames, a group. And so on. In each case, the law defines hate speech in a different way.

One response might be to say: Let us define hate speech much more tightly. I think, however, that the problem runs much deeper. Hate speech restriction is a means not of tackling bigotry but of rebranding certain, often obnoxious, ideas or arguments as immoral. It is a way of making certain ideas illegitimate without bothering politically to challenge them. And that is dangerous.

[…]

PM: What do you think about proposals for restricting defamation of religion?

KM: It is as idiotic to imagine that one could defame religion as it is to imagine that one could defame politics or literature. Or that the Bible or the Qur’an should not be criticized or ridiculed in the same way as one might criticize or ridicule The Communist Manifesto or On the Origin of Species or Dante’s Inferno.

A religion is, in part, a set of beliefs — about the world, its origins, and humanity’s place in it — and a set of values that supposedly derive from those beliefs. Those beliefs and values should be treated no differently to any other sets of beliefs, and values that derive from them. I can be hateful of conservatism or communism. It should be open to me to be equally hateful of Islam and Christianity.

Proponents of religious defamation laws suggest that religion is not just a set of beliefs but an identity, and an exceptionally deeply felt one at that. It is true that religions often form deep-seated identities. But, then, so do many other beliefs. Communists were often wedded to their ideas even unto death. Many racists have an almost visceral attachment to their beliefs. Should I indulge them because their views are so deeply held? And while I do not see my humanism as an identity with a big ‘I’, I would challenge any Christian or Muslim to demonstrate that my beliefs are less deeply held than theirs.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120420

Financial Crisis
» Can Italy be Far Behind?
» Greece: Tourism Revenues Fall 17.5% in Jan-Feb
» Greece: Private Islands Sold for Bargain Prices
» Spanish PM: ‘We Have No Money for Health or Education’
» Speculation Has Pushed up Spread Says EU
 
USA
» CAIR-PA ‘Concerned’ About Temple Univ Anti-Islam Hate Event
» Judge Sets Bail at $150,000 for Shooter in Trayvon Martin Case
» Stakelbeck: Media Matters vs. Christianity and Israel
 
Canada
» How the American and Canadian Far Left Won the Release of Terrorist Killer Omar Khadr
 
Europe and the EU
» EU Delays Vote on Labeling Oil Sands Oil Dirty
» France 2012: Sarkozy-Hollande, Socialist Candidate Ahead
» Italy: Diamonds Were Bought by Stiffoni and Rosy Mauro
» Italy: Berlusconi Calls House Parties ‘Burlesque Shows’ Not Sex
» Italy: Carabinieri Report Northern League Paid Calderoli’s Rent
» Ministers Ponder Creation of EU Super-President
» Norway: Breivik Studied Terror on Internet
» Norwegian Far-Right Extremist Anders Behring Breivik Used the Internet to Learn How to Carry Out a Bombing-and-Shooting Rampage, Studying Attacks by Al-Qaeda, Oklahoma Bomber Timothy McVeigh and the 1993 Bombing of the World Trade Centre.
» Norwegian Gunman Describes Hunting Down Teenagers
» Scotland: Coastguard Helicopter Pilot Suspended Over Orkney Butcher Trip
» UK: “After Such Knowledge, What Forgiveness?”
» UK: Lords Proposed Move to Salford Meets With Cautious Optimism
» UK: New Director Hired to Improve Student Life at University of East London
» UK: Tower Hamlets Mayor Rahman’s Candidate Beats Labour in Spitalfields by-Election
» UK: The Scandalous Lies of Hope Not Hate
» Young Israel’s New Love Affair With Germany
 
North Africa
» Tens of Thousands Protest Military Rule in Egypt
» Tunisia: 500 Million Dollar Loan From Qatar
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Palestine: Quartet and UNESCO in Head-on Collision
 
Middle East
» Caroline Glick: The Elephant of Jew Hatred
» Qatar Holding Seals Costa Smeralda Deal
» Sri Lanka Woman Accused of Sorcery Could be Beheaded in Saudi Arabia
» Syria: First Assad Report to ICC for Crimes Against Humanity
» Yemen: CIA Wants Free Rein in Use of Drones Against Terror
 
South Asia
» Families of Imprisoned Marines Visit Indian Jail
» Sri Lankans Protest Mosque in Buddhist Sacred Area
» ‘The Asian Arms Race is Starting to Look Ominous’
 
Australia — Pacific
» Cola ‘Contributed to Woman’s Death’
 
Latin America
» The Tab for U.N.’s Rio Summit: Trillions Per Year in Taxes, Transfers and Price Hikes
 
Immigration
» EU States Slam Swiss for Immigrant Worker Caps
» France Moves to Bring Back Border Checks
» Franco-German Schengen Proposal: A Vote of No Confidence in Europe
» Put Qatada on a Plane and Quit the European Court
» Sweden: Two Arrested for Asylum Home Male Gang Rape
» The Sun Says: Abu Bye-Bye
 
Culture Wars
» Genocidal Green Quotes

Financial Crisis


Can Italy be Far Behind?

What is going on in the Eurozone impacts, and will continue to some perhaps significant degree impact, everywhere else. Two recent articles, reported that on April 17 The International Monetary Fund released its 2012/2013 forecast for Italy. That forecast is reported as targeting:

  • Italy’s deficit as a % of output at 2.4% and 1.5% in 2012 and 2013 respectively, as contrasted with the Italian Government’s current forecasts of 1.6% in 2012 and a balanced budget in 2013;
  • Italy’s public debt, said to be 2nd highest to Greece in the Eurozone, at 123.4% in 2012, and 123.8% in 2013;
  • Italy’s economy to shrink by 1.8% in 2012, and by a further 0.3% in 2013;
  • Italy’s ‘primary balance’, being the budget balance excluding debt service costs, at +3.0% and +4% of GDP in 2012 and 2013 respectively, as contrasted to higher recent Italian Government targets of 3.4% and 4.9% respectively; and,
  • Italy’s ‘tax burden’, being fiscal revenues expressed as a % of GDP, at 48.3% and 49.0% of GDP in 2012 and 2013 respectively, as contrasted to lower the recent Italian Government target of 43.8% in both years.

Only about three months ago, shortly before Greece Sovereign Debt was restructured, I began to warn about Spain as the next Eurozone country to focus on. That has turned out to be ‘all the news’, and reports abound every day on Spain’s:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Tourism Revenues Fall 17.5% in Jan-Feb

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 20 — Revenues from tourism services in Greece declined by a considerable 17.5% in the first couple of months of 2012 year-on-year, according to data released on Thursday by the Bank of Greece and reported by daily Kathimerini. This is attributed to the 11.1% drop in foreign arrivals in January and February that left even popular resorts emptier than usual. There was also a 26.1% slump in Greeks’ travel expenditure abroad, the data showed. The country’s Central Bank further said that the current account deficit shrank by 44.1% year-on-year, dropping from 4.65 billion euros to just 2.6 billion in the first two months of 2012. There was also a net outflow in direct investment, amounting to 305 million euros.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Private Islands Sold for Bargain Prices

Owners forced to sell due to high taxes

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — After a 3-year period without any activities, sales in the exclusive sector of Greek private islands saw a sharp increase. Experts active in this peculiar market, as newspaper Kathimerini recently reported, say that several owners, particularly those who have hired the islands, are trying to get rid of them because of the high taxes that were recently introduced by the government. As a consequence, prices have fallen substantially and owners are willing to give interesting discounts. This is also true in the case of the presumed sale of Oxia, an island that is owned by the Greek-Australian Stamoulis family, to a member of the royal household of Qatar. The island has a surface area of around 500 hectares (half the size of Capri) and was initially put on sale for 6.9 million euros. But the final sale price is said to be less than 5 million euros. The island is situated in the Ionian Sea, 38km from Itaca, the Homeric island of Ulysses.

Part of Oxia falls under the protection of environmental organisation Natura 2000 but the rest of the island is open for tourism development. Another sale, well-informed sources say that about to be concluded, regards the island of Patroclo, just 3km away from Cape Sounion, the beautiful promontory 70km south-east of Athens. Patroclo has a surface area of 260 hectares (half the size of Oxia) but, because of its position near the capital, the airport and the Greek coast (from which it receives drinking water), has an immense potential for tourism development and an official price of 150 million euros. The same sources add that the owner of the island (the Giatrakos family) are currently working together with a Canadian investor and the Greek authorities to find out exactly what part of Patroclo can be developed commercially. But earlier attempts to sell the island failed due to a lack of planning for the island’s use and building as well as the presence of several archaeological sites. The Giatrakos family are reportedly doing all they can to solve the existing problems and to find the island a new owner. The sale of another island has also encountered obstacles.

This island, Skorpios, is currently owned by Athina Onassis, granddaughter of the magnate Aristotle who bought it in 1963 for 15 million USD. Aristotle Onassis, his son Alexander and daughter Cristina (mother of Athina) lie buried on the island, which is situated in the Ionian Sea off the coast of Lefkada.

Earlier it was rumoured that Skorpios would sell the island for more than 200 million dollars and that Bill Gates was interested in buying it. In September 2010 Giorgio Armani denied having bought the island for 150 million euros. It is said that Athina Onassis wants to get rid of the island for financial reasons. But well-informed sources told the newspaper that the transaction was difficult because of a clause in the testament of her grandfather that forbids the sale of the island. The clause only allows it to be sold if its maintenance becomes impossible, which the Onassis heir now claims to be the case. Considering these legal complications, Athina’s lawyers are now reportedly studying the option of leasing the island to an investor for a period of 99 years.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spanish PM: ‘We Have No Money for Health or Education’

Spain has approved €10 billion of spending cuts and higher fees for education and health in a bid to show investors it is getting its deficit under control. Speaking on the eve of the cabinet decision on Friday (20 April), centre-right Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said he does not have enough money.

“It’s necessary, imperative because at this moment there is no money to pay for public services … There’s no money because we have spent so much over the last few years. So we have to do this so that in the future we can get out of this situation,” he told national media. Rajoy said people will have to pay “just a few euros a month” more for medication than they do now. The wealthy will pay more than the poor, while those who do not have a job and do not qualify for state aid will be exempt.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Speculation Has Pushed up Spread Says EU

‘Confident’ about Italy’s ability to cope with debt crisis

(ANSA) — Brussels, April 20 — Short-term market speculation has pushed the spread between Italian and German bonds above 400 points, an EU spokesman said Friday.

The EU remains “confident” about Italy’s ability to cope with the eurozone debt crisis, he added.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


CAIR-PA ‘Concerned’ About Temple Univ Anti-Islam Hate Event

Muslim civil rights organization supports students challenging hate speech

PHILADELPHIA, April 19, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Philadelphia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Philadelphia) today expressed concern about the hostile learning environment that may result from an upcoming event at Temple University featuring a speaker who claims Islam is a “poison to a society” and others who are leaders of organizations designated as anti-Muslim hate groups and who were cited by Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik.

SEE: Occupy Activists to Protest Anti-Muslim Event at Temple bit.ly/JgR5DL

The April 23 “Islamic Apartheid Conference” features Nonie Darwish, a notorious Islamophobe who has stated that Islam must be “annihilated.” In a video of Darwish speaking at a protest in Florida, she states: “Islam is a poison to a society. . .Islam should be feared, and should be fought, and should be conquered, and defeated, and annihilated, and it’s going to happen. Ladies and gentlemen, Islam is going to be brought down. . .Because Islam is based on lies and it’s not based on the truth. I have no doubt whatsoever that Islam is going to be destroyed.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Judge Sets Bail at $150,000 for Shooter in Trayvon Martin Case

Judge Kenneth R. Lester Jr. of Seminole County Circuit Court set bail at $150,000 for George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer who was arrested last week in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin. The judge also set conditions, including a curfew, on his release.

Mr. Zimmerman will not be released from jail on Friday. The judge said that he wanted to make sure security measures were in place for Mr. Zimmerman, who has received death threats.

[Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck: Media Matters vs. Christianity and Israel

The influential left-wing group Media Matters has a direct line to the White House and mainstream media.

Yet the group’s attacks on Christian organizations have been well-documented.

Now CBN has obtained an IRS document showing that Media Matters’ anti-Christian agenda is part of its very foundation.

My new report examines that and Media Matters’ anti-Israel rhetoric.

Click the link above to watch.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]

Canada


How the American and Canadian Far Left Won the Release of Terrorist Killer Omar Khadr

Breitbart’s Awr Hawkins is right on the money when he writes that …”the Obama administration is pushing the deal” to transfer convicted al-Qaida terrorist and American soldier killer Omar Khadr from Guantanamo to Canada, where he can be out on the streets on parole as soon as next year.

But it’s more chilling than even that: The return of Khadr to Canada by the end of next month is proof positive that the far left in the U.S. works— successfully—hand in hand with the far left in Canada with a Barack Obama now in the White House.

From the get-go, left wing politicians, their fellow traveller celebrities and the mainstream media portrayed convicted killer Khadr as a “child soldier”, and on Nov. 19, 2007, in a CBS newscast, as an “obedient son”. In a video showing the then 16-year-old being interviewed by Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) agents in Guantanamo Bay in February, 2003, the weeping teen begged the agents, “Promise you’ll protect me from the Americans”. (CFP, July 15, 2008).

It showed on hidden camera how the vulnerable victim act was dropped the moment Khadr realized that the Canadian agents weren’t there to help, but to fish information.

[…]

And now convicted terrorist and killer Omar Khadr is coming home to Toronto to a family aptly described by his brother Abdurahman as “an al Qaeda family”.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


EU Delays Vote on Labeling Oil Sands Oil Dirty

The European Commission will delay asking members to approve a measure that would label oil from oil sands as worse for climate change than crude oil — a proposal that had been vigorously opposed by Canada, where such oil is produced.

The Commission will ask the EU’s 27 environment ministers to vote on the measure early in 2013 rather than this June, Isaac Valero-Ladron, a spokesman for EU Commissioner for Climate Action Connie Hedegaard, said Friday.

In the interim, the Commission, the EU’s executive arm, will study the proposed fuel quality law’s impact on business and markets, as some EU countries had requested.

The delay reflects an attempt to build support for a proposal that has been the subject of intense lobbying by Canadian officials, and the recipient of only shaky support within the European Union. In February, an EU committee failed to reach a definite decision on the measure, neither approving it nor killing it.

“The idea is to present members an even more solid basis for decision,” Valero-Ladron said of the study. Canada’s minister of natural resources, Joe Oliver, welcomed the proposed review and said Canada would cooperate with it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France 2012: Sarkozy-Hollande, Socialist Candidate Ahead

According to last polls 2 days before vote

(ANSAmed) — PARIS — A few hours ahead of the election silence imposed on the eve of the first round of the presidential election on Sunday, polls are being furiously unleashed and scenarios imagined in France, with the two favourites — Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande — preparing to go head to head.

The Socialist challenger has consolidated his advantage over Sarkozy, according to a poll by BVA, which puts him at 30% of voter intentions, against 26.5% for the outgoing President.

The National Front’s Marine Le Pen and the far-left Front de Gauche party’s Jean-Luc Melenchon have been left behind on 14%. Projections suggest that Hollande would earn 57% of the vote in the run-off, with Sarkozy on 43%.

The TNS-Sofres institute, meanwhile, says that Sarkozy and Hollande are level on 27%, with the Socialist 10 points ahead of Sarkozy in the run-off (55% against 45%).

A third pollster, IPSOS, gives Hollande a more significant first-round lead (29% against 25.5%), and a 12-point lead in the run-off (56% against 44%).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Diamonds Were Bought by Stiffoni and Rosy Mauro

(AGI) Milan — The signatures of Rosy Mauro and Piergiorgio Stiffoni appear on receipts for payment of 300,000 euro for diamonds according to reports on investigations concerning electoral funds for the Northern League. Prosecutors are trying to discover with what money the precious stones were bought.

Documents acquired by the Financial Police indicate that the Deputy Speaker of the Senate and the Senator opened two bank accounts last January. It was using those accounts, created for that purpose, that they bought 300,000 euro worth of diamonds through an intermediary company; 200,000 euro worth for Stiffoni and 100,000 euro worth for Mauro. Certificates were signed personally by the two MPs. Investigators wish to understand whether these were personal investments or whether other funds were used.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Calls House Parties ‘Burlesque Shows’ Not Sex

Admits to paying money to ‘support ruined lives’ of guests

(ANSA) — Milan, April 20 — Former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi said Friday that alleged sex parties at his house were nothing more than entertainment. “They were burlesgue shows,” he told reporters during a court recess in Milan. Berlusconi is currently on trial for allegedly paying for sex with Karima ‘Ruby’ El Mahroug, an underage Moroccan-born runaway, after several of the parties at his villa at Arcore outside Milan and allegedly coercing police into releasing her after an unrelated theft claim to hush up the fact.

On Monday, Moroccan model Imane Fadil was the first witness to testify to attending a so-called ‘bunga bunga’ party and said she was offered 2,000 euros to stay the night. Fadil recalled an evening in which a model allegedly engaged in a strip-tease while dressed as a nun along with Nicole Minetti, Berlusconi’s former dental hygienist who is now a Lombardy regional councillor for his People of Freedom (PdL) party and is one of three people accused of supplying the premier with prostitutes.

“Minetti organized the evenings,” said Fadil, who described the performance as a sort of “Sister Act sexy dance in the bunga-bunga room,” with Minetti and Faggioli both dressed in “black habits with a white cross on the headdress”.

At another party she allegedly saw a young Brazilian model “with an AC Milan jersey and a Ronaldinho mask who stripped down to her thong”. The Brazil ace played soccer for Berlusconi’s AC Milan from 2008-2011. The other two accused of supplying prostitutes are bankrupt talent scout Lele Mora and long-time Berlusconi news anchor Emilio Fede, a close friend of the media magnate’s.

Prosecutors say Berlusconi had sex with 33 prostitutes at his villa over the course of several evenings.

Berlusconi, who says his parties were innocent and “elegant” affairs, has stressed that both he and Ruby deny having sex, and has quipped “33 women in two months is too many even for someone who likes pretty girls, like me”.

On Friday Berlusconi was confronted by journalists who noted bank records that show the ex-premier is still depositing money into the accounts of some of the women who attended his parties, now listed as injured parties in the case. “Yes, I’m taking care of all the girls whose lives have been ruined by the prosecution,” he said. “The only thing they did wrong was accept a dinner invitation to my home”. The ex-premier claims to be the victim of biased prosecutors who have allegedly been conducting a witch-hunt against him since he entered politics in 1994.

The charge of having sex with an underage prostitute carries a jail term of up to three years, and abuse of office 12 years.

The Ruby trial, which opened last April, is expected to run for years, with dozens of witnesses called by the prosecution and defence including George Clooney and soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Carabinieri Report Northern League Paid Calderoli’s Rent

(AGI) Milan — Within the framework of investigations carried out by prosecutors in Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria concerning the Northern League’s electoral funds, the Carabinieri have reported that former Minister Roberto Calderoli’s rent in Rome was paid for using party funds.

Calderoli is one the party’s three leaders now that Umberto Bossi has resigned. Calderoli commented that, “For over a year and a half the Northern League has paid the rent for an apartment in Rome that was assigned to me as my residence and my office, so I could also meet privately with the party’s leaders and other politicians. Most of the decrees concerning fiscal federalism were studied and drafted there.” “In Rome I did not work just as a senator or a minister, or rather as four ministers since I was assigned additional responsibilities,” he emphasized, “but I also did my best to comply with requests from the party, hence its coordinating activities in the capital’s institutions, relations with other political movements, acting a spokesman for the party within the government, as well as complying with all other requests made by Umberto Bossi for the activities and good of the movement.” “One the basis of agreements with the Northern League I am also paid 3,000 euro a month by the party and I pay for the expenses i have has Party Coordinator. All this information has been openly supplied and can be proved and is also known to the Northern League’s current CFO.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Ministers Ponder Creation of EU Super-President

BRUSSELS — Ideas kicking around in a reflection group of select EU foreign ministers include merging the roles of the EU Council and European Commission presidents. A senior EU source told this website following a meeting of the club in the Val Duchesse stately home in Brussels on Thursday (19 April) that the new supremo would have more power than either Herman Van Rompuy or Jose Manuel Barroso do today but also more “democratic legitimacy” because he or she would be elected by MEPs.

In other reforms, the new figure would “streamline” the European Commission into a two-tier structure. Every EU country would still have its own commissioner with their own vote in the college of 27 top officials. But as in some national set-ups, some commissioners would have more than one dossier while others would be the equivalent of ministers without portfolio.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Studied Terror on Internet

Anders Behring Breivik acquired the knowledge to carry out a bomb and shooting rampage on the internet, he told a Norwegian court today.

He said he studied case studies of al Qaida and other attacks and read more than 600 bomb-making guides.

On day five of his trial in Oslo, the confessed mass killer said he studied the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Centre in New York and Timothy McVeigh’s Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 in particular.

Breivik said of al Qaida: “I have studied each one of their actions, what they have done wrong, what they have done right.”

He has admitted the July 22 attacks that killed 77 people, but pleaded not guilty to criminal charges, saying his victims had betrayed Norway by embracing immigration.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Far-Right Extremist Anders Behring Breivik Used the Internet to Learn How to Carry Out a Bombing-and-Shooting Rampage, Studying Attacks by Al-Qaeda, Oklahoma Bomber Timothy McVeigh and the 1993 Bombing of the World Trade Centre.

On Friday, the fifth day of his trial, the confessed mass killer told a Norwegian court he paid close attention in particular to the World Trade Centre bombing in New York and McVeigh’s 1995 attack on an Oklahoma City government building, which killed 168 people and injured over 600.

Breivik also said he read more than 600 bomb-making guides.

About al-Qaeda, Breivik said: “I have studied each one of their actions, what they have done wrong, what they have done right.”

He called the Islamist group “the most successful revolutionary movement in the world” and said it should serve as an inspiration to far-right militants, even though their goals are different.

“We want to create a European version of al-Qaeda,” Breivik said.

Breivik has admitted to the July 22 attacks that killed 77 in Norway but pleaded not guilty to criminal charges, saying his victims had betrayed Norway by embracing immigration.

His lack of remorse and matter-of-fact description of weapons and tactics during his testimony have deeply disturbed families of the victims, most of whom were teenagers.

The 33-year-old Norwegian said he was deliberately using “technical” language as a way to keep his composure.

“These are gruesome acts, barbaric acts,” he said.

“If I had tried to use a more normal language I don’t think I would have been able to talk about it at all.”

A lawyer representing the bereaved, who are watching the proceedings in the Oslo court and in 17 other courtrooms in Norway, asked Breivik why he didn’t show any empathy for his victims.

“I can choose to remove the mental shield but I am choosing not to do it … because I would not survive,” he said.

Comparing himself to a Japanese “banzai” warrior during World War II, Breivik said too many Norwegian men were “feminised, cooking food and showing emotions”..

The victims’ lawyer noted that he showed emotions on the first day of the trial, when he cried as prosecutors showed an anti-Muslim video he had created.

“I wasn’t prepared for that film,” Breivik said. “It’s a film that represents the fight and everything I love.”

Breivik has admitted to the bombing in Oslo that killed eight people and the shooting massacre at the Labor Party youth camp that left 69 dead.

He claims to belong to an alleged anti-Muslim “Knights Templar” network. Many groups claim part of that name but prosecutors say they don’t believe the group described by Breivik exists.

The main goal of the trial is to figure out whether Breivik was sane or insane.

If declared sane, Breivik could face a maximum 21-year prison sentence or an alternate custody arrangement that would keep him locked up as long as he is considered a menace to society.

If found insane, he would be committed to psychiatric care for as long as he’s considered ill.

[Return to headlines]



Norwegian Gunman Describes Hunting Down Teenagers

OSLO, Norway — Norwegians who lost loved ones on Utoya island relived the horror Friday as far-right fanatic Anders Behring Breivik described in harrowing detail how he gunned down teenagers as they fled in panic or froze before him, paralyzed with fear. Survivors and victims’ relatives hugged and sobbed, trying to comfort each other during the graphic testimony.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Scotland: Coastguard Helicopter Pilot Suspended Over Orkney Butcher Trip

The pilot of a coastguard helicopter in Shetland has been suspended after dropping in on a butcher in Orkney to pick up meat.

The incident came to light after a video of the aircraft landing in a field was posted on YouTube.

It has emerged that the Shetland-based helicopter landed near Craigie’s butchers in the east of mainland Orkney to pick up a consignment of meat.

The aircraft’s operators, CHC, confirmed the pilot had been suspended.

Mobile phone footage — which has now been removed from YouTube — showed two crew getting out of the helicopter and walking over to a group of butchers, who handed over the bag of Orkney beef.

‘High standards’

A CHC spokeswoman: “We can confirm that a pilot has been suspended pending the results of a formal investigation.

“We expect high standards of professionalism from all our employees and, if we find these have not been met, we will take the appropriate action.

“While the aircraft was previously engaged in a training exercise, it was operating a non-revenue flight at the time of the incident in question.”

The butcher at the centre of the incident said he was horrified that the pilot had been suspended.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



UK: “After Such Knowledge, What Forgiveness?”

by Bruce Anderson

[…]

There is another area in which the quality of government is under threat, and it is the most vital of all: national security. Despite all the evidence, there seems to be a widespread belief that we are not living in a dangerous world: that those responsible for security are deliberatley exaggerating the problems to justify their own salaries: that some of them may be James Bond manques who are confusing fantasy and reality. This is such a travesty. Those who live with dangers and warn of dangers are not like small children who are afraid that there is a monster lurking under the bed. They are outstanding public servants who have a firm grip on reality. We are menaced by lurking monsters.

In 1517, Martin Luther sparked off the Reformation. Within a very few years, Catholics and Protestants were killing one another, which they continued to do for decades and centuries. In Ireland, it is not yet certain that the wars of religion are over. Today, there is turmoil in much of the Islamic world, often accompanied by a growth in religious intensity. As a result, many Muslims have far more resemblance to John Calvin or Philip II than to the average modern Anglican who potters along to Church once a month for a pleasant service and a glass of sherry with the vicar. Many Muslims have come to hate the West, to believe that we are the authors of their misfortunes and that they are entitled to strike at us without restraint.

There is no easy response to all that. The natural Western instinct is to pursue dialogue: to negotiate; to see what scope there is for compromise and concession. There is nothing wrong with any of that, as long as we do not delude ourselves that all will then be well. If you are tempted to indulge in optimism, think Catholics and Calvinists in 1550. Whatever the outcome of any negotiations, there will be a sizeable residue of ruthless opponents, who simply want to kill us.

[…]

It is time for the elder statesmen to intervene again, warning the younger politicians that squeamishness is not an antidote to terrorism. There is a choice. Either the West responds realistically to the threats that we face, or our opponents will exploit our lack of realism.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Lords Proposed Move to Salford Meets With Cautious Optimism

Barbara Keeley, MP for Worsley and Eccles South, gives backing to Lord Adonis’s suggestion to move the House of Lords

Lord Adonis’s comments about relocating the House of Lords 200 miles north in Salford or Manchester have been greeted with cautious optimism. Speaking from the Commons, Barbara Keeley, the MP for Worsley and Eccles South, said she welcomed the suggestion that the House of Lords should consider moving to Salford Quays. “The BBC move to its new base at MediaCity in Salford Quays has been a great success despite attempts by some to talk it down. “Debates on legislation can and should take place in areas outside London. With an important broadcasting base already at Salford Quays, those debates would be well covered in the media.” She said the Lords were very short of space so it seemed to make sense “to take a serious look at the idea”.

Nick Bowles, an MA student at Salford University, adjacent to the BBC at MediaCity, said: “It’s not very often I find myself agreeing with the privileged few at the House of Lords — indeed, I don’t agree with whole system — but Lord Adonis’s comments about the effects of such a centralised government are decades overdue.” He said there was a “metro-centricity” surrounding London and that “every other city” had been diminished by centralised government. “We can’t even build a bridge in Manchester without permission or change improve our transport to meet our needs. Housing projects have to signed off by central government. It’s ludicrous to allow so few people, often privileged people, to have such control over the majority of the country.”

Barbara Spicer, the chief executive of Salford city council, said: “The BBC’s relocation to Salford has proved that moving north can be a really positive experience for businesses.”

She said she had had some fantastic feedback from BBC staff who have come to MediaCity who are “really making the most of having a new base in the north”. Spicer added that the north has a lot to offer and said: “We welcome opportunities that will give the region an economic boost.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: New Director Hired to Improve Student Life at University of East London

A new director’s post has been created to make student life better at the University of East London. The ‘Director of Student Life’ job beginning later this summer has been given to Gareth Smith, currently Head of London 2012’s Further & Higher Education unit. His responsibilities will include “corporate initiatives to improve the quality of student life and impact on the student experience.” The ex-National Union of Students executive member previously worked for Labour MP Gareth Thomas and the late US Senator Edward Kennedy.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Tower Hamlets Mayor Rahman’s Candidate Beats Labour in Spitalfields by-Election

Labour has been narrowly defeated in a hotly-contested by-election at Spitalfields in London’s East End in its bid to regain a seat it lost on Tower Hamlets Council by defection.

Mayor Lutfur Rahman’s nominated independent candidate Gulam Robbani took the seat last night with 1,030 votes. Robbani, one of the Mayor’s former aides who had been contracted to advise him on social care before quitting in February, beat Labour’s Ala Uddin into second place by just 43 votes out of a total 2,315 cast. Labour had pinned its hopes on former council deputy leader Uddin to retake the seat it lost when Cllr Shelina Akhtar, who won it for them in 2010, defected last year to Mayor Rahman’s independent administration.

The by-election was caused by Akhtar being jailed in January for council benefit fraud. The Mayor was out campaigning himself in the week, door-knocking with Robbani who is now almost certain to be offered a place in his cabinet. Conservatives came third and Greens fourth, pushing Lib Dems into fifth place.

The results:

Gulam Robbani (independent) — 1,030 [elected]

Ala Uddin (Labour) — 987

Matthew Smith (Conservative) — 140

Kirsty Blake (Green) — 99

Richard Macmillan (Liberal Democrat) — 39

The turn-out was 31 per cent.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Scandalous Lies of Hope Not Hate

by Bruce Bawer

The list reads, in large part, like an honor roll of courageous truth-tellers. In the U.S., people like David Horowitz, Daniel Pipes, Ibn Warraq, Mark Steyn, Robert Spencer, and Andrew McCarthy. In Canada, Ezra Levant. In the U.K., Roger Scruton. In the Netherlands, Geert Wilders. In Denmark, Lars Hedegaard. And so on. But no, this isn’t meant as an honor roll. It’s a list of individuals — and organizations, too, among them the David Horowitz Freedom Center — that, according to a new “Counter-Jihad Report” by a British group called Hope Not Hate, make up a nefarious network of Islamophobic extremists who inspired the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring-Breivik.

It’s no coincidence that this “report” was issued to coincide with the beginning of Breivik’s trial, which started on Monday. For the people at Hope Not Hate seek to draw an explicit cause-and-effect connection between writings by various critics of Islam and the atrocities of July 22. One thing’s clear: Breivik has been a terrific gift to those who, for whatever reason, have long been eager to shift focus away from the danger of Islam and to argue that it’s the criticism of Islam that’s the real danger. It hasn’t been easy for these folks. Over the last decade, as a result of one brutal jihadist atrocity after another — 9/11, Madrid, London, Beslan, Bali, Mumbai, etc., etc. — Islam has been associated in the Western mind with bloodthirsty slaughter. Then, on July 22 of last year, a single man, acting alone, killed dozens of people, purportedly in the name of anti-jihadism. His actions provided everyone who’d like to whitewash Islam with an opportunity to associate not Islam, but its critics, with savage violence.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Young Israel’s New Love Affair With Germany

Marco-Urban.deGerman passports, Berlin DJs and language lessons: After decades of wariness, Israelis have discovered a new love for Germany. For a new generation of confident, young Israelis, the country has become one of their favorites.

For reasons of data protection and privacy, your IP address will only be stored if you are a registered user of Facebook and you are currently logged in to the service. For more detailed information, please click on the “i” symbol.

On his first night in Germany, Tomer Heymann, an Israeli, sleeps with a German. He met him — Andreas Josef Merk, blond and Catholic — at Berghain, a Berlin club. Heymann — film director, Jewish and gay — at first takes him for a Swede. He thinks Germans must look different, perhaps more sinister perhaps, jagged or cruder.

The next morning, the camera is already rolling, and the Israeli asks the German: Are you proud to be a German? Have you ever spoken with your grandparents about the Holocaust? No, says the German, but it’s very possible that they were Nazis. A long silence follows. It’s the only time they broach the topic.

Shortly thereafter, the German travels to Tel Aviv with two suitcases and a one-way ticket. The two men celebrate Passover and Christmas together. The German demonstrates how to flip pancakes in the air; the Israeli shows him how to stand still on Holocaust Remembrance Day, with your arms pressed tightly against your body while you observe two minutes of silence. These and many other scenes eventually become a film: a 56-minute record of the new, unencumbered way in which many Israelis and Germans are now relating to each other.

“I Shot My Love” is a declaration of love — that of an Israeli, whose grandparents fled Berlin in 1936, to a German dancer from Bavaria. The remarkable part: just how normal this love seems to be.

A New Stance toward Germany

Something has changed about the way Israelis and Germans interact, far removed from the endless German debates in which old men wrestle with their ghosts and politicians struggle to perform the mandatory rituals: the obligatory visit to Yad Vashem here, the obligatory visit to Dachau there. For quite some time now, there’s been a new Israeli-Germany reality beyond the routine of shock and dismay — primarily in Israel.

Nearly 70 years after the Holocaust, the last survivors are passing away, and this is changing how younger Israelis view Germany. Relatively free of historical taboos, they are redefining what this country means to them. This new generation no longer finds it odd that a company like Birkenstock promotes its products in Israel with “Made in Germany,” and a short trip to Berlin is the most normal thing in the world. For them, Germany is not just a country like any other — it also happens to be one of their favorites.

It mainly has to do with a feeling, a new Israeli self-assurance vis-à-vis Germany, one characterized by curiosity and a yearning for discovery. Young Israelis no longer insist on constant remembrance but, rather, on the right to be allowed to forget sometimes.

The sheer scale of this transition is perhaps best expressed in figures: Two years ago, one-quarter of all Israelis were rooting for Germany to win the soccer World Cup. In a survey conducted in 2009, 80 percent of all respondents qualified Israeli-German relations as normal, and 55 percent said that anti-Semitism was no worse in Germany than elsewhere in Europe…

           — Hat tip: Hermes [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tens of Thousands Protest Military Rule in Egypt

Egypt’s Islamist and secular forces sought to relaunch the street uprising against Egypt’s ruling military Friday, packing Cairo’s Tahrir Square with tens of thousands of protesters in the biggest rally in months and accusing the generals of manipulating upcoming presidential elections to preserve their power.

But attempts by protest organizers to form a united front against the military were blocked by competing agendas. The protest was riven by distrust and resentments that have grown between Islamists and liberals during the rocky, military-run transition process since the fall of President Hosni Mubarak more than a year ago.

Liberals and leftists accuse the Muslim Brotherhood of abandoning the “revolution” months ago and allying with the military in hopes of securing power. In Friday’s rally, many said the Brotherhood was only turning to the streets after the generals proved more powerful in decision-making even after an Islamist-dominated parliament was elected. The liberal groups warned that the Brotherhood could accommodate the military again for a chance to govern.

“The Brotherhood are here for the throne, that’s all. We tried them before and they rode the revolution and the blood of martyrs,” said Mohammed Abu-Lazeed, an accountant who took part in a march to Tahrir led by communists and socialists.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: 500 Million Dollar Loan From Qatar

Critics say interest rate is non privileged

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, APRIL 19 — 500 million dollars have arrived into the Tunisian Central Bank’s account following a loan from Qatar. The announcement was given from the Central Bank itself.

The loan has sparked much criticism in the past few months due to the fact that it had originally been presented with a privileged interest rate, whereas sceptics say instead that it has actually been set with a rate of 2.5% which is not, after all, a particularly privileged one considering it is basically on a level with normal rates.

The loan will last five years and is to be sent returned within April 18 2017 “in one payment”, says a note by the Central Bank.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Palestine: Quartet and UNESCO in Head-on Collision

UNESCO’s recognition that Palestine is a State has now been totally refuted by the Quartet — America, the Russian Federation, the European Union (EU) and the United Nations (UN).

The Quartet — in its latest statement — has now endorsed the view of the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (OTP) just a few days earlier — that Palestine is not a State.

“The Quartet reaffirmed its commitment, as expressed in its 23 September 2011 statement, to examine possible mechanisms it can actively support going forward, individually and together, to advance peace efforts and strengthen the Palestinian Authority’s ability to meet the full range of civil and security needs of the Palestinian people both now and in a future state.”

The Quartet’s use of the words — “both now and in a future state” — was clear and unambiguous .

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Caroline Glick: The Elephant of Jew Hatred

Hatred of Jews is the central animating feature of the political and strategic reality of the Middle East. It is hatred of Jews that dictates the legal regimes, foreign policies, military aspirations, cultural mores, educational themes and even public health policies of our neighbors from Ramallah to Tehran.

Despite the centrality of Jew-hatred in all aspects of public life in the Arab and Muslim world, our neighbors’ unrelenting and irrational abhorrence for Israel and the Jewish people remains a dirty secret that you aren’t supposed to mention in polite company. From Washington to Brussels, talk of the policy implications of Arab and Muslim Jew-hatred is prohibited.

Omar Abu-Sneina, a convicted terrorist murderer, is one of the thousand Palestinian terrorists that Israel released from prison in order to secure the release of Israeli hostage IDF Sgt.- Maj. Gilad Schalit. Originally from Hebron, Abu-Sneina was released to Hamas-controlled Gaza…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Qatar Holding Seals Costa Smeralda Deal

Jet-set properties injected with funds

(ANSA) — Rome, April 19 — Qatari emir Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani has sealed a deal for the acquisition of luxury properties on Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda, ANSA sources said on Thursday.

Qatar Holding, the Gulf country’s 46-billion-euro sovereign wealth fund, now reportedly holds over 51% of the indebted Smeralda Holding, which manages five-star hotels, the majority of the yacht marina, the famed Porto Cervo villa, the Pevero Golf Club and 2,400 hectares of seafront land.

The properties were built in the 1960s by the hugely wealthy businessman Aga Khan. The deal is reportedly part of a plan for a relaunch, including recapitalization, in order to reel in Smeralda Holding’s 200-million-euro debt. Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda is one of the world’s most exclusive tourist areas, frequented by celebrities, business leaders and other affluent visitors.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sri Lanka Woman Accused of Sorcery Could be Beheaded in Saudi Arabia

She was arrested after a man complained that his daughter started acting strangely during a trip to a shopping centre in Jeddah after they came close to the Sri Lankan. Since September, two people have been put to death for the same reason.

Riyadh (AsiaNews/Agencies) — A Sri Lankan woman accused of casting a spell on a 13-year-old Saudi Arabian girl could be beheaded if found guilty, local Daily Okaz newspaper reported.

The case began when a Saudi man complained his daughter had started acting strangely during a trip to a shopping centre in Jeddah after they came close to the Sri Lankan. He then notified a specialised unit of the police, which acted swiftly and arrested the woman.

Police spokesman Mesfir al-Juayed confirmed the details of the woman’s arrest.

Saudi Arabia has no written criminal code. Court rulings are based on judges’ interpretation of Sharia, the Islamic code.

For crimes like sorcery, witchcraft or apostasy, the punishment is death by decapitation with a sword.

Conviction is also not unusual in the country. A Sudanese man was executed last September for sorcery; a Saudi woman was put death in December for the same reason.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Syria: First Assad Report to ICC for Crimes Against Humanity

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, APRIL 20 — The first report against the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad, has been presented to the International Criminal Court (ICC) by a Lebanese lawyer, Tareq Shandab, in the name of 12 Syrian refugees on Lebanon, the lawyer has told ANSA today. The accusations levelled against Assad include “crimes against humanity”.

Shandab, who has a doctorate in international criminal law, practices in the city of Tripoli, in the north of Lebanon, to where thousands of Syrian refugees have fled. The report filed by the lawyer last week to the ICC in The Hague is “against Assad, around 15 army officials and the political leaders of the regime,” who are accused of “crimes against humanity and war crimes”.

The lawyer says that he has gathered evidence and witness accounts of violations committed by the regime. Some of the 12 refugees whom he represents claim to have been kidnapped by forces loyal to the regime, 7 to have had siblings and children killed, while one other claims that his daughter was raped. The 12 are from the regions of Homs, Hama and Damascus. Shandab, a Sunni, said that his initiative “has the sole aim of defending the law, and has no religious or political motivation”. The majority of Syrians are Sunnis, though President Assad belongs to the minority Alawite branch of Shia Islam.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Yemen: CIA Wants Free Rein in Use of Drones Against Terror

No need to identify targets, suspicious behaviour enough

(ANSAmed) — NEW YORK — The CIA wants greater freedom in Yemen. The US secret service wants the authorisation to strike using drones, the lethal unmanned aircraft, even against presumed terrorists whose identities remain unknown. The CIA bases its demands on models of intelligence known as “suspicious behaviour”, such as images showing militants gathering in an Al Qaeda camp or during operations of loading or unloading explosives.

The practice, known as “Signature Strikes”, is widely used in Pakistan, and the head of the CIA, David Petraeus has asked for it to be applied against the Yemeni branch of Al Qaeda, which is currently seen as the greatest terrorist threat to the US, the Washington Post reports.

For the Obama administration, though, agreeing to such a demand could be a serious risk, given the complexity of the current political situation in Yemen, where it is hard to distinguish between international terrorism and internal uprising.

Although Obama has said on several occasions that drones are a fundamental instrument for the fight against terrorism, he has also recognised that “there is a perception that we are carrying out a series of random raids”, underlining recently that “these are targeted efforts, concentrated against people who feature on a list of active terrorists who are trying to strike against Americans”.

Recent estimates by the Obama administration suggest that since the President took office in the White House, more than 1,500 presumed terrorists have been “eliminated” by drones in Pakistan alone. Eight of the 20 supreme Al Qaeda leaders have also been taken out thanks to the remote-controlled aircraft, while around 60 civilians have lost their lives in so-called “collateral damage”. In Yemen, the use of drones dates back to last year and has been more contained, with a total of 8 attacks in the last 4 months.

Thanks to the use of drones in Yemen, however, the CIA has been able to eliminate one of Al Qaeda’s most senior figures, the ideologist Anwar al-Awlaki, who was born in America and had been hiding in a remote mountainous region in the country. Some senior officials, who preferred to remain anonymous given the sensitivity of the issue, say that the CIA’s request has also been presented to the National Security Council, but no decision has yet been taken. The White House has refused to comment, but plenty of people remember Obama’s assertion that everyone should understand that drone operations are conducted “on a tight leash”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Families of Imprisoned Marines Visit Indian Jail

Parents express ‘deepest condolences’ to slain fishermen’s kin

(ANSA) — New Delhi, April 19 — Two imprisoned Italian marines in India who allegedly shot two Indian fishermen last February were visited in jail in Thiruvananthapuram by family members on Thursday.

Five family members spent over two hours with Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone, who are being held in a special section of a jail.

Maria Ferrara and Michele Girone, Girone’s parents, and his wife Vania Ardito, as well as Latorre’s sister Franca Latorre and his nephew Christian D’Addario were “moved and emotional,” said the Indian press.

Speaking to journalists following the meeting, Girone’s parents expressed their “deepest condolences” to the families of the two Indian fisherman who were killed.

The anti-piracy marines have been at the centre of a diplomatic row between Italy and India since being detained in February after an incident that took place while they were guarding an Italian merchant ship.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sri Lankans Protest Mosque in Buddhist Sacred Area

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka-Thousands of Buddhist monks and lay supporters have protested the construction of a mosque and a Hindu temple being built in an area designated as a Buddhist sacred zone. Local journalist Kanchana Ariyadasa says about 2,000 protesters, including 300 monks, shouted slogans and waved the Buddhist flag Friday in the central town of Dambulla. Monk Inamaluwe Sri Sumangala Thera said that the construction area was inside the Buddhist sacred zone and that erecting houses of worship for other religions there was illegal. He demanded the authorities stop the construction immediately. About 7 percent of Sri Lanka’s 20 million people are Muslims. About 74 percent are Sinhalese, who are mostly Buddhists, while about 18 percent are Tamils, who are predominantly Hindus or Christians.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



‘The Asian Arms Race is Starting to Look Ominous’

India added itself to the short list of nuclear-armed countries with ballistic missile capability on Thursday. More importantly, though, the country’s successful test marks a new chapter in the developing Asian arms race. German commentators express deep concern on Friday.

Conservative daily Die Welt writes:

“There is much movement on the multi-dimensional, Asian chess board. Just a few weeks ago the United States distinctly said that they are, and plan to remain, players in this game. But amid all the saber rattling, the basic structure of this chessboard remains stable so far, with the exception of Pakistan, which is plagued by internal fighting.”

“All of the Asian powers are playing their own game. … Unlike the Cold War, this is a multi-polar system, where arms controls and trust-building measures are foreign words. It is an Asian power system unlike any ever seen before — an open-ended one. And, incidentally, one without any kind of participation from the Europeans.”

Left-leaning daily Die Tageszeitung writes:

“India isn’t joining an arms race. It is arming itself but slowly. Its military budget is at most a quarter of China’s. It is as far behind China as China is behind the USA. That’s why nobody in Delhi wanted to celebrate the rocket test as a challenge to Beijing’s power. Rather, the test resulted in a naïve outbreak of patriotic pride: Finally, the country sees itself as belonging to the club of nuclear powers.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Cola ‘Contributed to Woman’s Death’

A New Zealand woman’s two-gallons-a-day Coca-Cola habit probably contributed to her death, experts have said.

Natasha Harris, a 30-year-old mother of eight, from Invercargill, died of a heart attack in 2010.

Fairfax Media said a pathologist has now said she probably suffered from hypokalemia, or low potassium, which was caused by excessive consumption of Coke and overall poor nutrition.

Ms Harris’s partner said she drank up to 2.6 gallons (10 litres) of regular Coke every day. He also said she ate little and smoked about 30 cigarettes a day.

The coroner’s office is compiling a final report on Ms Harris’ death.

A spokeswoman for the soft-drinks giant said its products are safe and pointed out that even water can be deadly in excessive amounts.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Latin America


The Tab for U.N.’s Rio Summit: Trillions Per Year in Taxes, Transfers and Price Hikes

The upcoming United Nations environmental conference on sustainable development will consider a breathtaking array of carbon taxes, transfers of trillions of dollars from wealthy countries to poor ones, and new spending programs to guarantee that populations around the world are protected from the effects of the very programs the world organization wants to implement, according to stunning U.N. documents examined by Fox News.

The main goal of the much-touted, Rio + 20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, scheduled to be held in Brazil from June 20-23, and which Obama Administration officials have supported, is to make dramatic and enormously expensive changes in the way that the world does nearly everything-or, as one of the documents puts it, “a fundamental shift in the way we think and act.”

Among the proposals on how the “challenges can and must be addressed,” according to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon:

  • More than $2.1 trillion a year in wealth transfers from rich countries to poorer ones, in the name of fostering “green infrastructure, “ “climate adaptation” and other “green economy” measures.
  • New carbon taxes for industrialized countries that could cost about $250 billion a year, or 0.6 percent of Gross Domestic Product, by 2020. Other environmental taxes are mentioned, but not specified.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


EU States Slam Swiss for Immigrant Worker Caps

Many of the eight EU countries whose citizens have been singled out by Switzerland for immigration restrictions have reacted with fury to the move.

Polish foreign Minister, Radoslaw Sikorski, was reported in the Polish newspaper, Gazeta Wyborcza, as saying that he was “deeply disappointed”.

The decision, he said, was “discriminatory and illegal”, since more than 90 percent of the EU nationals in Switzerland come from the “old” EU countries, rather than the eight new members from Central and Eastern Europe that have been singled out, newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung reported.

Sikorski also asked the Polish people to think twice in future before planning their holidays in Switzerland after the country invoked a “safeguard clause” in its bilateral agreements with the EU.

The move means Switzerland will reduce by two thirds the number of work permits it issues to citizens of the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Slovakia.

A joint statement was released on Thursday by Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia, calling for Switzerland to reverse its decision.

“If in the future an agreement with Switzerland is negotiated by Brussels, I do not know if we Slovaks will enthusiastically support it,” Ján Foltín, the Slovakian ambassador to Switzerland, told NZZ.

Various EU politicians, including the EU president, German Social Democrat Martin Schulz, and a spokesman for the Liberals in Europe, as well as Catherine Ashton, the EU’s foreign representative, believe that the move infringes freedom of movement and breaches the bilateral treaties in place between Switzerland and the EU.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France Moves to Bring Back Border Checks

France and Germany have begun moves to reclaim powers to close their borders for up to 30 days in a simmering battle over immigration pressures on Europe’s passport-free Schengen travel zone.

In a joint letter to the European Union’s Danish chair seen by AFP ahead of talks among interior ministers in Luxembourg on April 26, France’s Claude Guéant and Germany’s Hans-Peter Friedrich say the Schengen set-up, which abolished frontier controls in 1995, needs a radical revamp.

Schengen refers to an area that is home to 400 million Europeans and covers 25 states.

Guéant and Friedrich said that where a government within the area fails to meet its obligations to manage external frontiers — Greece for one is under intense migratory pressures at Europe’s south-eastern fringe — partners should have “the possibility, as a last resort, to reintroduce internal frontiers for a period not greater than 30 days”.

Currently, only the European Commission, or EU civil service, can decide short-term emergency blocks on individual frontier pressure-points.

The ministers also insisted that such decisions should not be left to permanent Brussels officials — but be left as the sole preserve of national ministers voting in the European Council of EU member states.

Fighting to hold onto power ahead of Sunday’s first-round election, French President Nicolas Sarkozy told a rally last month that without “serious progress” on a rewrite of the Schengen treaty over the coming year, “France would then suspend its participation in the Schengen accords until negotiations conclude”.

Once inside Schengen, illegal immigrants can theoretically move freely between the participating states.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Franco-German Schengen Proposal: A Vote of No Confidence in Europe

Germany and France’s joint proposal to allow Schengen-zone countries to temporarily reintroduce border controls as a means of last resort might sound harmless. But doing so would damage one of the strongest symbols of European unity and perhaps even contribute to the EU’s demise.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Put Qatada on a Plane and Quit the European Court

by Stephen Pollard

ENOUGH is enough. It’s time to put the Abu Qatada farce to bed, once and for all. Were David Cameron to stand up in the House of Commons and announce that the government had decided to pull the UK out of the European Convention on human Rights he would not only guarantee a cheer from the vast majority of the country, he would also do more for human rights than any prime minister since Churchill. Because in pulling us out of the wretched ECHR and telling the judges of the European Court of human Rights that we are no longer prepared to bow down before them, he would make a stand for the human rights of those of us who do not wish to live in a country that is prevented by a foreign court from protecting its citizens from terrorists. A sequence of events that had already become what Westminster wags dubbed an “omnishambles” has over the past few days entered another realm of idiocy altogether.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Two Arrested for Asylum Home Male Gang Rape

Police on Wednesday arrested two men in connection to a suspected gang rape of a 20-year-old man, carried out by three other men, in a home for asylum seekers in northern Sweden.

“All I can say is that they are all between 18 and 20, apart from one of the suspects who is under 18,” said Inga-Lis Adervall Åström, prosecutor at the Umeå prosecution chamber to local paper Norrländska Socialdemokraten (NSD).

Adervall Åström was unwilling to elaborate on the case or even confirm the sex of those involved due to the delicate nature of the on-going investigation.

According to the paper, the suspected rape took place in a flat in one of the apartment buildings that the Swedish Migration Board (Migrationsverket) rents house asylum seekers.

The berths in the apartments are divided into two asylum seekers per room, meaning that a three bedroom flat could house up to six asylum seekers of different nationalities and backgrounds.

The paper reports that there are five names on the door of the flat in question, which has been cordoned off by police.

The incident is said to have occurred in the early hours between Tuesday and Wednesday and according to a newspaper source, the attack could have been triggered by ethnic or religious motives.

According to the Migration Board’s Ann-Gerd Malmström, the agency tries to take these things into consideration when they allocate housing.

“But personal conflicts can break out between all people regardless of their ethnicity and religion. We are all individuals. I have no idea of this particular case and I have no wish to speculate into that,” said Malmström to NSD.

Police have arrested two of the three suspects so far. They are under suspicion of aggravated rape and robbery. The prosecutor must file remand orders by Saturday or the men will be free to go.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Sun Says: Abu Bye-Bye

THERE is one simple solution to the Abu Qatada shambles. Take him to Heathrow today and stick him on a plane to Jordan. Home Secretary Theresa May faces embarrassment over claims her officials got their dates muddled, leaving the door open for the hate preacher to escape the boot. But she should ignore lectures from Labour. They let in most of the fanatics here today. Let’s take a leaf out of France’s book. When it suits them they ignore Strasbourg and put terror suspects on the next flight out. David Cameron, limp-wristed as ever when it comes to Europe, bleats: “I sometimes wish I could put Qatada on a plane and take him to Jordan myself.”

Don’t just say it, Prime Minister. Grow a pair — and do it.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Genocidal Green Quotes

As Earth Day 2012 occurs on Sunday, April 22, I offer a selection of quotes from leading figures in the environmental movement that are worth reading so that you can draw your own conclusions.

[…]

Truth meant (and means) little to environmentalists.

“What we’ve got to do in energy conservation is try to ride the global warming issue. Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, to have approached global warming as if it is real means energy conservation, so we will be doing the right thing anyway in terms of economic policy and environmental policy.” — Timothy Wirth, former U.S. Senator (D-CO)

“It doesn’t matter what is true, it only matters what people believe is true.” — Paul Watson, co-founder of Greenpeace.

Many of the environmental movement’s leaders harbored genocidal dreams as the best way to “save the Earth.”

“We have wished, we eco-freaks, for a disaster or for a social change to come and bomb us into Stone Age, where we might live like Indians in our valley, with our localism, our appropriate technology, our gardens, our homemade religion—guilt-free at last!” — Steward Brand, writing in the Earth Catalog.

“Phasing out the human race will solve every problem on earth, social and environmental.” — Dave Forman, founder of Earth First

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120419

Financial Crisis
» Barroso Believes Eurobonds Are Solution to Crisis
» IMF is a Troublesome Ally
» Italy: PM Monti: Fighting to Avoid Dramatic Fate of Greece
» Italy Will be ‘Close’ To Balancing Budget in 2013
» Spain: Cuts: Pensioners to Pay 10% of Prescription Medicines
 
USA
» A War by Any Other Name is Still War
» Alabama Legislature Considering Anti-Agenda 21 Legislation
» Alcohol Banned for Visitors on Peanut Island
» ANWR: It’s Been 10 Years, We Could Have Been Reaping Rewards Now
» Bishop Says Obama on Hitlerian Path
» From Hackers to Slackers
» Levon Helm: Drummer and Singer for the Band, Dies at 71
» Liberty is Null and Void
» NASA’s Space Shuttle Museum Flights: Complete Coverage
» Negroes With Guns
» Tea Party vs. Netroots Nation — Game on?
» ‘The Office’ Star’s Anne Frank ‘Jokes’ Appal TV Viewers
» The Guardian Gives a Platform to a ‘Self-Confessed Terrorist’; Using CIF to Defend the Killing of US Troops
» Urban Outfitters Selling T-Shirt That Features Holocaust Imagery
 
Canada
» Electricy Sector Merger a Liberal Red Herring
 
Europe and the EU
» 48% of Brits Want to Get Out of the UK
» Antitrust Rules Against Alitalia Rome-Milan Monopoly
» Blamed for Bee Collapse, Monsanto Buys Leading Bee Research Firm
» Blood Libel Not Bad Enough for UK Court
» Britain’s Duty to the Palestinian People
» Even More Oil Found Off Norway
» French-German Relations: What a Hollande Victory Would Mean for Merkel
» French Muslims Mobilizing to Unseat Sarkozy
» Germany: Minister Slams Salafism at Islam Conference
» Italy: Northern League to Sell Party’s Ex-Treasurer’s Diamonds
» Italy: Berlusconi Probed for Inducing Sex-Party Witness to Lie
» Merkel Ally Says Islam Not Part of Germany
» Norway: Breivik Planned to Behead Ex-Prime Minister
» Salafists Worry German Islam Conference
» The UK’s Leading Publisher [The Guardian] Of Jew-Haters
» ‘Tortured’ US Muslim Seeks Asylum in Sweden
» UK: Breaking: Lord Sugar Comes Out Against Ken Livingstone
» UK: Don’t Ban Alcohol — We’ll Get the Blame, Say Muslim Students
» UK: Five Arrested Over ‘Race Hate’ Internet Posts
» UK: Galloway and Livingstone: Twins in So Many Ways
» UK: Lord Sugar: Nobody Should Vote for Ken Livingstone as Mayor
» UK: Police Visit Mosque in Community Initiative
» UK: William Hague: Britain Will Have a Global Diplomatic Network and the Best Diplomatic Service in the World
» UK: Will Respect Thwart Labour Gaining Control of Bradford Council?
» Victoria Cross Awarded to Scots Skipper Who Fought ‘David and Goliath’ WWI Battle to be Auctioned
 
North Africa
» Tunisia: Blasphemous Film Trial, Tensions Before Courthouse
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israel at a Halt to Mark Holocaust
 
Middle East
» UAE: Dispute Over Islands; GCC to Support UAE, Says Official
 
South Asia
» Italian Base in Afghanistan Attacked, No Soldiers Hurt
» Jail May Await Afghan Women Fleeing Abuse, Rape — HRW
» Leaving Afghanistan: NATO Members Spar Over Post-Withdrawal Financing
» Pakistan: Three Hindu Women Forced to Convert Have to go Back to Their Muslim Husbands
» Taliban Post on-Line Request for Donations
 
Australia — Pacific
» I Am Also a Victim, Tyrannical Wife Murderer Zialloh Abrahimzadeh Tells His Son
» Jeff Kennett Decries Prayer Rooms at Footy
» Outback Opal Community Fights Ban on Alcohol
» Without Consent
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» As Sudanese Clashes Escalate, So Do Bellicose Exchanges
 
Immigration
» Arizona: Countdown to the Showdown on S.B. 1070
» EU Irked as Swiss Clamp Down on Immigration
» Italy: Police Probed for Taping Deportees’ Mouths Aboard Flight
» UK: Abu Qatada Deportation: Appeal Was Made ‘Just in Time’, Says Council of Europe Official
» UK: Abu Qatada Deportation: Theresa May Did Get Date Wrong, Claim Legal Experts
» UK: May’s Bid to Deport Qatada Descends Into Farce
» UK: Theresa May and an ‘Understanding’ On Abu Qatada
» UK: Theresa May Versus Qatada
 
Culture Wars
» Eco-Communism Celebrated Annually on Earth Day
» Marriage and Family Are Obscene, Says School
» Only the Old Embrace God in Former East Germany
» The Ugly Brutishness of Modern Britain
» UK: Lord Carey: Christians ‘Vilified’ By Courts
 
General
» Al-Qaeda Bomb-Making Expert Publishes Magazine
» Heavy Elements Key for Planet Formation, Study Suggests

Financial Crisis


Barroso Believes Eurobonds Are Solution to Crisis

(AGI) Strasbourg — The President of the E.U. Commission, Jose’ Manuel Barroso has said that Eurobonds are a valid solution for overcoming the debt crisis that is far from being resolved. “I never said that the crisis was behind us,” reiterated the former Portuguese prime minister during a debate at the European parliament, emphasizing that Europe must still complete its long-term recovery that might be helped by a common financial system. This proposal, however, has many opponents in Europe, starting with the German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who believes that issuing eurobonds would simply allow weaker states to continue to fund themselves continuing to spend as before, raising financing costs for other states that respect European budget rules.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



IMF is a Troublesome Ally

The International Monetary Fund, which recently warned Europe of the possibility of another crisis, forms part of the troika charged with rescuing countries in financial difficulty. However, over the last year under the presidency of France’s Christine Lagarde, the organisation which is often presented as a saviour has adopted a less conciliatory tone.

Last Christmas, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde offered the German Chancellor a trinket from Herme’s. Angela Merkel also had a small gift for Christine Lagarde: a CD of the Berlin Philharmonic playing Beethoven.

Notwithstanding this thoughtful behaviour, the personal relationship between the two women is now being sorely tested: in the wake of two years of intense involvement in the struggle to overcome the crisis in Europe, the IMF has begun to openly express its discontent.

In the Dominique Strauss-Kahn (DSK) era, it was reasonable to assume that China, Canada and Brazil would also adopt a similar line, but this is no longer the case. Today’s IMF is very different to the IMF of one year ago. For DSK, who had his sights set on the French presidency, a leading role in the campaign to save the euro was a godsend. Under Christine Lagarde, the IMF has become “a less stable partner”, points out a European civil servant.

A second-tier partner

The difference in personality between economist and politician DSK — who resigned amid rape allegations in May 2011 — and the lawyer and corporate CEO, Christine Lagarde, who succeeded him, only partly explains this change.

Perhaps more importantly, the IMF is increasingly uncomfortable with the role that has been attributed to it in the “troika” formed with the ECB and the European Commission. In the eurozone, the organisation, which is used to a high degree of autonomy, has become a “second tier partner”.

The Europeans in the troika, who are extremely strict in their approach, mainly take their orders from Germany. In the event of a divergence of opinion, the IMF is often the only member of the troika to argue in support of Greece.

“The IMF should never have allowed itself to become involved in this situation”, remarks Charles Wyplosz, of the Graduate Institute of Geneva. “It has been politically implicated.”

Already, under Dominique Strauss-Kahn, non-European countries were protesting, and critical voices were also raised from within the organisation. But the IMF’s second in command, America’s John Lipsky, was unable to to effectively counter his inspired European chief…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: PM Monti: Fighting to Avoid Dramatic Fate of Greece

(AGI) Rome — PM Mario Monti said, “We are fighting every day to continue to avoid the fate of Greece.” Monti was speaking during a press conference at the close of the Council of Ministers meeting. He initially spoke of lives which have been dramaticly interrupted and then used directly the term “suicides”, updating the number. Mario Monti did not attempt to hide “the dramatic consequences of the crisis” and that it painted a grave picture which “in Italy we are trying to turn around, under very difficult conditions”. “Today, economic growth is the principal worry of the citizens. The word ‘growth’ is the term most used by Italian and European political leaders, but I would say by the G8 and the G20 as well. We see the dramatic effects of an economic and financial crisis,” Monti stated in the press conference. “We are paying an extremely high price in economic, social and human terms for families, businesses and workers,” the Prime Minister said. “We know how desperate Italy would have been if she had defaulted,” he recalled, underlining how the “ability act together in the spirit of civic responsibility” is “a resource to preserve”.

Monti says that “international conjecture is and remains difficult. Italy still finds itself in a difficult situation,” Monti repeated. “The task of renewing Italy’s ability to grow has just begun.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy Will be ‘Close’ To Balancing Budget in 2013

Govt fighting to ‘avoid dramatic destiny of Greece’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — Premier Mario Monti said on Wednesday that recession-hit Italy would be “close” to hitting its target of balancing the budget next year.

Media reports had said on Tuesday that the government intended to delay by a year its plan to balance the budget because of the country’s low growth prospects in the short term.

The reports cited a leaked draft of the government’s Economic and Financial document (DEF).

Monti has repeatedly said that Italy will not need any more austerity measures to balance the budget in 2013 on top of those in its tough 30-billion-euro austerity package passed in December.

“In last summer’s grave financial emergency the previous government (of Silvio Berlusconi) had to, and wanted to, accept the goal of balancing the public accounts in 2013,” Monti told a press conference after his Cabinet approved the DEF and a so-called National Reform Plan to boost long-term growth. “It’s an ambitious target that we made realistic with the efforts and sacrifices demanded from the public (in the austerity package)…

“We have only just started the job of making Italy capable of growing again. We are fighting every day to avoid the dramatic destiny of Greece”.

Monti, who took power at the helm of an emergency administration of technocrats after Berlusconi resigned in November, said earlier on Wednesday that the Italian economy would return to growth in 2013.

The International Monetary Fund, however, forecasted in a report released on Tuesday that the Italian economy would shrink by 0.3% next year.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Cuts: Pensioners to Pay 10% of Prescription Medicines

Healthcare Ministry plan aims to save 3.7 billion

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, APRIL 18 — Spain’s Healthcare Ministry will today be presenting to the Inter-regional Health Council (in which regional governments are represented) a plan for the co-payment of pharmaceutical expenditure aiming to save 3.7 billion as part of a budget measure worth 10 billion in cuts to reduce the public deficit, announced by the government for the Health and Education Ministry. According to PP government sources quoted today by the media, pensioners currently exempt from paying for medicines will have to pay 10% of the prescription cost, with a limit of between 10 and 20 euros per month, while those in the workforce (who currently pay 40% of prescription medicines) will see the percentage rise to 50 or 60% depending on their income level. The proposal, after being debated today in the Inter-Regional Health Council, will be approved on Friday by the Cabinet.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


A War by Any Other Name is Still War

According to Kevin D. Freeman, “Events of the past dozen years clearly show that America’s adversaries have gained ground in non-military ways. Could the 9/11 terror attacks, high gas prices, market volatility and the U.S. credit rating downgrade all be linked to the same strategy?”

The recently published 150-page United Nation’s “World Happiness Report” is attempting to indoctrinate us into Fabian Socialism as an absolute giver of wellness, which must be imposed on the entire population of the globe. Happiness no longer comes from within, it comes from socialism.

Indoctrination worked well with our children in the last fifty years. We are witnessing the result of dumbing down of American education and the blatant move toward open socialist and communist indoctrination in schools and universities. If you tell a lie often enough to children and ignorant adults, they will eventually believe it to be the truth.

A book by two Chinese colonels, Qiao Liang and Wang Wiangsui, “Unrestricted Warfare,” published by the People’s Liberation Army, listed several variables of “war by other means:” (The American Legion Magazine, Kevin D. Freeman, April 2012):

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Alabama Legislature Considering Anti-Agenda 21 Legislation

Anyone that resides in Alabama should consider contacting their Representative in Montgomery and urge them to support HB 861. Alabama Legislature Considering Anti-Agenda 21 Legislation.

The Alabama Legislature is finally taking up a measure that will effectively shut down parts of the United Nation’s Agenda 21 program in Alabama. First introduced by Majority Whip Gerald Dial on April 5, 2012, Senate Bill 477 contains strong language in support of property rights and due process for property owners. This bill passed the Senate last week, but the companion bill (HB 861) is still stuck in the Alabama House of Representatives.

In effect this legislation would prevent governmental policies that would violate the U.S. and Alabama Constitutions. Especially the issues surrounding the dissolution of due process of property owners by taking their land for environmental and developmental reasons. The legislation calls out Agenda 21 by name, and restricts all types of contracts with organization that are defined within it.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Alcohol Banned for Visitors on Peanut Island

Palm Beach County Officials announced they are banning visitors from drinking alcohol on the popular weekend hot spot, Peanut Island, The Palm Beach Post reported Monday.

Starting May 18, visitors will not be allowed to drink on the land unless they have a permit to use the county’s campsite, Eric Call, the Parks and Recreation Director told the Post.

But drinking onboard an anchored boat offshore is still allowed. “We want people to enjoy themselves on boats,” Call told the Post. “As long as they are acting responsibly, that’s fine.”

Call also said water taxis operators will not transport visitors to the island if they have alcohol with them. The reason for the ban? Call said that department has received a lot of complaints from police and the residents about the “inappropriate behavior of those engaged in alcohol consumption,” the Post reported. This was the last straw for officials after multiple offenses have occurred here.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



ANWR: It’s Been 10 Years, We Could Have Been Reaping Rewards Now

Well, it’s ten years, folks, and because the Democrats continually defeat new efforts to drill or explore for oil on American soil we are once again out of luck for exploiting our own sources of energy. Thanks to Obama and his party we stay dependent on foreign sources of energy.

The Illinois Review reminds us that gas was about $1.37 per gallon in 2002 when the ANWR drilling bill went before Congress but now that gas is edging toward $5 per gallon, it is certain that we sure could be using that ANWR oil today, right?

Once again, the left harms America in favor of its fealty to the religion of environmentalism.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Bishop Says Obama on Hitlerian Path

Bishop Daniel R. Jenky: Taking aim at Obama, Hollywood and the media.

“Hitler and Stalin, at their better moments, would just barely tolerate some churches remaining open, but would not tolerate any competition with the state in education, social services, and health care.

“In clear violation of our First Amendment rights, President Obama—with his radical, pro-abortion and extreme secularist agenda, now seems intent on following a similar path.”

[…]

This is a story that just won’t go away. And it has the potential to alert the public, Catholic and non-Catholic, to the grave constitutional crisis we find ourselves in.

The notion of Obama as an “extreme secularist,” if not a dictator wannabe, is widely shared within the Catholic Church. A Priest recently told me that the Catholic Bishops, who usually divide into liberal and conservative factions, are united against Obama in this controversy.

He said Obama is viewed as someone who believes in freedom of worship, not freedom of religion, an important distinction that Jenky was alluding to. In other words, Obama believes Christians should be free to worship within the confines of their church, but that when they exercise their freedom of religion in public life, they must conform to the secular dictates of the federal government. In this context, however, the ability to exercise freedom of religion, as the Constitution means it, becomes essentially meaningless.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



From Hackers to Slackers

How a federal law can be used to prosecute almost anyone who uses a computer

by Jacob Sullum

If you are reading this column online at work, you may be committing a federal crime. Or so says the Justice Department, which reads the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) broadly enough to encompass personal use of company computers as well as violations of fine-print website rules that people routinely ignore.

Last week the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit rightly rejected this view of the CFAA, which Chief Judge Alex Kozinski noted could make a criminal out of “everyone who uses a computer in violation of computer use restrictions—which may well include everyone who uses a computer.” Unfortunately, other appeals courts have been more receptive to the Justice Department’s interpretation, which gives U.S. attorneys the power to prosecute just about anyone who offends or annoys them.

Congress passed the original version of the CFAA in 1984, when the Internet was in its infancy and the World Wide Web did not exist, to protect government computer systems and financial databases from hackers. As a result of amendments and technological developments, George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr explains in a 2010 Minnesota Law Review article, “the law that began as narrow and specific has become breathtakingly broad,” potentially regulating “every use of every computer in the United States.”

The 9th Circuit case involved David Nosal, who left the executive search firm Korn/Ferry International in 2004 and allegedly enlisted two former colleagues to feed him proprietary client information with an eye toward starting a competing business. In addition to conspiracy, mail fraud, and trade secret theft, Nosal was charged with violating the CFAA, which criminalizes unauthorized computer access in various circumstances.

Although Nosal’s confederates were authorized to use Korn/Ferry’s database, federal prosecutors argued that improperly sharing information with him retroactively rendered their access unauthorized. As Judge Kozinski noted, “the government’s construction of the statute would expand its scope far beyond computer hacking to criminalize any unauthorized use of information obtained from a computer.”…

           — Hat tip: DS [Return to headlines]



Levon Helm: Drummer and Singer for the Band, Dies at 71

Levon Helm, who helped forge a deep-rooted American music as the drummer and singer for the Band, died on Thursday in Manhattan. He was 71 and lived in Woodstock, N.Y.

His death was announced by a spokeswoman for Vanguard Records, for which he had recorded several albums. He had been suffering from cancer for several years.

[Return to headlines]



Liberty is Null and Void

Unless we rebuild the reality of a balanced federal system we will soon find ourselves locked in the embrace of an all-powerful central government.

[…]

Today this debate over the relationship between the central government and the States has resurfaced. As an administration moves aggressively to transform America beyond any semblance of a federal structure into a centrally planned and totally controlled socially engineered society citizens from sea to shining sea are searching for ways to return to the limited government won by the Revolution and supposedly safe-guarded by the Constitution.

One of the most revolutionary proposals is a direct descendant of the Doctrine of Nullification. The Repeal Amendment is supported by citizens and their representatives in every State and in the Federal Congress. This proposed amendment states, “Any provision of law or regulation of the United States may be repealed by the several states, and such repeal shall be effective when the legislatures of two-thirds of the several states approve resolutions for this purpose that particularly describe the same provision or provisions of law or regulation to be repealed.” As of today, no State has passed the Amendment, and it has not gained enough support in Congress to advance past the proposal stage.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



NASA’s Space Shuttle Museum Flights: Complete Coverage

The final chapter is about to close on NASA’s 30-year space shuttle program.

The space agency’s three remaining orbiters — Discovery, Endeavour and Atlantis — each made their last flights in 2011, and are now being prepped for retired life in museums. Discovery has been gifted to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s Stephen F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Va., while Endeavour is bound for the California Science Center in Los Angeles. Atlantis is due to stay close to home at the Kennedy Space Center Visitors Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Additionally, the prototype orbiter Enterprise, which never flew to space, is set to move from its current home at the Smithsonian to New York City’s Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum.

UPDATE for 5 p.m. EDT Thursday, April 19

Space shuttle Discovery is officially property of the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum, Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Va., today, marking the end of its storied career as NASA’s most traveled space plane. Discovery arrived at Dulles International Airport near the Smithsonian annex, which is just outside Washington, D.C., on Tuesday and was removed from its carrier plane on Wednesday. NASA signed the space shuttle over to the Smithsonian during an emotional ceremony today.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Negroes With Guns

Liberals have leapt on the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in Florida to push for the repeal of “stand your ground” laws and to demand tighter gun control. (MSNBC’S Karen Finney blamed “the same people who stymied gun regulation at every point.”)

This would be like demanding more funding for the General Services Administration after seeing how its employees blew taxpayer money on a party weekend in Las Vegas.

We don’t know the facts yet, but let’s assume the conclusion MSNBC is leaping to is accurate: George Zimmerman stalked a small black child and murdered him in cold blood, just because he was black.

If that were true, every black person in America should get a gun and join the National Rifle Association, America’s oldest and most august civil rights organization.

Apparently this has occurred to no one because our excellent public education system ensures that no American under the age of 60 has the slightest notion of this country’s history.

Gun control laws were originally promulgated by Democrats to keep guns out of the hands of blacks. This allowed the Democratic policy of slavery to proceed with fewer bumps and, after the Civil War, allowed the Democratic Ku Klux Klan to menace and murder black Americans with little resistance.

(Contrary to what illiterates believe, the KKK was an outgrowth of the Democratic Party, with overlapping membership rolls. The Klan was to the Democrats what the American Civil Liberties Union is today: Not every Democrat is an ACLU’er, but every ACLU’er is a Democrat. Same with the Klan.)

In 1640, the very first gun control law ever enacted on these shores was passed in Virginia. It provided that blacks — even freemen — could not own guns.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tea Party vs. Netroots Nation — Game on?

International Socialists and their Washington D.C. politicians have successfully divided the once United States into competing factions, both ready for all-out war in 2012.

As the Tea Party still struggles to find an identity, unity and direction, the international left steam rolls ahead, forcing the United States towards an economic abyss via policies that promise to enslave every citizen for generations to come. It no longer requires any imagination to see the Cloward-Piven Strategy in full bloom.

In a recent missive from DSA USA, (The Democratic Socialists of America) which operates through both the Progressive and Black Caucus’s in congress and the Obama White House, the marching orders are clear…

“Netroots Nation is an important gathering of the American progressive movement. It started in 2006 as a meeting of liberal bloggers organized by Daily Kos, but it has evolved into something much more. It is place where bloggers, labor activists, environmental and community groups, and progressive office holders can come together to discuss issues, develop strategies, and learn new organizing tools—both social media and conventional.” — DSA Memo

Democratic Socialists now in control of nearly every aspect of government, media and academia in America, keep their friends close and watch their enemies closely…

“Remember the December Pew survey showing that more and more Americans have a positive view of socialism. And that absent a strong socialist voice in the progressive movement and American politics, even the most moderate reforms to rein in corporate power will be red-baited off the map. (Not to mention that the Right continues to call even mildly progressive politicians socialist as a scare tactic.)” — DSA Memo

The subject Pew Poll provides some frightening statistics concerning America’s new attitude towards socialism. The left-wing Huffington Post sums it up by simply stating — “socialism has more fans than opponents among the 18-29 crowd. Forty-nine percent of people in that age bracket say they have a positive view of socialism; only 43 percent say they have a negative view.”

The dots are easily connected today, unlike the movement that operated in the shadows during the McCarthy era, when being a communist or socialist could get you black-listed in almost any industry, including Hollywood.“Young people — the collegiate and post-college crowd, who have served as the most visible face of the Occupy Wall Street movement — might be getting more comfortable with socialism.” — Huff Po

Contrary to the totally divided and grossly un-funded Tea Party operation, the leftist Netroots Nation is very united and very well-funded. Netroots is an international operation complete with wealthy financiers and big corporate sponsors like:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘The Office’ Star’s Anne Frank ‘Jokes’ Appal TV Viewers

Viewers have threatened to boycott shows by Ricky Gervais, after he joked that Anne Frank’s family went into hiding from the Nazis because they did not want to pay rent. The comedian has been harshly criticised in the UK and across the Atlantic for using Anne Frank as “comedic fodder” on The Daily Show in the US. Host Jon Stewart, who is Jewish, looked visibly uncomfortable when Mr Gervais joked how the Nazis must have been “stupid” not to have found the 15-year-old diarist and her family sooner. Speaking about his TV show, An Idiot Abroad, with Karl Pilkington, Mr Gervais said Mr Pilkington had genuinely believed the family had been trying to avoid paying for their apartment. The Frank family were discovered, after two years in hiding, in August 1944. Anne, her mother and sister died in the concentration camps. Mr Stewart told Mr Gervais: “She didn’t live in a Nazi’s house… they didn’t come in every day,” before advising him to “read the book”. Mr Gervais has previously included jokes about Anne Frank in his stand-up routines, such as: “She had time to write a novel; mind you, it ends a bit abruptly. No sequel. Lazy.” Gillian Walnes, director of the Anne Frank Trust, said the jokes could be dangerous if viewers were not informed about the Frank story.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The Guardian Gives a Platform to a ‘Self-Confessed Terrorist’; Using CIF to Defend the Killing of US Troops

Even one of the more sympathetic jurors who laments Mehanna’s long prison sentence acknowledges that he was a radical obsessed with violence, jihad and on the killing of U.S. troops. Perhaps Caputi’s defense of Mehanna would be less robust if it had been he that was targeted — or perhaps in such an extreme case, it would have driven him even further.

But ‘free speech’ is always the elephant in the room in cases like this. What is to stop The Guardian, Ross Caputi or even Tarek Mehanna from speaking their minds on such issues — even if it leaves the bitterest of tastes in our mouths?

The legal implications are complex, but in Britain, Caputi’s statements of support for Mehanna, including we assume from his words, his trip to Yemen and interest in fighting in ‘the resistance’ in Iraq is not just endorsement of terrorism but also proliferation, glorification and tantamount to incitement. His piece supports the killing of American soldiers abroad and could indeed be criminal under USC 2339A — ‘providing material support to terrorists’ and in Britain ‘inciting murder for terrorist purposes overseas’.

In Mehanna’s case under U.S. law, a 1969 Supreme Court case which the ‘Brandenburg test’ is derived from sets a precedent. For criminality of speech to be inferred, you have to be able to show that it would lead to ‘imminent lawless action’. Mehanna’s defence argued that he did not do this, but rather he was prosecuted for conspiring to kill American soliders and supporting Al-Qaeda — far more heinous crimes.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Urban Outfitters Selling T-Shirt That Features Holocaust Imagery

Marketing Nazi propaganda to impressionable youth doesn’t appear to be an isolated incident for Urban Outfitters.

In what can be considered yet another sign of the times that liberal ideology is elevating anti-Semitism back to mainstream acceptability once again, the international retailer Urban Outfitters is selling an item of clothing that can best be described as “Auschwitz chic”. It is a yellow t-shirt featuring a blue patchwork Star of David on the left breast pocket that harkens back to 1930s and 40s Europe where Jews were forced by the Nazis to wear a yellow badge in public until they were rounded up and sent off to the concentration camps.

While the reference might be lost on some Americans, the vintage yellow color of the shirt and homemade looking Star of David would serve as an unmistakable allusion to the Holocaust for most Europeans, where the practice of making the Jews visually distinguish themselves in public dates back over a millennia. For hundreds of years Jews have been made to wear yellow and sometimes blue, as was the case in Poland in 1939, badges in order to mark them as outsiders. Considering the long history of the practice in Europe, there is little doubt that the Danish brand Wood Wood, which produced the t-shirt for Urban Outfitters, could be ignorant of the anti-Semitic connotations that their design clearly conveys.

[…]

A few weeks ago it was revealed that they also carry the Obey Clothing brand which specializes in communist inspired themes and Christian bashing as evidenced by their upside down cross shirt. While Urban Outfitters doesn’t have a problem carrying merchandise that insult and defame Judaism and Christianity, curiously a review of their website revealed no such products that do the same for Islam.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Electricy Sector Merger a Liberal Red Herring

The Ontario PC party would scrap the OPA altogether. It was formed seven years ago as a 15-person ‘transitional’ body created by Dalton McGuinty’s Liberal government to manage Ontario’s energy supply. Today it’s a 235-person permanent entity where 87 people earn over $100,000 and the CEO earns over $570,000.

In just seven years, it has burned through over $375 million in expenditures, and its expenses have risen from $14 million in 2005 to $76.4 million today.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


48% of Brits Want to Get Out of the UK

Shock Sun survey shows almost half are ready to emigrate overseas

ALMOST half of all Britons are “seriously considering” moving overseas, an exclusive survey for The Sun has found.

Australia is top of the relocation wish list followed by the US, Canada and New Zealand.

The cost of living, weather, unemployment and crime are the most common reasons for wanting to quit Britain.

Pollsters YouGov quizzed 1,650 adults after The Sun told last week about Dave and Jackie Jones who emigrated to Australia with their 12 kids.

The family from Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria — who have never claimed benefits — quit in despair at what they see as soft-touch Britain’s emphasis on state handouts instead of opportunities.

Dave, 42, said: “I have to do the best for my kids and I feel the opportunities I want for them will not be in the UK.”…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Antitrust Rules Against Alitalia Rome-Milan Monopoly

High-speed rail line ‘not competition’ says ruling

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — Italy’s antitrust authority has ruled that Italy’s flagship carrier Alitalia must give up an unspecified number of slots on its monopoly Rome-Milan route by October 28.

Alitalia said it would appeal the ruling that said the airlines “must open itself up to effective competition” during peak transit hours before 8am and after 6pm.

The ruling overturns an ad hoc legislative decree that amended the suspended antitrust laws in 2008, allowing Alitalia an attempt to salvage its leading position in the Italian market and repay a government bridge loan of 300 million euros to the then almost insolvent carrier.

Probes carried out by the antitrust authorities that led to the ruling said that there is “a lack of proper competition between rail and air transport” and that Alitalia, along with its unit AirOne, was running a monopoly.

Alitalia Chief Executive Andrea Ragnetti said he was “surprised” by the ruling.

The airline said that it lost 2 million passengers and 50% of its earnings in the space of three years as a result of high-speed rail companies like the Frecciarossa, effectively confirming the competitive threat.

Citizens’ rights organisation Cittadinanzattiva said that the ruling shook the “absolute dominance of Alitalia on one of the most popular Italian routes” and was a step forward in protecting citizens’ right to choose.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Blamed for Bee Collapse, Monsanto Buys Leading Bee Research Firm

Monsanto, the massive biotechnology company being blamed for contributing to the dwindling bee population, has bought up one of the leading bee collapse research organizations. Recently banned from Poland with one of the primary reasons being that the company’s genetically modified corn may be devastating the dying bee population, it is evident that Monsanto is under serious fire for their role in the downfall of the vital insects. It is therefore quite apparent why Monsanto bought one of the largest bee research firms on the planet.

It can be found in public company reports hosted on mainstream media that Monsanto scooped up the Beeologics firm back in September 2011. During this time the correlation between Monsanto’s GM crops and the bee decline was not explored in the mainstream, and in fact it was hardly touched upon until Polish officials addressed the serious concern amid the monumental ban. Owning a major organization that focuses heavily on the bee collapse and is recognized by the USDA for their mission statement of “restoring bee health and protecting the future of insect pollination” could be very advantageous for Monsanto.

In fact, Beelogics’ company information states that the primary goal of the firm is to study the very collapse disorder that is thought to be a result — at least in part — of Monsanto’s own creations.

[…]

It appears that when Monsanto cannot answer for their environmental devastation, they buy up a company that may potentially be their ‘experts’ in denying any such link between their crops and the bee decline.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Blood Libel Not Bad Enough for UK Court

by John Ware

A libel barrister once gave me some very good advice. I was producing a TV documentary about a senior member of the IRA who’d sanctioned a series of bombings and shootings. He was also an elected politician and I wanted to call him all the names under the sun. The barrister wisely counselled caution. Peering over his rimless spectacles, and drawing heavily on a Turkish cigarette, he mused: “Look. Why don’t you just report the facts?” So, what are the facts in the imbroglio over Raed Salah, the most prominent Arab leader living in Israel today? The most significant one is that the Home Secretary lost on all counts in her attempt to persuade the Upper Immigration Tribunal that Sheikh Salah’s presence in the UK was not conducive to the public good. Her case that he’s a rabble rousing antisemitic preacher was “not a fair portrayal” of his views or words as a whole” and that there was no evidence that his presence had caused “any difficulty of any sort”.

Salah’s presence, maybe. But the attempt to remove him did create a very nasty situation in north London. Extremists stormed into a mosque visited by MP for Finchley and Golders Green, Mike Freer and called him a “Jewish homosexual pig” because he supported the ban on Salah. He had to retreat to a locked room for his safety. As if anticipating such events, the previous day, the lower immigration tribunal had found Salah’s “words and actions” did indeed have a tendency to be “inflammatory, divisive, insulting, and likely to foment tension and radicalism”. Their colleagues in the Upper Tribunal have now completely overturned this.

Hailed by his supporters as the “Ghandi of Palestine”, Raed Salah’s main purpose in visiting Britain was to promote the view that Israeli governments have been stealthily conspiring to destroy Islam’s third most holy site, the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem and replace it with a third Jewish Temple. The slogan ‘Al-Aqsa is in danger’ was made up by Hitler’s wartime ally Hajj Amin al-Husseini,to instigate anti-Jewish riots and to raise funds. Nonetheless, if Salah’s allegation is true today, or even contains a wisp of truth, the right to freely express it would quite properly trump any concerns about how angry it might make British Muslims.

So I want to pose a simple question: does it seem even remotely likely that an Israeli government would plot such a sacrilegious act knowing it would inflame not only its 1.7million Arab citizens, the 2billion Muslims beyond its borders, and alienate almost the entire globe? However far-fetched Salah’s imagination might seem, several MPs and members of the Lords were keen to give him and his supporters a platform in Parliament. Ismail Patel, who heads the Leicester-based Friends of Al Aqsa, said the Home Secretary’s decision to try to deport Salah because he was an inflammatory antisemite was based on “nothing more than hearsay”. Other Islamist organisations, several MPs and Baroness Tonge suggested likewise. For the Labour MP, Jeremy Corbyn, Salah was a potential “partner for peace”; for a former associate foreign editor of the Guardian, the Home Secretary was being “absurd” in banning a “much respected” leader; the Guardian itself brushed aside the allegations against him of antisemitism and incitement, publishing instead several apologias; the New Statesman said he had been “the target of a vicious and concerted smear campaign by the pro-Israel lobby in the UK.”

So who is the real, so-called “Ghandi of Palestine”? The Israeli Police say that, in a sermon in 2007 outside the Al Aqsa mosque, Salah invoked the infamous “blood libel” that Jews used the blood from the ritualised murder of gentile children to bake bread at Passover. Salah’s hosts — the Middle East Monitoring Organisation (MEMO) — initially quoted Salah as having denied making these comments or that he had been charged with racism and incitement. When it was pointed out to MEMO that Salah had in fact been charged, MEMO said he was never convicted “due to lack of evidence.” Also untrue: the evidence has yet to be tested in an Israeli court. In court in the UK, Salah denied that his reference to “blood” being used in “holy bread” was a reference to the blood libel against Jews. “I have never invoked the blood libel” he protested and “would not do so.” The judges in the Upper Tribunal found that he had and that his 10-paragraph explanation as to what he actually meant, with his obscure references to the Spanish Inquisition and the conflict in Bosnia, was “all wholly unpersuasive.”

And yet, to these judges, this mattered not too much. They concluded that, with the exception of the blood libel, overall, Salah’s language — albeit “intemperate” — was in fact directed at the Israeli state “rather than Jews as such.” They based this on the fact that, in his sermon, Salah had offered Jewish synagogues protection when, as he evidently believes, Israel succumbs to a Caliphate. The judges came to a similar view over a poem that he had written in 2002 in which he spoke of “oppressors” who “decayed our land” and were “germs and monkeys”.Salah’s behaviour could not be defined as unacceptable, the judges concluded. Really? I don’t know how much the judges know about the Middle East but even the dogs in the street know that it is not uncommon for Muslim hate preachers to refer to Jews as a kind of bacillus and to regurgitate Qu’uranic references to Jews as monkeys. The judges did find Salah’s speech had promoted the idea of “violent protest” because he had called for an “intifada” and referred to the virtue of “bloodshed” and martyrdom as “the most beautiful moments of our destiny.” But because Salah had yet to come to trial in Israel, even though he had been charged, the judges held that the Home Secretary should not have taken the Israeli indictments into account. Again, I pose a simple question: if, as the judges accept, Salah said these truly dreadful things, can it be right that the safety of British Jews and the state of communal tension generally should be contingent upon the tardiness of an overseas judiciary?

Reading the judgment, one gets the impression that the judges consider that Jews are just a bit too touchy about criticism. Otherwise, why dignify the suggestion from Salah’s side that the CST (which provided accurate material to government lawyers) “may be oversensitive in its detection of antisemitism (in the sense of anti-Jewish rather than generally antisemitic attitudes).” I struggle to see the distinction, just as I imagine a Palestinian might struggle to see a distinction between Islamophobia and “anti Muslim attitudes.” But references to Jews as child killers, blood baking monsters, germs and monkeys — whether or not “germs” and “monkeys” relates to the Israel state or its citizens? This comes across as the language of deep, visceral, racist, loathing.

So for me, this cases raises not only some awkward questions about the insouciance of the Tribunal but also about the way the Government’s legal team prepared and presented the evidence. The judges asserted that the evidence was “not a fair portrayal” of Salah. The blood libel, and invocation to martyrdom was “not a sample (of the evidence before them), or ‘the tip of the iceberg’: it is simply all the evidence that there is.” In fact, the evidence before them was only the evidence that was tested in court. I understand the Treasury Solicitors had several examples of other alleged Jewish libels by Salah but, for whatever reason, chose not to put them before the court. For example, in October 2001, an article published in Salah’s name by the journal of his Islamic Movement, promotes another grotesque antisemitic libel, with its clear implication of Jews being behind 9/11: that “4,000 Jews… 4,000 Jewish clerks” were warned to avoid the Twin Towers that day. “On the other hand”, Salah is reported to have said, “this warning did not reach the 2,000 Muslims who worked in the World Trade Centre…”

And then, just last year, after the death of Osama bin Laden, Salah’s Islamic Movement described the Al Qaeda leader as “the sheikh, the martyr, bin Laden” and said the US special forces that killed him were “mercenaries who have sold their consciences to cursed Satan.” The Treasury Solicitors also chose not to use evidence from the Israeli Commission of Inquiry into the Arab riots of October 2000, which found that Salah was “responsible… for the transmission of repeated messages encouraging the use of violence and the threat of violence as a means to achieve the goals of Israel’s Arab sector.” In those riots, 12 Arab Israelis were killed, and one elderly Jewish man was stoned to death after an Israeli Arab mob went on the rampage using firebombs, gunfire, rocks, and slingshots against both Israeli citizens and police. At a “Peace” rally two weeks earlier organised by Salah’s Islamic Movement on his forever theme “Al Aqsa is in Danger”, Salah is reported to have told the crowd: “the Islamic world has exclusive rights to all the holy sites in Jerusalem and Israel has none.” The crowd is said to have responded: “In spirit and blood, we shall redeem Al Aqsa.”

None of this was put before the judges even though the Home Secretary was advised that the evidence against Salah was “very finely balanced.” Whether that applied to all of the evidence available to the lawyers, or just the few pieces they chose to test, I cannot say. Legal issues aside, one might reasonably have expected the Guardian — of all newspapers — so often in the vanguard of exposing racism, at least to have remarked upon Salah’s wild Jewish conspiracy theories and his movement’s praise for bin Laden. But it did not. Neither did the Independent, nor the New Statesman. Indeed, the latter expressed jubilation. The Independent is now a marginal newspaper, the once great New Statesman even more so. But the Guardian? It could not even bring itself to report the first immigration tribunal’s verdict that Salah had a tendency to be an “inflammatory, divisive” and “insulting” preacher “likely to foment tension and radicalism”.

The “Ghandi of Palestine” is now back in his home town of Umm al-Fahm Uhmm, just inside Israel where he has been the thrice elected Mayor. He spent 10 months here fighting to clear his name and, when victory came, it was followed by an explosion of righteous fury by his supporters. Before departing from London Salah was the guest of honour at a party for 350 at a West London location. According to his hosts, the “most poignant words” came, not from any of the many speakers queuing up to pay their respects, but when the Supreme Guide to the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood telephoned to congratulate him personally. As most JC readers will know, the Brotherhood is the parent organisation of Hamas, to which the government lawyers said Salah’s Islamic movement in Israel is linked.

Mohammed Sawalha of the British Muslim Initiative, said the Home Secretary should resign “or be sacked by the Prime Minister.” Several others referred to what they clearly regard as the malign and disproportionate power of what they call the “Israel lobby. Jeremy Corbyn, supported by Salah’s lawyer, Tayyab Ali, has demanded an inquiry under the Public Inquires Act of 2005. With the greatest respect to Messrs Corbyn and Ali, this 2005 Act is intended for disasters of considerably greater significance than the banning of a single preacher whose views have yet to capture the imagination of the wider British public. To put it mildly. Still, it is a fact that many of those supporting the Home Secretary were indeed “Pro-Israel” to the extent that they would like to see a national homeland for one of the world’s smallest populations whose people have been persecuted throughout much of their history. It’s also a fact that those who habitually assign the “Pro-Israel” prefix to others, do so from what they consider to be a superior moral position. But whether one is “Pro-Israel” or “Pro-Palestinian”, why any British citizen, let alone MPs or liberal national newspapers, should have objected so passionately, and with such primeval fury to the Home Secretary putting the evidence against Salah to the test, is beyond my understanding. And that’s a “Pro British” view, by the way.

John Ware is a broadcaster

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Britain’s Duty to the Palestinian People

by Raed Salah

I came to the UK to talk about the plight of the Palestinians but ended up fighting deportation. This is what I wanted to say

In June 2011 I came to Britain to begin a speaking tour to draw attention to the plight of my people, the Palestinian citizens of Israel. The tour was meant to last 10 days. Instead I had to stay for 10 months in order to resist an attempt by the home secretary, Theresa May, to deport me — itself the result of a smear campaign against me and what I represent. I fought not just for my own sake, but for all who are smeared because they support the Palestinian cause.Since 1990 I have visited the UK several times to speak publicly. On this occasion I was arrested, imprisoned, and told I was to be deported to Israel because my presence in the UK was “not conducive to the public good”. A judge later ruled that I had been illegally detained, but bail conditions continued to severely restrict my freedom, making it impossible for me to speak as I had intended. After a 10-month legal battle, I have now been cleared on “all grounds” by a senior immigration tribunal judge, who ruled that May’s decision to deport me was “entirely unnecessary” and that she had been “misled”. The evidence she relied on (which included a poem of mine which had been doctored to make it appear anti-Jewish) was not, he concluded, a fair portrayal of my views. In reality, I reject any and every form of racism, including antisemitism. I have no doubt that, despite this, Israel’s cheerleaders in Britain will continue to smear my character. This is the price every Palestinian leader and campaigner is forced to pay.

My people — the Palestinians — are the longstanding victims of Israeli racism. Victims of racism, anywhere, should never condone or support the maltreatment of another people, as Israel does. The suffering of the Palestinian citizens of Israel has been ignored for decades. But there is today a growing awareness of it, which partially explains this smear campaign against me. In December 2011, EU ambassadors in Israel raised serious concerns about Israeli discrimination, noting that “not only has the situation of the Palestinian Arab minority in Israel not improved, but it has further deteriorated”. There are around 1.5 million Arabs in Israel. We make up 17% of the population, but we face a barrage of racist policies and discriminatory laws. We receive less than 5% of funds allocated by the government for development. Public spending on children in Arab municipalities is one-third lower than that of children in Jewish municipalities. The average hourly wage of Arab workers is about 70% of that of Jewish workers. Any Jew, from any country, is allowed under Israel’s law of return to migrate to Israel; Palestinian refugees are not allowed to exercise their right of return. While a Jew can live anywhere in Israel, a Palestinian citizen cannot. Jews can marry whoever they wish and live with them in Israel, Palestinian citizens cannot.

In the criminal justice system, a 2011 study commissioned by Israel’s courts administration and Israel bar association revealed that almost half of Arabs receive custodial sentences for certain crimes, compared to a third of Jews. While 63.5% of Arabs convicted of violent crimes were sentenced to prison, only 43.7% of similar Jewish offenders were.

Education is only one of several areas in which Palestinian citizens face discrimination in Israel. The Israeli government allocates less money per head for Arab children’s education than it does for that of Jewish children. One devastating consequence is that the drop-out rate from schools is three times higher among Arabs than among Jews. Nowhere is the injustice more striking than in the Negev. Living in poverty in “unrecognised” villages, the Arab Bedouin are ineligible for basic services such as water, electricity, and healthcare. The Negev village of al-Araqib has been demolished 35 times by the Israeli government; on every occasion it was rebuilt by its inhabitants.

Despite the Israeli policy of “transfer” — another term for ethnic cleansing — the Palestinians will not go away. The Israeli state can occupy our lands, demolish our homes, drill tunnels under the old city of Jerusalem — but we will not disappear. Instead, we now aspire to a directly elected leadership for Palestinians in Israel; one that would truly represent our interests. We seek only the legal rights guaranteed to us by international conventions and laws. The Palestinian issue can only be resolved if Israel and its supporters in Britain abandon the dogmas of supremacy and truly adhere to the universal values of justice and fairness. Britain has a special responsibility in this, because it is uniquely responsible for our suffering: our national tragedy began with the Balfour Declaration. While Britain enforced the first part of the declaration, which promised Palestine as a homeland for the Jewish people, but ignored the part that states: “It being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine.” If there is any lesson to be learned from this sordid affair, it is that there is nothing to gain from putting false words into my mouth, or casting me out of the mainstream of public discourse.

• In the thread below, there has been some discussion about statements that Raed Salah allegedly made. The Comment editor Becky Gardiner has commented, setting out the judgement here and here. Raed Salah has also replied here.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Even More Oil Found Off Norway

Wintershall, the largest internationally active German crude oil and natural gas producer, has struck oil at one of its licenses in a mature area of the North Sea. The discovery from a wildcat well at the Skarfjell prospect may be worth more than NOK 100 billion.

A 30-year-old Norwegian geophysicist is getting much of the credit for the latest in a series of new oil discoveries off Norway. Kari Langvik Østhus was given responsibility five years ago to survey the license Wintershall held on the site in the northeastern portion of the North Sea, which is off the west coast between Bergen and Florø.

“There’s always a team behind these projects,” Østhus told newspaper Dagens Næringsliv (DN). “But for me, it’s also very exciting that this was my first license, my ‘darling,’ in a way. I was of course really glad when I heard there was an oil discovery.”

So were the top executives at Wintershall, which has been investing heavily in Norway’s oil and gas industry. Wintershall is Germany’s largest producer of oil and gas and logged historically high operating profits last year.

“The Skarfjell discovery is another important milestone for Winterhall and adds further growth potential to our portfolio on the Norwegian Continental Shelf,” said Martin Bachmann, a member of Wintershall’s board of executive directors responsible for exploration and production. “We’re confident of the quality of our projects, both in exploration and development, and continue to pursue ambitious targets for the northern North Sea.”

Wintershall has a portfolio of more than 40 licenses off Norway with operating rights on more than 20. The company aims to raise its daily production on both the Norwegian and British continental shelf by more than 10-fold by 2015.

Svein Ilebekk, managing director of license partner Agora, said Østhus was responsible for seismic interpretation, among other things, and is among the youngest in the organization of license partners. “I sent her a message of congratulations,” he told DN.

Wintershall Norge is known for having a solid staff of women, who make up nearly half of its employees in an industry dominated by men. DN reported recently that the company’s roughly 150 employees in Norway come from 17 different countries. Several have come from large companies, attracted by the opportunity to work for a smaller operation that’s building itself up in Norway.

Norway’s oil and gas industry continues to boom, with major new discoveries and expansion of new oil fields. Government officials last week approved development, for example, of the so-called Edvard Grieg field, valued at an estimated NOK 1,900 billion. Oil & Energy Minister Ola Borten Moe called the move “the start of a new chapter in Norwegian oil history. These are enormous values.”

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



French-German Relations: What a Hollande Victory Would Mean for Merkel

German Chancellor Merkel has made it clear that she would like to see French President Nicolas Sarkozy win a second term. Indeed, if his challenger François Hollande emerges victorious in the country’s upcoming election, she could face isolation in Europe. But a Sarkozy re-election might be problematic, too.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Muslims Mobilizing to Unseat Sarkozy

PARIS — France’s Muslim community is mobilizing voters to reject President Nicolas Sarkozy in Sunday’s election to punish the conservative leader for his anti-immigrant/anti-Islam rhetoric.

“[French] Muslims can’t stand it anymore. They are fed up with these debates about national identity, Halal meat, the veil or fundamentalism all over the place,” said Francoise Lorcerie, a sociologist with the Institute of Studies on the Arab and Muslim World near Marseille..

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Germany: Minister Slams Salafism at Islam Conference

German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich condemned domestic violence, forced marriage and the fundamentalist Muslim branch the Salafists at the latest Islam conference on Thursday. Speaking at the opening of the conference in Berlin, Friedrich said, “We won’t allow the Salafists to set our agenda with their propaganda,” but he added that an “important signal” needed to be sent.

The Salafists, one of the strictest branches of Islam, caused a media controversy last weekend by handing out free copies of the Koran in several German cities.

This year’s Islam conference is to concentrate on the position of Muslim women in German society, but a number of politicians, including Lower Saxony state Interior Minister Uwe Schünemann, had called for a “clear signal” to address the Salafist Koran giveaway.

Friedrich also said that the conference’s declaration against domestic violence and forced marriage was the first time that Muslims of various backgrounds had “agreed on a text that unambiguously condemned such practices.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Northern League to Sell Party’s Ex-Treasurer’s Diamonds

(AGI) Rome — The diamonds handed back by former Northern League treasurer Belsito “will be sold”. Piedmont governor Roberto Cota, of the Northern League, said so speaking at the talk show Ballaro’, adding that “the proceeds will be given to the party’s constituencies”. According to Cota, “the Northern League is the injured party. Belsito is the only one being probed and he has been expelled. Bossi is not under investigation and he stepped down”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Probed for Inducing Sex-Party Witness to Lie

Ex-premier’s lawyer hopeful case will be dropped soon

(ANSA) — Rome, April 19 — Former Premier Silvio Berlusconi is under investigation in the southern city of Bari over accusations he induced a witness to lie about his alleged sex parties, judicial sources said on Thursday.

Berlusconi is suspected of bribing Bari businessman Giampaolo Tarantini to lie to magistrates about the role the latter allegedly played in supplying prostitutes to parties at the media magnate’s homes.

The ex-premier has been under investigation since October but the news only emerged in media reports on Thursday and was confirmed by judicial sources, who said prosecutors were notifying Berlusconi that the probe has been extended.

Berlusconi’s lawyer Niccolo’ Ghedini told Thursday’s Corriere della Sera that the ex premier had not been informed he was being probed, but added that he was expected to be put under investigation for procedural reasons.

“At this point we can only hope that the case is dropped as soon as possible,” added Ghedini, who is also an MP for Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party.

The case is related to an ongoing trial concerning allegations Berlusconi paid to have sex with an underage prostitute, Karima ‘Ruby’ El Mahroug, at his Arcore villa outside Milan and abused his power to try to cover the affair up.

Valter Lavitola, a Berlusconi associate who returned to Italy on Monday after living for over six month in South America as a fugitive of Italian justice, is also being probed for allegedly getting Tarantini to lie to magistrates.

Prosecutors suspect Tarantini denied that Berlusconi knew the women he took to the parties were paid during a 2009 interrogation because Berlusconi had given him money via Lavitola.

The Prosecutors had initially hypothesized that hundreds of thousands of euros had been extorted by Tarantini to not reveal the details of sex parties Berlusconi allegedly held in 2008 and 2009.

But subsequent investigations led them to suspect Berlusconi bribed Tarantini to lie.

Tarantini is suspected of providing at least 30 women for the former prime minister in a bid to exchange sex for public contracts.

Lavitola, the former editor of daily newspaper L’Avanti!, accompanied Berlusconi on some foreign trips during his time as premier even though he had no official government position.

Upon ending his exile this week Lavitola was told that he is also being investigated for alleged corruption with Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli and his government regarding contracts for the construction of prisons in the central American country.

Lavitola was told he is also being probed for criminal association related to the use of public funds for the media along with several other people, including Sergio De Gregorio, a Senator with Berlusconi’s People of Freedom Party.

In addition to the Ruby case, the former premier is also on trial in two other cases.

One concerns accusations of fraud at his media empire while the other regards alleged involvement in the publication of an illegally obtained wiretap in his brother Paolo’s conservative newspaper Il Giornale.

He could also face another trial after Rome prosecutors requested that he be indicted along with 11 other people for alleged fraud at a subsidiary of his Mediaset broadcasting empire -Mediatrade.

In the ongoing and several other previous trials, Berlusconi has always denied wrongdoing, claiming he is the victim of a minority group of allegedly leftwing prosecutors and judges who he says are persecuting him for political reasons.

In more than a dozen cases, the premier has never received a definitive conviction, sometimes because of law changes passed by his governments, while some other charges were timed out by the statute of limitations.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Merkel Ally Says Islam Not Part of Germany

(Reuters) — A leading conservative politician said on Thursday that Islam did not belong in Germany, fuelling tension at a conference on integrating Muslims that also debated a controversial Salafist campaign to hand out copies of the Koran across the country. “Islam is not part of our tradition and identity in Germany and so does not belong in Germany,” Volker Kauder, head of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives in parliament, told the Passauer Neue Presse.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Planned to Behead Ex-Prime Minister

The gunman behind Norway’s massacres told court on Thursday he had planned an even bigger killing spree, with three car bombs, the beheading of an ex-prime minister, and more shootings on Utøya island and at targets across Oslo.

Anders Behring Breivik told an Oslo court he meant “to kill everyone” in his Utøya massacre, not just 69.

“The goal was to kill everybody,” the 33-year-old right-wing extremist told the court, adding he had first planned to capture former prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland and behead her on camera, before posting the video online.

Breivik also said he had once spent a year playing video games, including role-playing online game “World of Warcraft”, and a shooting game to prepare for what he believed would be a suicide mission.

The far-right extremist also testified he had named his murder weapons after terms from Norse mythology, calling his rifle “Gungnir” after Odin’s magical spear and his Glock pistol “Mjølner” after Thor’s hammer.

Breivik is on trial for the July 22nd twin attacks, when he killed eight people with a van-bomb targeting buildings housing the offices of Labour Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, who was not present at the time.

He then travelled to Utøya island where, dressed as a police officer, for more than one hour he methodically shot at hundreds of people at a Labour Party youth summer camp, taking 69 lives, mostly teenagers.

On Thursday, the fourth day of his trial, the 33-year-old said that originally “the plan was three car bombs followed by a shooting”, describing the initial plan as a “very large operation.”

He said he had considered placing a bomb near Labour Party headquarters.

For the third location, he considered parliament, Norway’s Aftenposten newspaper and City Hall, before deciding on the royal palace, although he insisted he had planned to warn the royal family so they would not be hurt.

He said that, had he survived all three bombings, he would have used a motorcycle to drive first to a far-left squatter community, then to the Dagsavisen daily and finally to the headquarters of the Socialist Left Party, “executing as many people as possible” in each place.

“The plan was to not surrender before the whole plan had been carried out,” he told the court. “It was a suicide mission where the probability of survival was equal to zero.”

Breivik also answered questions from the prosecution about the year 2006, when he isolated himself to spend an average of 16 hours a day to play video games after returning to live with his mother at the age of 27.

“Some people dream about sailing around the world, some dream of playing golf. I dreamt of playing World of Warcraft,” he told the court.

He insisted the game was a very social, not very violent strategy game, which was “pure entertainment (and) has nothing to do with July 22.”

Instead, he said, it was a “hobby” and he decided to play it for a full year so as not to regret leaving a dream unfulfilled after his attacks.

“I felt it was right to do this to prepare myself mentally to sacrifice my life,” he told the court.

Breivik also mentioned another game, “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare”, which he said he had used as actual training for the shooting spree.

“It is a war simulator. It gives you an impression of how target systems work,” he explained, adding he used it to practice “shooting other people”.

Calm and more cooperative than Wednesday — when he refused to answer questions about a network of far-right militants he claims to be part of called the Knights Templar — Breivik smiled several times while discussing target shooting techniques.

When confronted about his smiles by prosecutor Svein Holden, he acknowledged the survivors and victims’ families watching were probably reacting “in a natural way, with horror and disgust”.

At the start of the day, the defendant refrained from making his habitual far-right salute — touching his chest and extending his clenched right fist in front of him — after objections from survivors and families.

Breivik, charged with “acts of terror”, entered a plea of not guilty at the start of his trial, saying his actions were “cruel but necessary”.

The gunman has told the court he wants to be executed or acquitted, deriding Norway’s maximum 21-year prison sentence as “pathetic”.

Breivik will only get prison if the court deems him sane — something he is fighting for so as not to delegitimize his Islamophobic and anti-multicultural ideology.

While the sentence then would be the maximum 21 years, it could be extended indefinitely if he was still considered a threat to society.

If found insane he could be sentenced to closed psychiatric care, possibly for life.

Meanwhile, Oslo police said they had deported a German woman expressing support for Breivik, amid reports she claimed to be the gunman’s lover.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Salafists Worry German Islam Conference

After the acrimony and uproar last year, Germany’s annual Islam conference this time around was more harmonious, but mistrust between the government and Muslims remains.

For German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich this year’s Islam conference was very constructive. During a break in meetings, he told journalists in Berlin that there was broad agreement among the conference participants. For example, Friedrich said, there was a consensus that forced marriage and domestic violence “did not come from religion, but from the patriarchal structures and traditions in the countries of origin.” Equality between the sexes was a key topic at this year’s conference. “No tolerance” was the watchword against domestic violence and forced marriage demanded by the participants in a joint position paper. “It is the first time that so many Muslim organizations and individuals were able to agree on such a declaration,” Friedrich emphasized.

No joint press conference

Nevertheless, the relationship between Friedrich and Muslims remains tense, after he said a year ago upon taking office that Islam, historically, did not belong to Germany. He faced some sharp criticism for those remarks from Muslims at last year’s press conference after the meeting. He was making a reference to former German President Christian Wulff who had urged more tolerance toward Muslims and who said that “Islam belonged to Germany.” This year, there was no joint press conference “for purely organizational reasons,” said Friedrich.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The UK’s Leading Publisher [The Guardian] Of Jew-Haters

So, you’re a poisonous antisemite who admits to peddling dangerous blood libels against Jews. You have something on your mind. Where would you go to get it published? Who would you give a column? The Guardian, of course. Who else? Well, to be fair, maybe the New Statesman would be worth a try. This is what the Court had to say about Salah’s antisemitic incitement:

The appellant is clearly aware of the blood libel against Jews. If his intention had been to draw an analogy between events of the Spanish Inquisition and actions of the Israeli state he could have said so in clearer terms that did not require over ten paragraphs of explanation for his true meaning to be made clear. If he had meant to refer to Christians using the blood of others to make bread, which he seems to consider less offensive than referring to Jews doing so, then he could have inserted the word “Christian” into the text of his the sermon as he does in paragraph 175 of his explanation. Allusion to historical examples of children being killed in religious conflict does not require reference to their blood being used to make “holy bread”. The truth of the matter is that the conjunction of the concepts of ‘children’s blood’ and ‘holy bread’ is bound to be seen as a reference to the blood libel unless it is immediately and comprehensively explained to be something else altogether.

UPDATE:

Here’s an article the Guardian didn’t publish. And would never publish.

John Ware on Raed Salah

Why wouldn’t the Guardian publish a piece like this? Simple. It is a promoter of vicious Jew-hatred.

Update: The comments thread, which was hijacked by a couple of nasty and unenlightening commenters, has been closed, and those commenters have been banned.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



‘Tortured’ US Muslim Seeks Asylum in Sweden

A US citizen who claims he was imprisoned and tortured at the behest the American FBI is seeking political asylum in Sweden. Yonas Fikre, a 33-year-old American Muslim, is currently in Sweden awaiting word on his application for political asylum after having been imprisoned in the United Arab Emirates where he claims he was tortured for 106 days at the request of American government agents.

“He told me to lie down on the floor and he started beating the soles of my feet,” he said in a video clip published on the YouTube channel of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), an advocacy group for American Muslims which has supported Fikre throughout his ordeal.

“This guy looked at me and said, ‘Look, your government doesn’t care about you. You’re in our hands now. You do what we tell you to do and you’ll get out of here as soon as possible. Otherwise you’re going to sit here for years and years to come and your government will never, ever find you.’“

Fikre’s problems first started back in 2009 while he was visiting Sudan and stem from his association with a mosque in Portland, Oregon in the western United States.

While he was in Sudan, Fikre, a naturalized US citizen from Eritrea who converted to Islam in 2003, was “harassed” by FBI agents from Portland looking for information about Portland’s Masjid as-Sabr mosque.

According to Fikre’s Swedish lawyer Hans Bredberg, the agents thought Fikre could help them learn more about the mosque, where Mohamed Osman Mohamud, a Somali American charged with plotting the “Christmas tree bomb” attempt in 2010, had once worshiped.

“He refused to cooperate so they started harassing him,” Bredberg told The Local. “I think these agents were sort of working on their own initiative, that it wasn’t officially sanctioned, but the FBI isn’t saying anything.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Breaking: Lord Sugar Comes Out Against Ken Livingstone

by Andrew Gilligan

One of Labour’s biggest donors and supporters, Lord Alan Sugar, has today tweeted: “I don’t care if Ed Miliband is backing Livingstone. I seriously suggest NO-ONE votes for Livingstone in the Mayoral elections.” And: “Livingstone must NOT get in on 3rd May.” Lord Sugar donated a total of £69,424 to Labour or to Mr Miliband’s office in 2011, including £12,576 as rcently as December. He is of course a prominent member of the Jewish community and was believed to have been extremely angry at Ken’s behaviour towards Jews.

Ken’s campaign is in crisis now.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Don’t Ban Alcohol — We’ll Get the Blame, Say Muslim Students

Muslim students at a university considering banning alcohol from parts of its campus have hit out at the plan — fearing they will be blamed for the move. Students at London Metropolitan University said banning alcohol in the name of Muslims will cause tension on campus, divide the community, and could be exploited by far-Right groups such as the English Defence League. Malcolm Gillies, Vice Chancellor of London Met, has said he might stop alcohol being served in parts of the university because some religious students view it as “immoral”. But Syed Rumman, vice president of the Student Union, warned that any ban would be “catastrophic”. Mr Rumman, who is a Muslim, said: “I do not drink, but it doesn’t mean that I will deprive another student from having alcohol.” He added: “It is unethical, catastrophic and it will isolate Muslims further in society. This will go against the ethos of London Met where students are so diverse but also socialise together. Students who do drink will resent Muslims. It will divide the student body. We must not allow this to become a religious issue. Muslim students never asked for this ban.” The debate began after a decision was made to close The Hub, a student bar on the university’s Aldgate campus.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Five Arrested Over ‘Race Hate’ Internet Posts

Five suspected far-right extremists were arrested by counter-terror detectives today after race-hate material was posted online. They are being held after raids by the North-East Counter Terrorism Unit in North Tyneside, County Durham, Merseyside, Barnsley and London. A spokeswoman for the unit said: “All five men have been arrested on suspicion of offences under the Public Order Act, publishing or distributing written material which may stir up racial hatred.” The arrests are being linked with a splinter group of the English Defence League known as the North West Infidels. A 43-year-old from North Tyneside, a 46-year-old from County Durham, an 18-year-old from Birkenhead, Merseyside, a 21-year-old from Barnsley and a 56-year-old from Holloway, north London, are being held.

A spokeswoman said: “They have been taken to local police stations for interviewing. “Searches have now begun at the addresses, together with searches at an address in Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, and Leeds, West Yorkshire On a North West Infidels Facebook page, a message posted at lunchtime said: “Heads up if you have posted any thing you might get in trouble for delete it now … while you still can … and don’t post anything considered racist folks you are responsible for your own actions.” Elsewhere on the page, there was a lengthy message explaining “Who are the Infidels of Britain?”. It said the group was an alliance of “right wing nationalists, patriotic and loyalist groups from different parts of the UK”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Galloway and Livingstone: Twins in So Many Ways

by Nick Cohen

Step outside party politics and the differences between the two disappear like the morning mist

On the face of it, Ken Livingstone and George Galloway could not be further apart. Livingstone is the Labour candidate in the contest to be mayor of London. The party’s leaders defend him against every critic, and indulge his every excess. George Galloway hates Labour, and Labour hates him. He accuses it of being a nest of warmongers and capitalist lackeys. Labour replies that he is a dictators’ stooge, and adds that he is the worst possible politician to represent the urban poor because the record of the last parliament showed he preferred mewing like a cat on a reality TV show to turning up for work in the House of Commons. Step outside party politics, however, and the differences between the two disappear like the morning mist. For its contemptible willingness to exploit the suffering of others for the purposes of self-aggrandisement, no politician can beat Galloway’s claim that his by-election victory was the “Bradford spring” — West Yorkshire’s imitation of the uprisings against tyranny in the Arab world.

[…]

Labour’s grubby leaders bite their tongues because they hope Livingstone will help restore their fortunes by flirting with the language of sectarian strife. Some of us have been warning for a while that they and the rest of the left cannot have it both ways. They cannot condemn evangelical leaders in America and orthodox Jewish leaders in Israel for keeping their followers in a state of religious paranoia, while staying silent about the manipulation of the faithful in Britain; they cannot condemn conservatives’ sexism, racism and homophobia while excusing or encouraging sexism, racism and homophobia for their own ends. After its defeat in Bradford, Labour will be tempted to follow Livingston’e lead and outflank Galloway on the religious right. It is for this reason that it is important that Londoners reject Livingstone, not just for London’s sake or Britain’s sake but for the sake of the Labour party.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Lord Sugar: Nobody Should Vote for Ken Livingstone as Mayor

A high-profile Labour peer has publicly stated that voters should not back Ken Livingstone to be mayor of London. Lord Sugar, the Apprentice boss and millionaire entrepreneur, wrote on Twitter: “I don’t care if Ed Miliband is backing Livingstone. “I seriously suggest NO ONE votes for Livingstone in the Mayoral elections.” In another message to his 1,848,793 followers on the social networking site, the former market trader wrote: “Livingstone must not get in” on May 3. Lord Sugar, who was made Baron Sugar of Clapton in July 2010, served as a government enterprise “tsar” under Gordon Brown. Adding further criticism, the Jewish businessman reposted a message from Conservative pundit Guido Fawkes that said: “Ken has claimed that he has no idea how much his wife earns. He is the director of the company that pays her.” However Lord Sugar did not offer himself up as an alternative. “It’s been suggested I run for mayor,” he wrote. “Not possible, too many commercial conflicts, no time, more to the point I would not know where to start.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Visit Mosque in Community Initiative

Keighley Neighbourhood Policing Team will have a mobile exhibition van outside a mosque tomorrow as part of a venture to build better relations with communities across the town.

The unit, plus various police vehicles, including an off-road bike, will be at the Markazi Jamia Mosque, in Emily Street, between noon and 4pm. Residents are invited to call in to speak to officers, who will visit the mosque itself to encourage people to raise issues. In addition, the team will be fitting anti-tamper screws to car number plates in the neighbourhood.

The initiative is the latest of several staged by the police to develop community relationships. Others have included a mentoring scheme with the national Mosaic charity project and Keighley schools, in which officers worked with young Asian girls and mums to raise their aspirations. The scheme was the first of its kind in Britain to break down barriers for young Muslim women and was backed by the Prince of Wales. Acting Inspector Craig Marshall, of Keighley NPT, said: “We are always working to make ourselves as accessible as possible and hope visiting the mosque and taking the exhibition van to Emily Street will encourage residents there to pop in and see us.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: William Hague: Britain Will Have a Global Diplomatic Network and the Best Diplomatic Service in the World

Last week the Foreign Affairs Select Committee published a report on the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. It praised the Department’s “impressive performance” representing the UK’s interests across the globe on a relatively small budget while arguing that the Foreign Office is underfunded. I welcome the report and the implication that the Foreign Office would make good use of a larger budget. But this is simply not possible at a time when our country is facing huge economic pressures. The Foreign Office has to shoulder its share of the burden of reducing the deficit. In any event it is not the size of the Foreign Office budget that matters, but what we do with it. Its budget will always be small compared to the expenditure needed to maintain our Armed Forces or the NHS. The real value of the Foreign Office lies in the power of the ideas it develops and the unique connections it forges overseas.

The Foreign Office I inherited in May 2010 was in a weakened position. Years of being sidelined by Labour Prime Ministers had taken their toll on its influence in Whitehall, as had endless ministerial changes. More than 30 British High Commissions, Embassies or posts had been shut in the space of ten years. The Foreign Office language school had been closed so that language skills declined. In an astonishing blunder, Labour Ministers stripped the Foreign Office of its protection against exchange rate movements — even though more than half its budget is spent in foreign currencies — leading to a raft of unplanned cuts to Embassies and to travel and training for diplomats. These bad decisions — which we highlighted in Opposition — diminished the Foreign Office and weakened British influence in the world. We promised to reverse them and to inject the long-term strategic vision for British diplomacy that had been missing for a decade.

My personal objective as Foreign Secretary is to strengthen the Foreign Office and to improve our country’s capacity to pursue effective foreign policy in the decades to come. We must do this while at the same time making the right decisions on Afghanistan and Iran, and using the best of our diplomacy to help stem the appalling bloodshed in Syria.

Britain is an outward-looking nation, highly integrated into the world economy and with a leading role in global affairs. Our country’s economy — and our international influence — both depend in part upon a strong Foreign and Commonwealth Office and effective British diplomacy. Like building a strong economy, maintaining a strong foreign policy requires a vision for the future, not just dealing with immediate crises.

Looking twenty years ahead, we can see that our country needs good economic and political ties with the new and emerging powers of the 21st century alongside our traditional alliances. We will need to be just as effective in Beijing, Brasilia, Pretoria, Delhi and Jakarta and other flourishing centres of influence as we are in Brussels and Washington. Fast-forwarding to the future, we must plug Britain into the world’s vibrant networks such as the G20, Commonwealth and ASEAN, seeking new partners as well as new opportunities. Britain’s engagement with the world needs constantly to break new ground, not to shrink in reach or ambition. A confident and capable Foreign Office with a global presence as well as highly skilled diplomats is critical to our national interest. This is our government’s vision and it is the path that the Foreign Office is now firmly on.

Today the Foreign Office is building the networks, alliances, and connections that our country needs to thrive long into the future. We have opened or are opening up to eight new Embassies and six Consulates and sending more diplomatic staff to over 20 countries, particularly in Asia. We are funding this by closing some small Consulates in Europe and making other savings. We have begun the biggest drive ever seen to reinforce the traditional diplomatic skills and institutional strength of the Foreign Office. We are re-opening an FCO language school. We will soon have 40% more Chinese language speakers in our Posts in China than in 2010, and the same increase in Arabic speakers across our network.

The foundation stone for this was restoring financial stability to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. This we did, securing a tough but fair flat-cash settlement in the current spending round and introducing a new protection against exchange rate movements so that the Foreign Office could once again plan sensibly for the future.

The results are there to see. We are reinvigorating neglected diplomatic ties from the Middle East to Latin America. Our increased emphasis on the Gulf meant that we were able to work with countries in the region when we intervened in Libya — a big change from the recent past. Our increased focus on using diplomacy to support jobs in our economy, led by the Prime Minister, is producing strong results. British exports of goods were up by £50bn last year, including significant increases to China, to Brazil, to Russia, to India and to South Africa.

So even with a constrained budget, today we are expanding British diplomacy in vital parts of the world while not moving Britain away from our indispensable alliance with the United States and deep partnership with the European Union. Our aim is that in twenty years time Britain will work highly effectively with new partners alongside our traditional allies on the shared problems of our time from piracy to cyber security to climate change. We will have increased Britain’s trade relations, supporting future generations of Britons. We will have a global diplomatic network and the best diplomatic service in the world. And we will continue to play a central role in averting conflict, addressing crises and advancing our values of human rights and democracy. This is British diplomacy on the advance, and it is the right course for our country.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Will Respect Thwart Labour Gaining Control of Bradford Council?

Labour currently run Bradford City Council as a minority administration. Last year a third of seats were up for election and they made five gains. This year another third are up for election. Gaining overall control in Bradford should be among Labour’s most modest objectives. They have 44 councillors out of a total of 90. The Conservatives have 28. But the victory of Respect’s George Galloway in the Bradford West byelection puts this in doubt. The Party are contesting a dozen wards. Most are safe Labour wards although one is Conservative held and a couple are held by the Lib Dems. Socialist Worker reports that some of the Respect candidates are former labour Party members. Labour gains from the Conservatives and Lib Dems might offset by losses to Respect. Some might welcome this difficulty for the Labour Party. I do not. Respect are a divisive and extremist party offering an equivalent brand of poison to the BNP. They are not democrats but are out to destroy our way of life. Conservative councillors are putting forward some strong positive messages about their approach — including proposing to save £438,000 currently spent employing 15 union officials at Council Taxpayers expense. But what is needed is for the mainstream parties to ensure that the people of Bradford are aware of the true nature of the Respect Party — an unpleasant alliance of Communists and Islamic fundamentalists. Faced with that sort of threat negative campaigning is a duty. Nick Cohen offers plenty of material.

[Reader comment by Faceless Bureaucrat on 19 April 2012.]

STOP PRESS!: Bradford spends past 20 years growing its Muslim population — now they unsportingly vote for pro-Muslim politicians!

Who could possibly have forseen that happening?…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Victoria Cross Awarded to Scots Skipper Who Fought ‘David and Goliath’ WWI Battle to be Auctioned

A VICTORIA Cross awarded to a Scots fishing boat skipper for taking on a cruiser five times bigger than his ship in WW1 is to go under the hammer.

The medal awarded to Joseph Watt is expected to sell for up to £160,000.

His medals and a gold pocket watch are up for sale at Spink in Bloomsbury, London, tomorrow.

Captain Watt, from Gardenstown, Banffshire, was awarded the VC in 1917 for his part in one of the great David versus Goliath battles of the war.

He became a national hero on May 15, 1917, when he engaged the Austro-Hungarian cruiser Novaro in his 87ft fishing boat Gowanlea.

The cruiser was 428ft long — five times bigger than the Gowanlea.

The attack happened in the Strait of Otranto between Italy and Albania after the Novara ordered Watt to back down.

But he instead urged his men to fight, telling them: “Three cheers lads and let’s fight to the finish.”

The Gowanlea then made straight for the cruiser and opened fire with her six-inch gun. The Novaro returned fire, with one shell detonating a box of ammunition, wounding Watt.

Two further shells landed on the boat before the Gowanlea limped away under her own steam after stopping to help remove the dead and wounded from their sister ship, the Floandi.

For his gallantry, Watt was awarded the VC, the Croix de Guerre and the Al Valore Militare.

The citation for the VC said Joseph was given the medal “for most conspicuous gallantry when the Allied Drifter Line in the straits of Otranto was attacked by Austrian light cruisers on the morning of May 15, 1917”.

Joseph returned to Scotland after the war but he never spoke about his wartime exploits. He died of cancer, aged 67, in February 1955.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tunisia: Blasphemous Film Trial, Tensions Before Courthouse

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, APRIL 19 — Tensions were high this morning before the courthouse in Tunis where a hearing is being held for the director of Nessma TV, Kabil Kaorui accused of having aired the film Persepolis last October during the electoral campaign for the constituent assembly. The film in question is considered to be blasphemous.

Websites in the capital report of an ongoing dispute in front of the courthouse between the supporters of freedom of expression (backing Karoui) and those who are there instead to protest against the violation of the symbols of Islam.

The trial follows the accusation signed by 140 Tunisian lawyers for “attacking holy values and traditions”, presented after the transmittion of the animated feature film Persepolis by the Iranian director Marjane Satrapi in which Allah is depicted with human features, something which is strictly forbidden by the laws of Islam.

After the film (translated into Tunisian dialect) finished being aired, protests sprang all over the country and Kaorui’s home in Tunis was literally put under siege by dozens of Salafis who also set it on fire. Luckily his family escaped the attack unharmed.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israel at a Halt to Mark Holocaust

The wail of air raid sirens has sounded across Israel as the country came to a standstill in tribute to six million Jews who perished at the hands of the Nazis in the Holocaust.

For two minutes this morning, pedestrians stopped in their tracks and motorists stood next to their vehicles, heads bowed. In homes and businesses, people suspended their daily tasks to pay homage.

The day is one of the most solemn on Israel’s calendar. Restaurants and places of entertainment shut down, and radio and TV programming focuses on Holocaust documentaries and interviews with survivors.

At the opening state ceremony yesterday, Israel’s leaders — president Shimon Peres and prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu — linked the Nazi genocide to Iran’s suspected drive to acquire nuclear arms and urged the world to stop it. Iran denies such intentions.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Middle East


UAE: Dispute Over Islands; GCC to Support UAE, Says Official

Oil-rich monarchies meeting today on policies towards Iran

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, APRIL 17 — The outcome of today’s meeting in Doha between the seven oil-rich monarchies of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) can easily be foreseen: support will be given to the United Arab Emirates in the dispute with Iran over the occupation of the three islands on the Strait of Hormuz.

“There is no doubt that the bloc will support the UAE, since the islands belong to it,” said the deputy secretary general for political affairs of the GCC, Sa’ad Al-Ammar, to the UAE daily Gulf News, describing the visit by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Abu Musa (the largest of the three islands) as “irresponsible and provocative”. Already on Sunday the six countries of the GCC — Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, the UAE and Oman — had jointly condemned the act, calling it a violation of the UAE’s sovereignty “not in keeping with good neighbourly relations withy Iran”. Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunb are the three rocky islands measuring just 24 square kilometres but rich in energy resources and strategically positioned at the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 40% of the world’s crude oil transits and which in the past Ahmadinejad had threatened to close were international sanctions against him to grow harsher. In 1971, just a few days before the official constitution of the United Arab Emirates, British troops withdrew from the three islands and Iran immediately occupied them. Since then, the UAE has tried in vain to resolve the dispute in a friendly manner.

A number of analysts also predict that today’s meeting will see the GCC draw up a coordinated policy line to be taken as concerns Iran.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Italian Base in Afghanistan Attacked, No Soldiers Hurt

Insurgents repelled by ‘immediate’ response

(ANSA) — Rome, April 19 — An Italian base in western Afghanistan came under attack from insurgents late on Wednesday but no military personnel were hurt in the incident.

The attack was repelled by the “immediate” response of Italian and Afghan soldiers, the command of the Italian contingent that is taking part in the NATO-led ISAF mission said on Thursday

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Jail May Await Afghan Women Fleeing Abuse, Rape — HRW

KABUL, March 28 (Reuters) — For Afghan women, the act of fleeing domestic abuse, forced prostitution or even being stabbed repeatedly with a screwdriver by an abusive husband, may land them in jail while their abusers walk free, Human Rights Watch said.

Running away is considered a “moral crime” for women in Afghanistan while some rape victims are also imprisoned, because sex outside marriage — even when the woman is forced — is considered adultery, another “moral crime”.

“From the first time I came to this world my destiny was destroyed,” 17-year-old Amina, who has spent months in jail after being forced into prostitution, told researchers from Human Rights Watch in a report published on Wednesday.

Despite progress in women’s rights and freedom since the fall of the Taliban a decade ago, women throughout the country are at risk of abduction, rape, forced marriage and being traded as commodities.

It can be hard for women to escape violence at home because of huge social pressure and legal risks to stay in marriages.

“The treatment of women and girls accused of ‘moral crimes’ is a black eye on the face of the post-Taliban Afghan government and its international backers, all of whom promised that respect for women’s rights would distinguish the new government from the Taliban,” the New York-based group said.

“This situation has been further undermined by President (Hamid) Karzai’s frequently changing position on women’s rights. Unwilling or unable to take a consistent line against conservative forces within the country, he has often made compromises that have negatively impacted women’s rights.”

The influential rights organisation said that there were about 400 women and girls being held in Afghanistan for “moral crimes”, and they rarely found support from authorities in a “dysfunctional criminal justice system”.

The plight of a woman called Nilofar illustrates the problem. She was stabbed repeatedly with a screwdriver in the head, chest, and arms by her husband who accused her of adultery for inviting a man into the house, the rights group said.

But afterwards, she was arrested, he was not.

“The way he beat her wasn’t bad enough to keep him in jail. She wasn’t near death, so he didn’t need to be in prison,” the prosecutor of the case told Human Rights Watch.

“HE WILL KILL ME”

The dire treatment of women was the main reason Western countries gave for refusing to recognise the Taliban government as legitimate when it was in power.

As Afghan and Western leaders seek a negotiated end to more than 10 years of war, the future for women is uncertain.

The United States and NATO — who are fighting an unpopular war as they prepare to pull out most combat troops by the end of 2014 — have stressed that any settlement must ensure the constitution, which says the two sexes are equal, is upheld.

A law, passed in August 2009, supports equality for women, including criminalising child and forced marriage, selling and buying women for marriage or for settling disputes, as well as forced self-immolation, among other acts.

But women, especially in rural areas, lack shelters to flee abuse while only one percent of police are female, according to the report based on interviews from October to November with 58 women and girls as well as prosecutors, judges, government officials and civil society.

The ordeal for women does not stop with jail though.

Once leaving prison, women and girls face strong social stigma in the conservative country and may be killed in so-called “honour killings”.

“I just want a divorce. I can’t go back to my father because he will kill me. All my family has left me behind,” 20-year-old Aisha, who was sentenced to three years for fleeing an abusive husband she was forced to marry, told researchers. (Reporting by Jack Kimball; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Robert Birsel)

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Leaving Afghanistan: NATO Members Spar Over Post-Withdrawal Financing

NATO has promised it will provide significant financial support to Afghanistan over the next decade. Reaching agreement on who will pay how much is proving difficult, however. Aside from the US, all member states are doing their best to keep their share as small as possible.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Three Hindu Women Forced to Convert Have to go Back to Their Muslim Husbands

Pakistan’s Supreme Court rules against all three. Abducted back in February in Sindh province, they were forced to marry Muslim men. Families complain about pressure from powerful Muslim groups. All three received death threats.

Islamabad (AsiaNews) — Three young Hindu women abducted in February and forced to convert to Islam and marry three Muslim men must return to their husbands, Pakistan’s Supreme Court ruled. For the justices, the three women freely chose their fate. Their families object that they were placed under huge pressure from Muslim religious groups.

On 26 March, one of the three women, Rinkle Kumari (pictured), told the judges that she wanted to go back to her family. In her statement to the court, she said, “there is justice only for Muslims; there is no justice for Hindus. Kill me here in court, but don’t send me to Darul-Aman (Qur’anic school). All these people are hand in glove, they will kill us”.

The other two women expressed a similar desire to go back to their family.

“This is a great injustice,” said Hindu activist Dilip Kumar. “Three weeks ago, the three women said they wanted to go back to their parents, but the judges chose to send them to prison to put pressure on them.” If they had not returned to their husbands, he believes, Muslims would have killed them.

For Fr Anwar Patras, a priest from the diocese of Rawalpindi, the court bent to the will of Muslim groups who kidnap young Hindu and Christian women to force them to convert and become prostitutes.

“The government must adopt a law against forced conversions,” he said. “It is clear that the young women were put under pressure to convert. The Supreme Court was their last hope and it let them down.”

Rinkel Kumari, a 19-year-old Hindu student was abducted on 24 February in Mirpur Mathelo, a small village in Sindh (southeastern Pakistan), by a thugs hired by a rich Muslim scholar.

The two other women, Lata and Asha, were abducted in Jacobabad and Larkana.

In order to get their daughters back, the parents filed a petition with the Supreme Court to avoid the local Islamic court.

On 26 March, the three women appeared before the court, testifying that they had been forced to convert and that they wanted to go back to their families.

The justices incarcerated them to allow them “to reflect” on their choice without the possibility of meeting their parents.

Each month, 25 to 30 young women are abducted for a total of about 300 forced conversions and marriages a year.

Young Hindu but also Christian women and teenage girls are taken away from their families and handed over to their would-be husbands and torturers.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Taliban Post on-Line Request for Donations

(AGI) Kabul — The Taliban have posted a modern on-line an appeal to the Muslim world, requesting donations to finance their Holy War, jihad, against the “infidel invaders”. The message includes various toll-free numbers and email addresses so as to make things easier for “benefactors.” “According to Shari’ a, all Muslims everywhere have the duty to unite in jihad with money and with the spirit” says the request. “The Taliban are still carrying out their legitimate jihad alone and with no support, only the help of ordinary and honest believers of Islam and we urgently need financial aid from Muslim brothers all over the world for military and other expenses.” .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


I Am Also a Victim, Tyrannical Wife Murderer Zialloh Abrahimzadeh Tells His Son

IN a ranting letter to his son, murderous husband Zialloh Abrahimzadeh condemns those who “put wealth and materialism” before “integrity, principles and dignity”.

Yet Abrahimzadeh did exactly that when he murdered his wife, Zahra, in front of 300 shocked witnesses inside the Adelaide Convention Centre in March 2010.

He was, at the time, obsessed with the belief that she had blocked the sale of their Iranian home and denied him thousands of dollars.

Yesterday, Supreme Court judge John Sulan jailed Abrahimzadeh, 57, for at least 26 years.

He said there was no doubt the March 2010 crime was the deliberate act of an “autocratic” man who repeatedly abused his family.

He said the letter, sent by Abrahimzadeh to his son, Arman, showed his lack of remorse.

“It demonstrates how you are completely self-absorbed and fail to have any regret for the misery you have caused to your family,” Justice Sulan said.

In the letter, released to The Advertiser, Abrahimzadeh tells Arman he “deplores” enemies “who laid the foundation” for the murder.

“I condemn those who put wealth and materialism ahead of integrity, principles and dignity,” he says.

He blames Zahra and her family for driving him “towards insanity” by denying him three quarters of the equity in their former Iranian home. “How much do you think the body and mind of a human being can tolerate?” he says.

“How long can a human being live with fear and anxiety, and with no security?”

Abrahimzadeh fills 11/2 pages with details of the family’s possessions, including televisions, jewels and gold. “I will not allow anybody to take what is rightfully ours,” he says.

“When someone is trying to destroy you in any possible way, you would defend yourself and sometimes this defence results in the destruction of the opposing party.”

He closes the letter by asking Arman “as an Eastern man” to judge him fairly.

“In any case, I am really sorry about what happened,” he says.

“I think I am also a victim of what happened.”

In sentencing, Justice Sulan said Zahra’s decision to divorce Abrahimzadeh also fuelled his murderous mentality.

He rejected Abrahimzadeh’s claim that, at the time of the stabbing, he was hallucinating about his youngest daughter, Anita, being attacked by “dark, ugly men”.

“That was, in my view, fanciful … I am satisfied, beyond reasonable doubt, that your act was premeditated and deliberate,” he said.

“You were motivated by the fact you had lost control of your family, in particular your wife.

“You took action because she continued to disobey your demands that she not proceed with the divorce.

“I accept you were distressed by the family situation … that may go towards explaining your conduct, but it can never excuse it.”

Justice Sulan said he had reduced the non-parole period by 12 months because Abrahimzadeh pleaded guilty in the middle of his trial.

He also took into account incidents when Abrahimzadeh:

SLAPPED his wife and daughters on the face and shoulders.

THREW Zahra into a window.

BROKE a cordless telephone aerial across Atena’s throat.

WHIPPED Atena with a belt for an hour.

SMOTHERED Atena will a pillow.

DEMANDED Atena beg, on her knees, for his forgiveness.

BURNED Atena’s fingers for biting her nails.

VERBALLY abused Arman.

VOWED to kill his entire family by burning their house down while they were inside.

SAID he would rather kill a family member than be dishonoured by them.

           — Hat tip: Russkiy [Return to headlines]



Jeff Kennett Decries Prayer Rooms at Footy

HAVING succeeded in convincing the AFL to introduce prayer rooms at all venues, Bachar Houli was unfazed last night by a stinging backlash sparked by former Victorian premier Jeff Kennett, who called the idea “stupid” and “political correctness gone mad”.

Football fans took to websites to condemn and ridicule the move, but at his home in Melbourne the AFL’s first Muslim player told The Australian: “The main thing is we’ve got what we want, and you can’t change that. “At the end of the day, people want to go and enjoy the footy as well as continue with their beliefs, and if it means they have to pray once a day at the footy, we’re not asking for much.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Outback Opal Community Fights Ban on Alcohol

ASHLEY HALL: Residents of the South Australian outback town of Mintabie are up gearing for a fight against the State Government over new laws aimed at banning alcohol in homes.

It’s part of a new lease agreement, which forces anyone living or moving there to undergo criminal history checks. It also seeks to make it illegal to sell many foods with a high sugar content in local shops. The State Government says it will bring the town, about 100 kilometres south of the Northern Territory border, in line with other communities in surrounding APY (Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara) Aboriginal lands.

Nicola Gage reports.

NICOLA GAGE: While it’s a far stretch from the bustling mining town it was 30 years ago, about 80 people still live and work in Mintabie. It has a State Government-run school, outback pub, and several operating opal miners. But under the new town lease, residents won’t be able to drink an alcoholic beverage outside of that pub.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Without Consent

What happens when young, educated, Australian-born girls are forced into unwanted marriages — often with relatives overseas?

Samia was just seventeen when her father announced he was taking her on a holiday overseas. But this was a holiday with a difference. Back in the family’s village in rural Pakistan, Samia watched in horror as the local Imam walked in ready to conduct her marriage to her first cousin — without her consent. With pressure from her extended family, she was given papers to sign and threatened.

Returning to Australia, Samia sought help from local religious authorities in Sydney — but they ignored her and told her to accept the marriage.

For the first time young women, the victims of forced marriages, are speaking out — without disguise and despite the risks of backlash from their communities. Are these women entitled to the same protection as other Australian girls?…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


As Sudanese Clashes Escalate, So Do Bellicose Exchanges

LAMU, Kenya — Less than a year after the nation of South Sudan was born out of a delicate peace agreement with Sudan, the two countries have plunged into war, a Sudanese government spokesman said Thursday.

Recent fighting between Sudan and South Sudan has grown from a struggle over the contested, oil-rich region of Heglig to inflame a number of areas along the border and beyond.

This week, Sudanese planes struck “deep into South Sudan,” hitting an important town, according to Susan E. Rice, the American ambassador to the United Nations. A United Nations compound inside South Sudan was also hit by bombs.

For its part, South Sudan has claimed to have shot down Sudanese jets and killed hundreds of Sudanese soldiers in battles over Heglig, which it said it captured from Sudan last week.

The African Union has condemned South Sudan’s seizure of Heglig as illegal, and the United Nations Security Council has demanded an immediate end to the fighting, a withdrawal of the South’s troops from Heglig, an end to Sudanese aerial bombardments and a halt to repeated cross-border violence.

But Rabie A. Atti, a Sudanese government spokesman, said Thursday that his nation was “fed up” with South Sudan’s leaders and would “make them learn a lesson” for seizing Heglig.

The two sides fought one of Africa’s longest civil wars before signing a landmark peace agreement in 2005 that ultimately led to the South’s independence. But Mr. Atti said the two nations were now back at war.

“We are not initiating this war,” Mr. Atti said. “The only way for us to teach them is to drive them and chase them out of Heglig and tell the people of the South to get rid of those people.”

The comments echo recent statements by Sudan’s president, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who said that Sudan would “liberate” South Sudan from its governing party, and that the “boundaries of the old Sudan can no longer fit us together,” according to news reports.

The Sudanese government and South Sudan’s army have stepped back from the brink many times before. The two sides have clashed over the disputed area of Abyei and fought each other in Malakal, another oil-producing area.

Mr. Bashir is notorious for his fiery tongue, once saying that under no conditions would the United Nations be allowed into the vast, troubled region of Darfur and that Darfur would become a “graveyard” for foreign peacekeepers. That region is now home to one of the largest peacekeeping missions in the world. And several United Nations officials said they work closely with their Sudanese government colleagues.

The fighting that is now spreading along the north-south border is by far the most serious confrontation in years.

Ambassador Princeton N. Lyman, the American special envoy who has been talking with both sides in recent days, said the South’s seizure of Heglig was “a dangerous act that had to be reversed.”

“This was an extremely dangerous step by South Sudan, and it threatened a much wider conflict,” he said in a call with journalists.

Despite the “very emotional, very powerful rhetoric coming out here from Khartoum, raising the stakes in many ways,” he said it was still possible to head off outright war.

Other analysts agreed that a wider war could still be avoided. “Neither side gains from a wider war,” said E. J. Hogendoorn, an analyst for the International Crisis Group, “but both leaders are daring the other to blink first.”

[Return to headlines]

Immigration


Arizona: Countdown to the Showdown on S.B. 1070

Dan Stein, president of the Federation of American Immigration Reform, www.fairus.org , talked about what Arizona’s S.B. 1070 law faces at the Supreme Court level.

“Beginning next week, Americans will be bombarded with coverage of Arizona’s first-in-the nation immigration enforcement law being heard in the Supreme Court,” said Stein. “SB 1070 is the bill which has become the focal point for the showdown between federal and state authority to enforce immigration laws, and the bill other states have replicated. FAIR’s position on SB 1070 is clear: The law is constitutional and effective and due to its efficacy, the Obama Administration has labeled it, and other state laws, a threat to its non-enforcement policy.”

In a Nutshell

“The question for the Court is going to be this: can the federal government stop states from participating in immigration enforcement; is it exclusively the role of the federal government?” said Stein. “A favorable ruling will pave the way for more states to enact bills, thus limiting the scope of the Obama Administration’s non-enforcement policy. An unfavorable ruling will mean continued dismantling of immigration enforcement at the federal level with no available legal means for states to protect themselves.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



EU Irked as Swiss Clamp Down on Immigration

European leaders expressed consternation on Wednesday as Switzerland re-introduced quotas for immigrants from eight Central and Eastern European countries.

The decision was taken by the Swiss government on Wednesday to activate a safeguard clause in its bilateral agreement witrh the EU, which will restrict the number of work permits available to people from Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Slovakia, newspaper Tages Anzeiger reported.

“The safeguard clause is not the ultimate solution that will solve the problems alone, but it is one of the instruments at our disposal and that is why we will use it,” Federal Councillor Simonetta Sommaruga said on Wednesday, newspaper Tribune de Genève reported.

The EU foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, opposed the invocation of the clause, which she said infringed the rights of EU citizens to move freely in Switzerland. “I regret the decision of the Swiss Federal Council”, she said on Wednesday.

The new EU president, Martin Schulz, also criticized Switzerland for violating the spirit as well as the text of the agreement with the EU, and accused Switzerland of discrimination against these eight countries. No citizen from one EU country should be treated any differently than a citizen from another member state, he said. Switzerland has been considering activating the clause, which is contained in its bilateral treaty with the EU, for some time.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Probed for Taping Deportees’ Mouths Aboard Flight

Image posted on filmmaker’s Facebook page

(ANSA) — Rome, April 19 — Rome prosecutors opened an investigation Thursday into the case of two Tunisian men being deported from Italy on an Alitalia flight who had their mouths sealed with duct tape and their hands cuffed with plastic bands.

The story came to light Wednesday when Italian filmmaker Francesco Sperandeo posted on Facebook the photo he took of a plain-clothes policeman standing over a seated man with his mouth taped.

“The indifference of the other passengers” was the worst part, Sperandeo said, adding he was ordered to return to his seat by officers when he requested that the deportees be treated humanely. Sperandeo said he was told that the methods used were “normal”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Abu Qatada Deportation: Appeal Was Made ‘Just in Time’, Says Council of Europe Official

A Council of Europe official says Abu Qatada’s lawyers made his appeal ‘just in time’, adding to concerns that Theresa May misinterpreted the appeal deadline date when she ordered the radical cleric Abu Qatada to be arrested and deported.

Mrs May ordered the rearrest and deportation of the extremist cleric on Tuesday morning, believing a time limit in which his lawyers could appeal against his removal had elapsed. However, Labour released advice from the research department of the Council of Europe — which is responsible for the court — suggesting it may have just beaten the deadline. The note, sent to the House of Commons Library, stresses that the final decision on whether the appeal is admissible now rests with a panel of five judges from the court’s Grand Chamber. “The Othman (Qatada) case was supposed to become final on 17/04/2012 and, according to the information provided by the European Court, the applicant requested a referral to the Grand Chamber on the 17/04,” the note said. “So I would say that it just in time but of course the Court (panel) may decide otherwise.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Abu Qatada Deportation: Theresa May Did Get Date Wrong, Claim Legal Experts

Theresa May, the Home Secretary, did misinterpret the appeal deadline date when she ordered Abu Qatada to be arrested, legal experts claimed today.

Mrs May ordered the rearrest and deportation of the extremist cleric on Tuesday morning, believing a time limit in which his lawyers could appeal against his removal had elapsed.

But yesterday, to the surprise of the Government, officials at the European Court of Human Rights said the deadline was 24 hours later and that it had received an appeal application from Mr Qatada’s legal team with an hour to spare. Now it has emeged that under European guidelines for calculating deadlines in legal disputes the time limit actually ran out at midnight on Tuesday 17 April because it requires deadlines to run to corresponding days of the month. However it is up to the Grand Chamber Panel to decide whether the referral was actually made in time. Writing on his blog barrister and former government lawyer Carl Gardner said: “I think their view of the time-limit is correct. They’re in time, which is all that matters.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: May’s Bid to Deport Qatada Descends Into Farce

The deportation of Abu Qatada descended into farce after a potential blunder by the Home Office allowed his lawyers to lodge a last-minute appeal which could extend his stay in Britain and derail attempts to remove him from the country.

Theresa May, the Home Secretary, ordered the rearrest and deportation of the extremist cleric on Tuesday morning, believing a time limit in which his lawyers could appeal against his removal had elapsed. But yesterday, to the surprise of the Government, officials at the European Court of Human Rights said the deadline was 24 hours later and that it had received an appeal application from Mr Qatada’s legal team with an hour to spare. As the situation descended into chaos on the eve of a government-hosted conference in Brighton to reform European human rights laws, the Home Office was accused by Labour of potentially acting illegally by starting the deportation process apparently before the deadline had passed.

Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, described the situation as a “shambles”, while MPs last night lined up to attack the situation as “chaotic”, “farcical” and “a big mistake” just a day after Mrs May was cheered in the House of Commons as she announced Mr Qatada’s rearrest. As Mrs May was forced to deny repeatedly any mistake by the Home Office, David Cameron last night intervened to declare his intention to have Mr Qatada deported, no matter how long it took. The latest twist in the case means the Government’s nine-year attempt to deport the man once described as Osama bin Laden’s “right-hand man in Europe” will be delayed even further.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Theresa May and an ‘Understanding’ On Abu Qatada

by Simon Hoggart

Yvette Copper tries to be merciless with the home secretary, playing the X Factor party card

Unlike omnibuses — you wait for ages then three arrive together — omnishambles just keep coming for this government, one after the other, regularly and frequently. Poor Theresa May was obliged to appear at the Commons on Thursday to explain the latest: the screw-up over dates that allowed lawyers for Abu Qatada to refer his case back to the European court of human rights. Mrs May is pretty tough. Home secretaries are like rodeo riders on bucking broncos — there is little elegant about the performance, but the audience gasps with admiration at anyone who can stay in the saddle at all. And Mrs May has been there for almost two years. But she was distinctly evasive on the matter of dates — had she not checked the deadline before she made her victory statement on Tuesday? Hadn’t scores of people — officials, the BBC, the Home Office cleaning ladies — not warned her that she was jumping in a day early?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Theresa May Versus Qatada

by Tim Montgomerie

If you wanted to criticise Theresa May over the last few months in her handling of the Qatada case then you might fairly say that she was too submissive to the ECHR and too keen to follow the letter of the law. I think those would have been unfair criticisms — a Home Secretary cannot ignore or even bend the law. A Home Secretary must uphold the law and be seen to do so. I read yesterday’s news that Qatada has been allowed to appeal as proof (if further proof was needed) that the Strasbourg court will bend over backwards to help someone like Qatada — popularly known as Osama bin Laden’s ambassador to Europe. The Home Office is absolutely clear that his window to appeal expired at midnight on Monday. The officials at the Strasbourg court are saying that “within three months” from 17th January equalled Tuesday night. On the Today programme the leeway is apparently explained by the court receiving so much correspondence every day.

David Cameron made it clear that Qatada will be deported: “He is a threat to our security, he has absolutely no further call on our hospitality and he should be deported. That is what we are determined to achieve, no matter how difficult it is, no matter how long it may take.”

The Prime Minister must understand the importance of this issue. For many Eurosceptics the Qatada issue is an issue of sovereignty. Do we rule our own country or do ‘judges’* from foreign lands run Britain? It is also becoming an issue of competence, however. I have huge respect for Theresa May and believe she’s one of the Government’s most effective ministers. The papers aren’t giving her much benefit of the doubt this morning, however, because this episode follows numerous others in which the Coalition’s “grip” and effectiveness has been questioned. The papers are also hostile to the Coalition, in general, and this is another opportunity for them to kick David Cameron. What this latest episode will do is reinforce the increasing view that Britain will have to leave the ECHR. In his column for yesterday’s Evening Standard Matthew d’Ancona wrote that making the British Supreme Court the court of final appeal “is not loopy talk confined to dining groups of angry Right-wing Tories… increasingly — and crucially — this is mainstream Conservative thinking.” If the PM is looking for an issue to reunite the unhappy Conservative family he can’t get too tough towards the ECHR. The Lib Dems will protest but doomed in the opinion polls, let them.

* I use the inverted commas deliberately because many of the ECHR’s countries send politicians rather than legal experts to be their representatives at the court.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Eco-Communism Celebrated Annually on Earth Day

In the run-up to Earth Day on April 22nd—the birthday of Vladimir Lenin, the Soviet Union’s first dictator—Brian Sussman, author of the bestselling “Climategate”, has a new book, “Eco-Tyranny: How the Left’s Green Agenda Will Dismantle America” ($25.95, WND Books). If you read no other book about the relationship between environmentalism and communism this year, you must read this one.

Sussman has brought together all the relevant facts. “Karl Marx founded a philosophy that inspires dictators and demagogues,” writes Sussman. “Commencing with the Russian Revolution in 1917 to the present, Marx’s tyrannical ideology has been responsible for the documented deaths of more than 110 million individuals around the world.”

“Pollution,” writes Sussman, “never has been Earth’s most troubling foe— Marxism had. And Marxists have always seized upon pollution, both real and imagined, as an effective weapon in their unrelenting war on freedom.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Marriage and Family Are Obscene, Says School

What will it take to convince America’s Christian parents to stop sending their children to the public schools?

Earlier this month, a girl at Pilgrim High School in Warwick, Rhode Island, had her artwork censored by “educators.” The student had painted a mural that was deemed objectionable because it depicted a boy growing up, marrying, and having a child. In fact, the “educators” found it so offensive that they ordered it blotted out by painting over it.

The girl’s parents called a local radio talk show to complain, and the fat was in the fire. (Full story, plus photos)

Responding to public outrage, the superintendent of schools overruled the high school censors and allowed the student to paint her mural as she pleased, and the school board chairwoman said “the order to paint over the traditional marriage portion of the artwork should never have happened.”

Had the parents not called the radio show, and had the school district not been dragged onto center stage as an example of political correctness run amok, the censorship order would have stood. Marriage and the family, at Pilgrim High School, would have remained, for all practical purposes, obscene.

The story is not that the censorship was overruled. The story is that public educators think that marriage and the family are obscene. Really—what if kids should have to pass by that mural on their way to a Gay-Straight Alliance meeting? They shouldn’t have to see something like that!

School officials didn’t actually use the word “obscene.” What they did say was, “[S]some of the members of the Pilgrim High School community suggested that the depiction of a young man’s development may not represent the life experiences of many of the students at Pilgrim High School,” and that therefore the assistant principle “asked” the student “to look at other ways to show the outcome of the subject’s progression to adulthood.” Need we ask what “other ways” would have been found acceptable?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Only the Old Embrace God in Former East Germany

Belief in God varies greatly between different countries, but the percentage of believers in the former East Germany is lower than anywhere else, “anchoring the secular pole” internationally, according to a new report by an American research organization. But even in this unpious region, the rate of believers increases with age.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Ugly Brutishness of Modern Britain

A demotic egalitariansim, allied with multiculturalism, has rendered civility passé.

By THEODORE DALRYMPLE

A few days ago at a crowded bus-stop in the city of Nottingham, a fat youth of about 13 started to throw food at a friend. Some of it nearly hit me and landed on the ground just beyond me, making a mess.

“Excuse me,” I said to the youth, “could you pick that up?”

“Shut the f— up!” he snarled, with real hatred contorting his face.

Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings, in England, come—obscenities. No one at the bus stop dared say, much less do, anything. For increasingly, the English are a people who know neither inner nor outer restraint. They turn to aggression, if not to violence, the moment they are thwarted, even in trifles. And those who are neither aggressive nor violent are by no means sure that the law will take their side in the event of a fracas. It is better, or easier, for them to pretend not to notice anything, even if it means living in constant fear…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Lord Carey: Christians ‘Vilified’ By Courts

Christians are being “vilified” by British courts and “driven underground”, Lord Carey, a former archbishop of Canterbury, has said.

In a written submission to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), he blames judges for treating some worshippers as “bigots”.

He also warns that believers are being sacked for expressing their faith.

The criticism is part of an appeal to Strasbourg judges to protect religious freedom ahead of a landmark case.

Lord Carey — who was archbishop from 1991 to 2002 — has voiced concern that a recent “secular conformity of belief and conduct” has meant that conduct in keeping with the Christian faith is effectively being “banned” in the public setting.

In his submission, he says the “the State and Courts… not parliament” are destroying the legal right to freedom of religion of “any substantive effect” by insisting on stringent readings of equality law.

He also argues that if rulings against wearing crosses and expressing Christian faith are not reversed it could lead to believers facing a “religious bar” to employment.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Al-Qaeda Bomb-Making Expert Publishes Magazine

A top al-Qaeda bomb-making expert this week has joined his fellow terrorists in publishing information on the World Wide Web, but this time its an Internet magazine instructing readers on how to build bombs and other deadly devices.

“The webmaster of death” is veteran Islamist and explosives maven Abdullah Dhu al-Bajadin, who is considered al-Qaeda’s most feared weapons creator. In fact, law enforcement officials have told the Law Enforcement Examiner that al-Bajadin can go into any modern kitchen and within minutes create some type of offensive device.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Heavy Elements Key for Planet Formation, Study Suggests

Planets form more commonly in star systems with relatively high concentrations of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, a new study suggests.

Such heavier elements are necessary to form the dust grains and planetesimals that build planetary cores, according to the study, which was carried out by researchers Jarrett Johnson and Hui Li of Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.

Additionally, evidence suggests that the disks of dust that surround young stars don’t survive as long when the stars have lower concentrations of heavy elements, or lower “metallicities” in astronomers’ jargon. The most likely reason for this shorter lifespan is that light from the star causes clouds of dust to evaporate.

The planet epoch

Our cosmic history has several defining epochs, one of which is the point at which star systems began to form planets. Heavy elements such as carbon, silicon and oxygen first needed to be created from huge star explosions called supernovas and the stellar cores of the first generations of stars before the first planets could form.

“Our calculation is an estimate of the minimum amount of heavy elements that must be present in circumstellar disks before planets can form,” Johnson said. “Because these heavy elements must be produced by the first stars in the universe, the first planets could only form around later generations of stars.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120418

Financial Crisis
» A New Dispute Over Euro Rescue Fund: Spain Wants Billions for Its Banks
» Balanced Budget Enshrined in Constitution
» EU Gives €1mn to Orange Order Ahead of Irish Referendum
» EU on Greek Statistics Scandal: ‘Never Again’
» EU: Banks Gorging on Sovereign Bonds Shifts Risk
» Hungary Bows to EU Pressure on Central Bank Law
» Italian Family Debt Lower Than EU Counterparts Says IMF
» Obama Stimulus Dollars Funded Soros Empire, In Scandal That Dwarfs ACORN and Gsa, Says New Report
» One Jobless Person Per Day Kills Self in Italy
» Portugal: Possible Extension Financial Support, Premier
» Premier Monti is Grateful to Italians for Their Courage
» Showdown in Washington: Emerging Nations Vie for Power at IMF
» Slovenian Public Servants Strike Over Austerity Measures
 
USA
» 3 Out at Secret Service in Colombia Prostitution Scandal
» A Progressive Perverts the Commerce Clause; But O’Reilly Gets it Right
» Comic Books as a Method of Missionizing for Islam (Da’wa)?
» Dick Clark: TV Impresario, Is Dead at 82
» Helter Skelter Manufactured Crisis = Manufactured Race Wars
» Liberal “Political Psychology” Propaganda
» Man Charged With Murder in Beating Death of Stepson, 10
» Media Hysteria and the Remolding of the American Mind
» Middle Class San Franciscans Fleeing City
» NASA Requests Inspiration for New Mars Quests
» Obama’s Illegal Alien Uncle Gets Driver’s License After DWI
» Stakelbeck on Terror Show: Is the Muslim Brotherhood Winning?
» What Passes for Intelligence — SPLC Intelligence Report, Spring 2012
» Wolf Blitzer Should Apologize to Allen West
 
Europe and the EU
» Accusations Against Lord Ahmed Merely Highlight a Vile Anti-British Career
» Cyprus’ Church Set to Start Private Power Station
» Europe Needs to Profit From Human Spaceflight
» Germany: Father Gets 17 Years for Killing Daughter With Axe
» Greece: Riot Police Warned on Press Attacks
» Italy: Medical Association’s President Probed for Investment Fraud
» Italy: Ex-League Treasurer Belsito Hands Over Gold and Diamonds
» Italy: Berlusconi Party Slams Minister Over TV-Frequency Auction
» Italy Hopes Sponsoring Can Save Cultural Treasures
» Italy: Soccer: Radu Denies ‘Fascist Salute’
» London Celebrates 100-Day Countdown to Olympics
» Norway: Judges Right to Let Killer Have His Say: Survivors
» Norway: ‘The Knights Templar Doesn’t Exist as You Describe It’
» Real Estate: Berlin Rivals London in Attracting Greek Money
» Sweden: Museum Evacuated After ‘Racist’ Bomb Threat
 
Balkans
» Macedonia: Mysterious ‘Army’ Threatens ‘Liberation of Albanian Lands’
 
Mediterranean Union
» EU Launches ‘ENPARD’ For Southern Neighbours
 
North Africa
» Egyptian Presidential Hopefuls Banned
» Group of 100 Tunisians Kidnapped Close to Libyan Border
» Italian Hostage Freed in Algeria
» Turks to Get Same Rights in Europe’s Economy as EU Residents — Commission Decision Taken Last Week — Brussels Bringing Turkey Into EU Under the Radar
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Cyprus, Israel Discuss Exploitation of Hydrocarbons
 
Middle East
» Bahrain: Amnesty Report, More Human Rights Violations
» Exclusive: Iran Ships “Off Radar” As Tehran Conceals Oil Sales
» Jordan’s Parliament Bans the Muslim Brotherhood’s Party
» Muslim Brotherhood Plans to Take Over Kuwait by 2013: Khalfan
» Saudi to Create 12,000 Security Jobs for Women
» Spengler: Recall Notice for the Turkish Model
» Syria: As Rebels and Regime Violate the Ceasefire, Kofi Annan’s Plan Collapses
» Yemen: Drone Strike Kills ‘At Least 7’ Militants
 
South Asia
» 150 Afghan Schoolgirls Seriously Ill After Being Poisoned in Anti-Education Attack by Muslim Extremists
» How Pakistan Makes US Pay for Afghan War
» India: New Delhi Ready to Launch a Nuclear Missile That Can Reach China
» India: Series of ‘Acid Attacks’, But Cops Inactive
» Indonesia: Aceh’s New Governor Zaini Abdullah Pledges More Sharia
» Pakistan: Karachi Violence Heats Up Leaving at Least 7 Dead
» Pakistan: Bin Laden’s Family to be Expelled Wednesday
» Pakistan: Muslims Strip Christian Woman in Punjab Because She “Dressed Up”, Shoot at Her Son
» Poison Scare Highlights Threats to Girls’ Education in Afghanistan
 
Far East
» Volkswagen Builds New Car Factory in China Trouble Region
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Extended Somalia Pirate Plan Creates Waves
» Germany Expands Military Mission Against Somali Pirates
 
Latin America
» Asian Investment Boom Seen in Latin America
» ‘Latin America Must Open Up’
 
Immigration
» Germany: Deportation to Kosovo Means a Life in Misery
» Italy: Deportees on Alitalia Flight With Taped Mouths
 
Culture Wars
» Switzerland: Sex Box for Kids Sparks Call to Action
 
General
» Italy: Another Northern League Heavyweight Resigns
» ‘Rogue’ Alien Planets May Circle Billions of Stars

Financial Crisis


A New Dispute Over Euro Rescue Fund: Spain Wants Billions for Its Banks

A number of euro zone countries and senior officials at the European Central Bank would like to see the euro bailout fund changed so that it can provide direct aid to banks. This could help Spain, which has emerged in recent days as a new center of the euro crisis, but Germany is opposed.

With an eye on the growing banking crisis in southern Europe, particularly in Spain, an increasing number of goverments as well as senior represenatives of the European Central Bank are pleading for the European Union’s temporary euro backstop fund to be used to provide financial institutions with direct assistance.

Sources familiar with the discussions told the Süddeutsche Zeitung that the parties would like to see the criteria used by the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to allocate aid be relaxed to include financial institutions in the event they represent a greater problem than a country’s government finances. So far, this aid has been paid to governments, which in turn provided some forms of assistance to beleagured banks.

Such a move would enable the temporary euro-zone rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), to directly transfer money to these banks, bypassing national governments.

Süddeutsche reports that the primary supporter for the calls is the Spanish government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, which is having increasing difficulty raising money on the markets to fill the country’s budget shortfall. Relaxing the rules could help ease the burden of the banking crisis his government faces and it would enable Spain’s comparably low debt-to-GDP ratio to remain constant. In addition, it would mean that his country wouldn’t be forced to implement strict savings and reform measures that are stipulated by the rescue fund in exchange for aid. As some observers have noted, austerity measures appear to be contributing to Spain’s slide into recession.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Balanced Budget Enshrined in Constitution

Extended austerity proposal passes Italian Senate

(ANSA) — Roma, April 17 — On Tuesday the Italian Senate passed a balanced budget law, to be written into the Constitution without the need for a referendum.

The extended austerity proposal, which is part of the European Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance, will become national law after it gained two-thirds of the Senate vote, hence avoiding referendum.

Premier Mario Monti took part in the vote, which he called “important”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Gives €1mn to Orange Order Ahead of Irish Referendum

Victims of republican violence during The Troubles in Northern Ireland are to get help from a €1.1mn EU grant paid to The Orange Order, a Protestant-unionist movement, the Press Association reports. The news could rouse anti-EU feeling in Ireland in the run-up to the May referendum on the fiscal treaty.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU on Greek Statistics Scandal: ‘Never Again’

BRUSSELS — The EU commission has proposed new rules on how to shield national statistics bureaus from political influence, three years after Greece lied about its deficit, triggering its first bail-out and marking the start of the eurozone crisis.

Under the new regime, unveiled on Tuesday (17 April), EU governments will have to sign written pledges that they will not make political appointments in the sector and on the independence of national number-grinders more broadly.

Failure to comply would lead to legal action at the European Court of Justice and potential fines, apart from the market turmoil that such a breach of confidence can trigger. MEPs and member states still have to bless the scheme. But for his part, taxation commissioner Algirdas Semeta told press in Brussels: “We want to ensure that, (that) never again, will we have any political influence on our statistics.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU: Banks Gorging on Sovereign Bonds Shifts Risk

Rome, 18 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Italian, Spanish and Portuguese banks are loading up on bonds issued by their own governments, a move that shifts more of the risk of sovereign default to European taxpayers from private creditors.

Holdings of Spanish government debt by lenders based in the country jumped 26 percent in two months, to 220 billion euros ($289 billion) at the end of January, data from Spain’s treasury show. Italian banks increased ownership of their nation’s sovereign bonds by 31 percent to 267 billion euros in the three months ended in February, according to Bank of Italy data.

German and French banks, meanwhile, have cut holdings of those countries’ bonds, as well as Irish and Greek debt, by as much as 50 percent since 2010 in some cases. That leaves domestic firms on the hook for a restructuring such as Greece’s last month and their main financier, the European Central Bank, facing losses. Like Greece, governments would have to rescue their lenders with funds borrowed from the European Union.

“The more banks stop cross-border lending, the more the ECB steps in to do the financing,” said Guntram Wolff, deputy director of Bruegel, a Brussels-based research institute. “So the exposure of the core countries to the periphery is shifting from the private to the public sector.”

ECB Lending

The jump in sovereign-debt holdings by Spanish and Italian banks has been fueled by the ECB’s 1 trillion-euro long-term refinancing operation, or LTRO, initiated in December, to provide liquidity to the region’s lenders. Encouraged by their governments to take the money and buy bonds, banks borrowed 489 billion euros on Dec. 21 and 530 billion euros on Feb. 29.

For lenders in so-called peripheral countries — Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Italy — profit also was an inducement: They could borrow at 1 percent to buy government bonds yielding between 6 percent and 13 percent.

Lenders in those five countries have taken about 715 billion euros from the ECB through emergency programs, including the LTRO, according to the most recent data provided by the central banks of those nations. Irish and Greek lenders have borrowed an additional 83 billion euros from their central banks, using collateral that isn’t accepted by the ECB.

The bond purchases helped bring down borrowing costs at first. The yield on Spain’s benchmark 10-year bond dropped below 5 percent in January from more than 6.5 percent in November. Concerns that a deepening recession will lead the government to default on its bonds have driven yields back to 6 percent and the cost of insuring Spanish debt to levels that prompted other European countries to seek bailouts.

Ireland, Portugal

Irish banks increased ownership of that nation’s sovereign debt by 21 percent in the three months ended in February, according to the Central Bank of Ireland.

Government-bond holdings by Portuguese banks jumped 15 percent to 30 billion euros in the same period, according to ECB data. While the central bank doesn’t provide a breakdown of the holdings by country, most debt sold by Portugal in recent months has been snapped up by its own lenders, according to two primary dealers who serve as middlemen in the sales and who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public.

French and German banks bought the sovereign debt of other European countries last decade as the region’s financial sector became more integrated and interest rates declined. That process has been fragmented by the debt crisis.

Since 2010, banks in France and Germany have retreated, cutting lending to the governments of Spain, Portugal, Ireland and Greece 42 percent, according to data compiled by the Bank for International Settlements. Dumping Italian sovereign bonds began more recently, with German lenders reducing their Italian holdings 13 percent in the second and third quarters of 2011, BIS data show. French banks shrunk their holdings of Italian government debt about 25 percent in the third quarter.

Debt Relief

While French and German banks lost money on Greece’s restructuring last month, a delay of more than a year allowed a similar shift of risk to the public sector. When the exchange took place, the debt relief was capped at 59 billion euros because fewer bonds were held by the private sector, including banks outside the country. If Greece had defaulted in 2010, the reduction could have been as much as 232 billion euros.

Greece had to borrow an additional 49 billion euros from the International Monetary Fund and the EU to recapitalize Greek banks that couldn’t handle losses on their sovereign-debt holdings during the restructuring.

“If there’s a private-sector restructuring of Portuguese sovereign debt, then Portugal’s banks will need a bailout like Greek banks did,” Dimitri Papadimitriou, president of the Levy Economics Institute at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, said in an interview.

Regulatory Pressure

In Spain, stronger banks such as Banco Santander SA (SAN), the country’s largest lender, can handle losses from their sovereign holdings, while weaker savings institutions stung by soured real estate loans will need help, Papadimitriou said. Italian banks probably are buying more of their country’s debt because they can sell it to retail customers who still have an appetite for the securities, he said.

Lenders in peripheral countries are facing pressure from regulators and the ECB to buy government debt, according to two executives and a banking supervisor who asked not to be identified because the discussions are private. German and French regulators, meanwhile, have said they asked banks to cut lending to those nations.

“As German banks reduce their exposure and the domestic banks pick up the slack, credit is becoming national again,” said Michael Dawson-Kropf, a Frankfurt-based senior director at Fitch Ratings. “But in most cases, like Ireland, there aren’t enough domestic deposits to do that, so they need external financing.”

‘Backdoor Exposure’

That’s when the ECB and other public lenders step in, creating a “backdoor exposure” for wealthier nations such as Germany, France and the Netherlands, said Sean Egan, president of Egan-Jones Ratings Co. in Haverford, Pennsylvania.

“Private-sector banks offloading their obligations to the public sector doesn’t get the German taxpayer off the hook,” Egan said. His firm downgraded Germany’s sovereign credit to A+ in January, four levels below the top rating, amid worries that the country will have to rescue other EU nations.

Before the 2008 crisis, banks in Ireland held almost no Irish government debt. They owned about 20 percent of that nation’s sovereign bonds as of Dec. 31, according to data compiled by the Washington-based Institute of International Finance. In the meantime, the Irish government has pumped 62 billion euros into its banks to cover losses on real estate loans and now owns most of the banking system.

Tied at Hips

“The Irish government and the banks are tied at the hips,” said Constantin Gurdgiev, a finance lecturer at Trinity College in Dublin. “Banks get money from the government, which turns around and borrows from the banks. But how long can this game go on?”

Portuguese banks’ ownership of that country’s sovereign bonds jumped to 12 percent at the end of 2011 from 5 percent in 2007, according to IIF data. Spanish banks’ share of their government’s debt rose to 35 percent from 24 percent.

Meanwhile, foreign banks’ holdings of Spanish government debt dropped to 64 percent at the end of September from 74 percent a year earlier, IIF data show. In Ireland, the share declined to 23 percent from 27 percent, and in Portugal it fell to 19 percent from 26 percent.

‘National Fragmentation’

“This national fragmentation of credit is beginning to undo the financial integration that was one of the biggest benefits of the monetary union,” said Hung Tran, deputy managing director of the IIF, which represents more than 400 banks worldwide. “It’s not reducing the vulnerability of the banking system to the sovereign risk either.”

The ECB’s emergency-lending programs can provide indirect support for governments, “but only if sovereigns are perceived by markets to be going in the right direction,” David Mackie, chief European economist for JPMorgan Chase & Co., wrote in an April 10 note to investors.

“If there are doubts about the path ahead for sovereigns, then longer-term financing for banks will not necessarily provide much support as domestic banks may be reluctant to buy and other holders of sovereign debt may be keen to sell,” wrote Mackie, who is based in London.

Spain, Portugal, Italy, Ireland and Greece relied on banks in countries with stronger economies to finance their budget deficits for a long time, said Jan Hagen, a banking professor at Berlin’s European School of Management and Technology. With those lenders now weakened by losses and pressed to reduce risk, governments will struggle to finance themselves as the rest of the world stays away, he said.

“Governments loved the banking sector’s growth in the last two decades because they could borrow so easily,” Hagen said. “It was like a drug addiction. But like all addictions, it probably will end in a bad way.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Hungary Bows to EU Pressure on Central Bank Law

(BUDAPEST) — Hungary’s government said Wednesday it is altering legislation that the EU had criticised as curbing the independence of the central bank, in the latest attempt to unblock talks on financial aid. “The Hungarian government has tabled changes to the central bank law concerning several points contested by the European Commission,” the economy ministry said in a statement.

A government representative will now not take part in meetings of the central bank’s rate-setting committee, which will no longer be obliged to send to the government the minutes of these talks, the ministry added.

In addition, a constitutional change has also been tabled excluding a merger of the central bank with Hungary’s financial regulator, which critics had said would have further increased government control over monetary policy.

“These changes have been sent to the European Commission, which has taken note of them,” the statement added.

The announcement followed talks on Monday at the European Central Bank in Frankfurt between officials from the Hungarian government, the European Commission and the ECB.

In November Hungary approached the European Union and the International Monetary Fund about a possible 15-20-billion-euro ($20-26-billion) credit line after the forint currency plunged and Hungary’s borrowing costs soared.

But talks have snagged on EU objections to a raft of legislation passed by the centre-right government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban that Brussels worries increases state control on the judiciary, the media — and the central bank.

In March the European Commission gave Hungary a month to amend the judiciary and data protection laws or face court action, saying financial aid depended on Budapest proving its commitment the EU’s democratic principles.

Orban on Friday accused Brussels of “blackmail”, but behind the combative rhetoric his government has moved to assuage the European Commission’s concerns, submitting in late March changes to its legislation on the judiciary.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Family Debt Lower Than EU Counterparts Says IMF

Only 51% of GDP

(ANSA) — Washington, April 18 — Italian families have lower household debt than other eurozone countries and the US an International Monetary Fund report released on Wednesday said.

Italian family debt was registered at 51% of GDP, while in the US it was 88% of GDP and in the UK 99%.

Financial institutions in Italy were at 97% of GDP while non-financial institutions 122%, reported the IMF.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Obama Stimulus Dollars Funded Soros Empire, In Scandal That Dwarfs ACORN and Gsa, Says New Report

Billionaire “philanthropist” George Soros expanded his U.S.-based empire by using funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

Newly recently released tax documents, examined and analyzed by Tina Trent of sorosfiles.com, reveal how billionaire “philanthropist” George Soros expanded his U.S.-based empire by using funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, also known as the Obama stimulus. Soros and Obama worked hand-in-glove through the stimulus, which has been called the largest single partisan wealth transfer in American history.

The new report has been released by America’s Survival, Inc. (ASI), publisher of the Soros Files website, and posted under the title OBAMA STIMULUS DOLLARS FUNDED SOROS EMPIRE. The release of the report coincides with an Internet advertising campaign on CanadaFreePress.com, a global source of news and information, drawing attention to how the transfers of federal funds to the Soros empire constitute a bigger scandal than ACORN.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



One Jobless Person Per Day Kills Self in Italy

Unemployed male suicides up 45% in three years

(ANSA) — Rome, April 17 — Joblessness is driving nearly one person everyday to commit suicide in Italy, a new report showed Tuesday. In 2010, 362 people who killed themselves were out of work, up from 357 in 2009, both a significant rise from an average 270 in the three previous years, according to the Eures think tank’s report ‘Suicide in Italy in a Time of Crisis’. Of the total number of those who committed suicide from 2008 to 2010, 39.2% were unemployed. The rise in suicides among the unemployed was particularly apparent among the male population. In 2008, 231 jobless men killed themselves; in 2009 the number went up to 303; in 2010, it went up again to 310: a 45.5% jump in only three years. The authors of the report credited men’s tendency to identify themselves with their occupations as a factor for the disproportionate toll on men compared to women. The suicide rate is also up among those aged 45 to 64, corresponding to the so-called ‘esodati’ (‘exiled’) demographic, who are laid-off employees who are ineligible to receive a pension because they are younger than the minimum retirement age. That age group suffered a 12.6% rise in 2010, following a 16.8% rise in 2009. Artisans and merchants suffered the greatest suicide toll among sectors in 2010 with 192 total deaths. Businessmen and independent contractors accounted for 144 suicides.

The industrial north of Italy leads the country in total suicides, with the Lombardy region surrounding Milan in first place, the Veneto region second and Emilia-Romagna third. photo: demonstrators protesting lay-offs

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Portugal: Possible Extension Financial Support, Premier

Due to events out of our control, article in Financial Times

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, APRIL 18 — The premier of Portugal, Pedro Passos Coelho, has warned that the country may need financial aid for a longer period due to “circumstances that are outside the government’s control.” In an article published today by the Financial Times, Passos Coelho underlined that Portugal will respect its international commitments and will be financially autonomous again in 2013, despite the risk that factors outside the government’s control may keep Portugal from reaching its targets.

“It is important to say something that will sound controversial, but is in fact not controversial at all: in an age of uncertainty there are no guarantees,” the Portuguese premier wrote. “There are no guarantees and we cannot legislate for events out of the government’s control”, he continued. The premier referred to external factors that may cause Portugal “to rely on the commitment of our international partners to extend further support” if circumstances beyond Portugal’s control obstruct its return to market financing. Portugal has received 78 billion euros in support of its economy from IMF, the European Commission and ECB. The country is implementing the agreed financial restructuring programme.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Premier Monti is Grateful to Italians for Their Courage

(AGI) Rome — “I am deeply grateful to Italians for the awareness with which they are facing this difficult moment”.

The statement was made by Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti during the ceremony for the award of the Goldan Necklace for Sporting Merit and the Honors Diplomas at the CONI, the Italian Olympics Committee facilities. In order to restore hope to the Country, Monti went on to say, “it is the ruling class that must do more: this is the commitment that I share with everybody and also what you give Italians through your achievements is a message of hope”, Monti added addressing a public of male and female athletes. Monti also recalled the closing of the year celebrating the 150th anniversary of the unification of Italy: “throughout the year, million of flags have been hung from the windows and homes of Italians and our Mameli national anthem has been played frequently. Our hope is that in 2012 our tricolored Italian flag and Mameli’s anthem will continue to wave and echo in the homes of Italians”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Showdown in Washington: Emerging Nations Vie for Power at IMF

The European Union would like to see the International Monetary Fund provide billions in additional funds to help relieve the debt crisis. However, a number of emerging economies are resisting the plans, accusing the West of abusing its power within the organization and creating a “North Atlantic Monetary Fund”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Slovenian Public Servants Strike Over Austerity Measures

Slovenian public servants have walked off the job to protest against the government’s austerity measures, which they say they are being forced to bear the brunt of. Prime Minister Janez Jansa says his hands are tied. Civil servants went on strike in Slovenia on Wednesday to protest against planned pay cuts.

The strike closed schools and other public services across the small European Union country. Around 80,000 public sector workers took part in the general strike, according to union officials.

The center-right government of Prime Minister Janez Jansa, which took office just two months ago, is planning to cut public sector wages by more than seven percent as part of its austerity drive aimed at wrestling down Slovenia’s high budgetary deficit. Jansa’s government is hoping to reduce the deficit from 6.4 percent of gross domestic product in 2011 to 3.5 percent in 2012. That’s still well above the three-percent ceiling set out in the European Union’s Stability and Growth Pact, which is designed to safeguard the bloc’s common currency, the euro.

The unions, though, argue that it is unfair for civil servants to have to shoulder the bulk of the burden through wage cuts. “This is the wrong idea for Slovenia to grow,” Branimir Strukelj, the head of the confederation of public trade unions said. “The strike is a serious message to the government that we are determined to defend the social state and the acquired standards in education,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


3 Out at Secret Service in Colombia Prostitution Scandal

Three Secret Service employees are leaving in the prostitution scandal that has rocked the agency, and eight other employees remain on administrative leave, the agency announced Tuesday evening. One supervisor was allowed to retire, and another faces termination proceedings. The third, a non-supervisory employee, resigned, the agency said. It is unclear if more firings are imminent, but one federal law enforcement official said the number of firings would be between two and “a handful.”

The scandal was made public Saturday. As many as 11 agents and 10 military servicemembers allegedly brought prostitutes back to their hotel in Cartagena, Colombia, while doing advance work before the president’s arrival for a trade summit. The swelling scandal has raised questions about the “secret” culture at the nation’s elite protection agency — and few are feeling the heat more intensely than its director, Mark Sullivan.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



A Progressive Perverts the Commerce Clause; But O’Reilly Gets it Right

Bill O’Reilly (Fox News) made our Framers proud when, on March 26, 2012, he correctly explained [probably for the first time ever on TV] the genuine meaning of the interstate commerce clause. O’Reilly’s guest was Big Government Progressive Caroline Fredrickson, Esq., of the inaptly named “American Constitution Society.” In trying to defend obamacare, she said that our Framers intended to grant to Congress extensive powers over the “national economy”:

“When the Founding Fathers adopted the Constitution, they put in the commerce clause ah specifically so that Congress could actually regulate interstate commerce. They envisioned a national economy, and we really have one now, and to the tune of over two trillion dollars, health care makes up a big big part of that and so it’s completely within the power of ah Congress to pass this legislation [obamacare] and to attempt to provide some reasonable regulation…”

But what she said is not true! Accordingly, O’Reilly responded:

The interstate commerce clause was put in so individual States could not charge tariffs [for] going from one state to another. So, for example, Pennsylvania would say to New Jersey, ‘Hey, you can’t bring in anything here from New Jersey unless you pay us 2% on it.’“

Bravo, O’Reilly! That is precisely the purpose of the interstate commerce clause.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Comic Books as a Method of Missionizing for Islam (Da’wa)?

Yes. One year ago, Harvard University hosted a workshop to teach comic book artists how to address Americans’ “unease with Islam and the Middle East.” And later this week, Georgetown University will air a PBS documentary, Wham! Bam! Islam! celebrating a comic book called The 99.

[…]

But a closer look reveals the Islamic nature of the comic book. The title, 99, refers to Islam’s concept that God has 99 names, each of which appears in the Koran and embodies some attribute of His character: the Merciful, the Compassionate, the Kind, the Most Holy, and the All-Peaceful, but also the Avenger, the Afflicter, and the Causer of Death.

[…]

Likewise, Barack Obama praised the comic books for having “captured the imagination of so many young people with superheroes who embody the teachings and tolerance of Islam.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Dick Clark: TV Impresario, Is Dead at 82

The television legend Dick Clark, who originated “American Bandstand” and the perennial New Year’s Eve celebration on ABC, died Wednesday morning, his representative Paul Shefrin said.

Mr. Shefrin said that Mr. Clark, 82, had suffered a massive heart attack.

[Return to headlines]



Helter Skelter Manufactured Crisis = Manufactured Race Wars

As the economic pressures increase in the United States and across the world, people have a tendency to retreat into tribal, ethnic and racial groups. That tendency is amplified by radical groups on both the right and the left , who seek to use racial conflict as a means to maintaining and acquiring political power. The stage is being set by the media and other powers in the United States for all-out class warfare. It started months ago with powerful television images of gangs of African American girls brutally beating up a white girl in a fast food restaurant.

The programming of mass consciousness is accelerating with stroboscopic intensity: television images of the New Black Panther Party, Neo-Nazi groups parading in uniform, Trevor Martin, George Zimmerman and on it goes. It seems the mass media, or the people who control the media, want a race war. This should be obvious to anyone who is not wacked out of their mind on drugs or television. The 24/7 news cycle seems intent on stirring the pot with powerful and hateful emotions.

[…]

Images and messages that stir up racial violence can easily to lead to race wars and then to class wars. Is that their purpose? I believe it is.

The Cloward-Piven Strategy was developed in the 1960s by a pair of radical leftist Columbia University professors, Richard Andrew Cloward and Frances Fox Piven. The Cloward-Piven Strategy is to force political change through manufactured crisis. Specifically, a manufactured crisis like race wars is intended to create the fall of capitalism by triggering class warfare and violence. It is classic Marxist strategy and that is why we hear terms like the 99% and the 1% repeated like mantras hypnotically through the media.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Liberal “Political Psychology” Propaganda

Blatant propaganda attack on conservatism, tea party, religious beliefs, and intellectual ability of Americans who disagree with liberals Liberal “Political Psychology” Propaganda.

Chris Mooney wrote an article for the Washington Post on “why Republicans and Democrats don’t just vote differently — their brains work differently too.” He is the author of “The Republican Brain: The Science of Why they Deny Science — and Reality.”

Mooney, who has an English degree from Yale, wrote two other books, “Republican War on Science” and “Unscientific American.”

According to Mooney, political differences are no longer just about divergent philosophies, wealth, or lobbying, but about “political psychology.” “Political psychology” is psychobabble for pseudo-science. We know how many times throughout history real science has been wrong.

“Political psychology” is the ultimate euphemistic leftist talking points interpretation of why liberals and conservatives “hold wildly incompatible views on issues ranging from global warming to whether the president was born in the U.S. to whether his stimulus package created any jobs.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Man Charged With Murder in Beating Death of Stepson, 10

A 10-year-old boy was found dead in the basement of his Guilford Street home late Tuesday and his stepfather, Ali Mohamed Mohamud, has been charged with second-degree murder, Chief of Detectives Dennis J. Richards announced this afternoon.

Mohamud, 40, took his stepson, Abdifatah Mohamud, into the basement of the family home, which is near the Broadway Market, to discipline him and proceeded to beat him to death, possibly with a blunt object, police said.

Ferry-Fillmore District Police Officer Christopher Fields responded to a missing person call at 10:40 p.m. and was let inside the house, where, moments later, he found the boy’s body in the basement.

The stepfather, Richards said, had left the house earlier in a red Subaru Forester and Fields radioed a “pick-up” request for the vehicle, which was spotted parked in the vicinity of Washington and Scott streets.

Investigating officers learned that Mohamud worked as a security officer for U.S. Security Associates at The Buffalo News, where he was arrested within an hour of the initial call and without incident, the chief added.

The News is located at the intersection of Washington and Scott.

“The suspect made a statement to police indicating his involvement in the death of his stepson,” Richards said. “There are certain indications the victim had been beaten. It was a disturbing scene.”

A neighbor said the family, which consists of three older children and three younger children, is from Somalia. Mohamud, Richards said, has been in the country for a decade.

The neighbor added that Mohamud is a naturalized U.S. citizen.

Homicide Det. Sgt. James Lonergan is heading the continuing investigation into the killing.

           — Hat tip: MS [Return to headlines]



Media Hysteria and the Remolding of the American Mind

During the Cold War, Soviet leadership counted on fear and terror—the Stockholm Syndrome—to implant socialist sympathies in the hearts of Americans for their cause. Americans, who felt helpless before their dark fears of impending doom, started to look to the Soviets for relief from this fear. To some extent Reagan slowed this process in the two key ways suggested in Part I of this article—strong defense and values. Knowing what we stood for helped us stand against tyranny, and with SDI, for the first time it seemed like there was an alternative to living in fear. But both of these things were made light of by the liberal media who considered SDI a “star wars” fantasy and American values somewhat corny—like Reagan himself. So with certain Americans, the Soviets still enjoyed considerable success.

Watching angry “peace” demonstrations must cause most Americans to scratch their heads in wonder. Nothing America does seems to satisfy these people. Jeane Kirkpatrick described them as people who “blame America first.” What’s really going on is straightforward enough; living with fear and resentment, many Americans were going through what Patty Hearst experienced—a conversion. Forty years or so of intimidation have transformed the thinking, feeling, emotional lives of these Americans. Through fear, rage, and intimidation, they have developed a subconscious affinity with the other side.

The technique is simple enough. Place a person under extreme pressure. Threaten his or her life over a long period of time without rest, and just as you see the terror transforming the victim, change the face of cruelty and smile sweetly at your victim; you become his friend after the terror does its work. Now you reward the slavish submission with approval and validate your victim’s altered belief system as the truth, and give them new direction. Police sometimes use this bad guy/good guy routine to break down a suspect and obtain confessions.

Of course, you can’t terrorize people if you can’t reach them. The point is, the media must bear great responsibility for what has happened in America. They are supposed to report the news, but not in a distorted manner that frightens people. I remember during the Second World War in England the calm, matter-of-fact manner of the newscasters. They told us the most unpleasant truth with great dignity. They didn’t try to panic the British people as they reported the Nazis were overrunning France and poised at our doors. On the contrary, the honesty and the dignity with which the bad news was presented seemed to bolster British morale. It made us all the more resolute to fight “the Jerries,” as we called them to make light of the matter.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Middle Class San Franciscans Fleeing City

Tony Bennett famously left his heart in San Francisco. And, for thousands of middle class residents in the City by the Bay, their hearts may be the only part of them they can afford to leave there.

Like all great world cities, San Francisco is an attractive destination for tourists, businesses and workers from all walks of life looking to better their lives in a diverse and thriving environment. But, the city’s popularity does have a side effect. It’s creating a cost of living so high that it’s chasing away the middle and low-income immigrants and minorities who make the city tick.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



NASA Requests Inspiration for New Mars Quests

“Have a good idea about Mars exploration? We’d like to hear about it.” So tweeted NASA’s John Grunsfeld. Following budget cuts, the US space agency is rewriting its Mars exploration programme and clearly needs all the inspiration it can get.

The programme was hit hard by the proposed 2013 US federal budget, and so NASA pulled out of European-led missions planned for 2016 and 2018. It has two other missions in progress — the rover CuriosityMovie Camera, pictured during take-off (see right) and set to land on Mars in August, and the orbiter MAVEN, which should launch in 2013.

NASA is looking to the public and the wider science community to help decide what happens next. On 13 April, the new Mars Program Planning Group (MPPG) announced that it wants ideas from researchers, government and industry for how to reach Mars cheaply. The ideas will be presented at a workshop in June in Houston, Texas.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Illegal Alien Uncle Gets Driver’s License After DWI

After pleading guilty to driving while intoxicated, President Barack Obama’s illegal-alien “Uncle Omar” was handed a Massachusetts driver’s license by the Motor Vehicles Registry, making it legal for him to drive again in that state in spite of protests by law enforcement officials. In addition, federal officials continue to say Uncle Obama doesn’t belong in the United States in the first place.

“Onyango Obama, 67, who lost his regular license for 45 days last week, gained his driver’s license yesterday from the Registry’s Wilmington branch, after telling a hearing officer that life without wheels would have posed an undue hardship on his livelihood as a liquor-store manager. Obama bolstered his case with a letter from his employer, Conti Liquors, as well as proof that he’d enrolled in an alcohol-treatment program,” said John Zaremba and O’Ryan Johnson of the Boston Herald.

There are many who have become highly suspicious of Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick’s complicity in the decision to give a license to a man just convicted of drunk driving. Patrick is a staunch Democrat and was appointed the co-campaign manager for President Obama’s re-election run the same week Uncle Obama got his driver’s license.

“How is it possible that a previously deported illegal immigrant stripped of his driving privileges after getting busted for drunken-driving gets his license reinstated? Hint; his beloved nephew lives in the White House,” stated the Judicial Watch blog.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck on Terror Show: Is the Muslim Brotherhood Winning?

On this week’s episode of the Stakelbeck on Terror show, we examine the Muslim Brotherhood’s alarming recent strides in the United States—including a visit by a Brotherhood delegation to the White House to meet with Obama administration officials.

We also show how radical, Brotherhood-linked American groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) are benefiting from the group’s newfound “mainstream” status.

Plus, General Jerry Boykin joins us for an exclusive interview about CAIR’s pressure campaign against him and we also sit down with a leading Egyptian dissident—a former Muslim turned Christian—who warns about the Brotherhood’ rise.

And you won’t want to miss Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert as he calls the Obama administration on its open door policy for Islamists.

Click the link above to watch.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



What Passes for Intelligence — SPLC Intelligence Report, Spring 2012

The spring “intelligence” report from the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has been released and as usual it has little to do with intelligence and more to do with fear mongering and misdirection. As an intelligence analyst I know what an intelligence report is and this is not that.

They start off with identifying what they call “Patriot” groups in the United States in 2011. Now in my 56 years in this country I always thought of myself as a Patriot. I have served in the military, went to war, was awarded the Purple Heart, swore an oath to protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic, and always thought being a Patriot was a good thing.

Not these, ahem, intelligence analyst of the SPLC — they classify these groups as anti-government. Now don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of anti-government groups around but just because citizens are wishing to hold government accountable, which is their duty, is admirable and does not make them “anti-government.” Maybe anti-unlawful government.

So how does a group get on this prestigious list? Evidently not hard at all; I personally know of a number of these “groups” that have only just started and have done nothing so far, and I mean absolutely nothing. In fact one group, and I’ll get to them later, has a total of 3 people involved, have only had a handful of meetings and have set up a rudimentary web page — that’s it. They must be very dangerous and scary to the “intelligence” folks at the SPLC.

[…]

Everything I have placed in this article can be found with a simple search on the internet. What really worries me is not that the SPLC publishes such unfounded misinformation; it is that the current administration and especially the Department of Homeland Security have a history of communication and sharing with the SPLC and that the SPLC is taken seriously by our government when so much of what they “report” is just plain wrong. The SPLC has been cited numerous times in state fusion center and DHS literature as being a credible source of their information. That, to me, is what is really scary.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Wolf Blitzer Should Apologize to Allen West

CNN’s Wolf Blitzer played the role of wise guy during a segment last Thursday on Rep. Allen West and communism. West “sounds like McCarthy,” Blitzer said, referring to his allegations of communists in Congress. The comment was designed to ridicule West, a combat veteran of the Iraq War and a man considered by many Republicans to be vice-presidential material. Blitzer urged West to issue a public apology.

But Blitzer is the one who should apologize, for he did not offer West’s comments in context. Blitzer also ignored clear and convincing evidence that the Communist Party USA, once funded by Moscow, regards the Congressional Progressive Caucus and the Democratic Party as allies in the “struggle” for socialism in the U.S.

“What’s the difference between the CPUSA and progressive Democrats?” asked CPUSA writer Dan Margolis. “The CPUSA has worked to get Democrats elected, fought for health care reform with the public option, and embraced most of what organized labor has been doing.”

[…]

Although Blitzer used the phrase “sounds like McCarthy” in order to mock West, it bears repeating that the communist threat was much greater than even Sen. Joseph McCarthy had feared. The Venona transcripts of communications among Soviet spies in the U.S., many recruited by the Communist Party, and Moscow, demonstrated as many as 350 infiltrators, including numerous high-level government officials.

With some prominent exceptions such as Democratic Rep. Danny Davis, members of Congress do not advertise their work or affiliations with the CPUSA these days. However, as West noted, the party has referred to “our allies in Congress, the Progressive Caucus, and John Conyers,” the Congressman from Michigan who participated in events sponsored by the U.S. Peace Council, the CPUSA front.

The problem is actually much worse than that.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Accusations Against Lord Ahmed Merely Highlight a Vile Anti-British Career

Lord Ahmed exemplifies ‘Labour appointments to the Lords in the 1990s designed to make Parliament more ‘multicultural’, a deliberate project by Labour to make Parliament represent ethnicity over the love of our country.

Lord Ahmed was suspended by the Labour party yesterday for allegedly putting a bounty on the heads of President Obama and former President GW Bush while supporting the man indicted for the Bombay terror attacks.

It is unclear whether Ahmed actually said this. However his past record is not unblemished.

In 2005 he invited well-known anti-semite Israel Shamir to the House of Lords to talk about ‘Jews and Empire’.

In 2007 he savagely attacked Tony Blair for giving Salman Rushdie a knighthood, by oddly stating: ‘he’s honouring a man who has insulted the British public and been divisive in community relations’. It’s excellent that we have a Peer that has such an awful regard for our tradition of freedom of speech, who believes that literary merit cannot be praised if a minority might be offended.

In 2008 he ran over and killed a man on the M1 after texting on his mobile phone. He was given a prison sentence for dangerous driving, which was later suspended.

In 2009 he threatened to mobilise 10000 Muslims to prevent democratically elected Dutch MP Geert Wilders from speaking in Parliament, this is despite his own invite of the anti-semitic Israel Shamir who has been accused of denying the holocaust.

It is clear that Ahmed is a character that consistently shows dubious moral judgment, and Miliband should show some strength to move to annul his Peerage altogther.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Cyprus’ Church Set to Start Private Power Station

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, APRIL 17 — The Church of Cyprus has signed preliminary agreements to start the island’s first private power station, Cyprusnewsreport.com wrote quoting Archbishop Chrysostomos II as saying on Orthodox Easter Sunday.

The station will start using mazut fuel and then switch to natural gas, with the Church offering its land and foreign companies offering technology and know-how, according to the Archbishop. Due to the economic recession, the Church’s revenues have dropped by 60%, he said, and the planned electricity plant will bring new income and create new jobs. There is a crisis in the energy market in Cyprus due to the deadly explosion last July, which critically damaged the island’s largest power station, Vassiliko’. Electricity prices have increased by at least one third as the Electricity Authority of Cyprus (EAC) added a 6.95% charge to cover the costs of hiring generators to take over some of the missing power. But in an overall economic crisis, consumers have had difficulty paying their bills, which frequently reach hundreds of euros. As one of the island’s largest landowners, the Church is possibly the most likely candidate to compete against the EAC, which has been criticised for failing to adapt to changing technologies and was left financially and technically vulnerable by the damage to Vassiliko’. When the EAC’s board of directors presented the authority’s 1.8 billion-euro 2012 budget to Parliament — with a 66 million-euro surplus — DIKO MP Nikolas Papadopoulos said that the EAC should make radical changes if it wants to be competitive in the near future. He backed the Cyprus Energy Regulatory Authority’s (CERA) call to rationalise and reorganise the company’s structure to make it more efficient. The EAC’s monopoly is the reason that consumers pay the highest electricity rates in the EU, and this was true before the explosion at Mari naval base which critically damaged the Vasiliko power plant, he said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Europe Needs to Profit From Human Spaceflight

As the final space shuttle lands at a US museum, Europe’s top astronaut says keeping humans in space is important for Earth-based research — and that it makes financial sense.

The European Space Agency (ESA) director of human spaceflight and operations, Thomas Reiter, said there was a simple reason why Europe should continue space missions: European countries have already invested considerable sums in the International Space Station, particularly the Columbus laboratory that permanently attached to the ISS, and “now it is time to reap the harvest.”

The Columbus laboratory, which was launched in 2008, provide space for research into material science, fluid physics and life science as well as an external payload facility for experiments the fields of space science, Earth observation and technology. Reiter’s remarks came following Italy’s decision to cut financing for ESA projects due to the ongoing economic crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Father Gets 17 Years for Killing Daughter With Axe

The 53-year-old Pakistani man who killed his 16-year-old daughter, Swera, at their home in Zurich-Höngg in 2010 has been sentenced to 17 years imprisonment. The Zurich District Court found the father guilty of murder, and concluded that although it had not been an honour killing in the sense most commonly understood, the man had killed his daughter “to get out of a humiliating situation and to restore his honour”.

The court stated that the father, referred to as Scheragha R, had used “really excessive violence” and that he had killed his teenaged daughter with “reckless brutality”, newspaper Tages Anzieger reported.

The court listened as the defence lawyer, Matthias Brunner, described a man who had reached the end of his tether, both physically and emotionally, having been particularly burdened by his two younger daughters’ psychological, behavioural and developmental problems.

The discovery that his favourite eldest daughter wanted to move out of the home finally destroyed the family ideal he had held and sent him over the edge, Brunner said. But the prosecution, represented by Ulrich Krättli, went in hard and asserted that the father “had downright massacred his daughter”.

The court found that the brutality was such that Scheragha R deserved a life-sentence, although this was partially reduced because the 53-year-old had confessed to the murder and demonstrated feelings of remorse.

Each of the remaining children will receive between 12,000 and 15,000 francs in compensation for suffering. The murder took place on May 10th 2010, not long after 16-year-old Swera had been picked up at a Zurich police station by her parents. She had been caught stealing cigarettes.

It was the first time the girl had seen her father for two weeks: she had run away after her father had allegedly tried to electrocute her by throwing a hairdryer into the bath, online news site 20 Minuten reported.

Once back at their apartment Swera said she wanted to leave home permanently and started to pack a bag. She then went down to the basement of the building to get a pair of shoes. While she was gone, her father allegedly retrieved an axe from the balcony and hid it in the bedroom he shared with his wife.

Once she was back in the apartment, the girl went into her parents’ bedroom to pick up some of her belongings. When she bent down to retrieve some items from the wardrobe, her father hit her with the axe on the back of the head, the prosecutor says. The man struck his daughter 19 times with the axe: 12 times with the blade and seven with the blunt end.

The teenager did not die instantly, but lay on the ground in agonizing pain for several minutes until her life finally slipped away. After washing his hands, Scheragha R left the apartment and called his wife to say he had killed his daughter. Fifteen minutes later, he called the police, who arrested him shortly after near his apartment.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Riot Police Warned on Press Attacks

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 17 — Greek police officers have received a written warning from senior officers to stop attacks against journalists, after a veteran photographer was brutally beaten by riot policemen suffered a fractured skull, as daily Athens News reported. “While carrying out police duties, news media professionals must be treated with respect for the role that they must fulfil,” the written notice to officers said. “We must always display understanding and act professionally and responsibly.” Photographer Marios Lolos was seriously injured earlier this month after being confronted by riot police in Syntagma Square, during demonstrations that followed the suicide of retired pharmacist Dimitris Christoulas. Lolos, who colleague says was struck with the handle of a riot police truncheon, suffered a fractured skull and has still not recovered full use of his left arm. It was the latest in a series of recent incidents that have seen photographers and other news staff beaten by police, in several cases what appeared to be targeted attacks.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Medical Association’s President Probed for Investment Fraud

Investigators say scheme put 500 million euros at risk

(ANSA) — Rome, April 17 — The president of the Italian physicians’ insurance agency and pension fund Enpam, Eolo Parodi, is being investigated for alleged real estate investment fraud along with three others, police said on Tuesday. Raids on 47 homes, real estate studios, investment brokers and Enpam offices were conducted for probes into the alleged mismanagement of high-risk property acquisitions worth approximately 500 million euros.

Investigations into the president’s alleged misdeeds were initiated in May 2011 at the request of Enpam board members from the Catania, Ferrara, Bologna and Latina branches, and also include abuse of office.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Ex-League Treasurer Belsito Hands Over Gold and Diamonds

200,000 euros in jewels still missing, investigators say

(ANSA) — Rome, April 17 — The former treasurer of the scandal-plagued Northern League came forth on Tuesday with some of the diamonds and gold bars that were allegedly bought illegally with public election funds, ANSA sources said. Francesco Belsito, under multiple investigations for fraud and money laundering, gave his lawyer gold bullion and diamonds valued at hundreds of thousands of euros. But investigators say that 200,000 euros in diamonds are still unaccounted for. The items handed over Tuesday are said to be 11 gold bars weighing a total of five kilos and 11 packaged diamonds, which were passed on to party representatives who then handed them over to police. Prosecutors said Monday that bank records for the jewels and gold surfaced as part of an investigation into Belsito for allegedly channeling public funds to the family of ex-leader Umberto Bossi, who stepped down at the beginning of April.

Belsito is accused of buying the items along with former Senate Deputy Speaker Rosy Mauro, expelled last week from the party, and League Senator Piergiorgio Stiffoni.

In addition to turning over gold and diamonds, Belsito also handed over an Audi A6 sedan which at one point belonged to Bossi’s son Renzo, who stepped down last week as councillor in the Lombardy regional assembly.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Party Slams Minister Over TV-Frequency Auction

Passera ‘made a mess’ of plan says predecessor Romani

(ANSA) — Rome, April 17 — Ex-premier and media magnate Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party on Tuesday slammed Industry Minister Corrado Passera for making “a mess” of a plan to auction off six new digital TV frequencies.

PdL heavyweight and former industry minister Paolo Romani said the approval of the plan, passed by the House finance committee with the PdL voting against, was a “serious” issue which would have to be taken up by a summit of the parties backing the government Tuesday night.

Romani claimed Passera went back on an original draft and framed the new plan, which would reportedly exclude Berlusconi’s Mediaset empire and state broadcaster RAI, with the centre-left Democratic Party (PD) over the head of the PdL. The previous Berlusconi-led government was to have given the frequencies free to big media players including RAI and Mediaset in a so-called ‘beauty contest’.

The European Commission on Tuesday voiced approval for the auction plan, saying it would boost competitiveness in the Italian TV sector. Experts say the sale should bring in an estimated 1.2 billion euros for the government, which has imposed stiff austerity measures in a bid to balance the budget next year.

The original beauty contest for the frequencies had been opposed by critics of Berlusconi, who accused him of a conflict of interest.

The row over the frequencies is the latest sign of mounting tension between the PdL and PD over the economic policies of the technocratic government led by Mario Monti, which replaced Berlusconi’s executive at the peak of Italy’s euro debt crisis in November.

The PdL and PD are the main backers of Monti’s government.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Hopes Sponsoring Can Save Cultural Treasures

With the country mired in debt, Italy’s cultural budget has been slashed in recent years, spelling trouble for several historic sites. Many local politicians have turned to corporate sponsorships to raise the money necessary for vital upkeep. The trend has attracted considerable criticism.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Soccer: Radu Denies ‘Fascist Salute’

‘Doesn’t even know what Fascism is’ says Lazio defender’s lawyer

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — Stefan Radu on Wednesday told an Italian soccer disciplinary panel he had no intention of making a Fascist salute when he directed a stiff-armed gesture at celebrating fans after Lazio’s 3-1 win over Napoli at the Stadio Olimpico on April 7.

“(Radu) doesn’t even know what Fascism is,” the Romania defender’s lawyer told reporters after the hearing.

The lawyer said he was “convinced” that, even if found guilty, his client would be “let off with a fine”.

Lazio has a section of hard-core rightist fans and former striker Paolo Di Canio was fined for Fascist salutes to them twice in 2005.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



London Celebrates 100-Day Countdown to Olympics

It is 100 days until Britain hosts to the 2012 Olympics games and celebrations have been in full swing. Organizers have been keen to build Olympic fever after some trepidation over London’s ability to stage the event.

Britainmarked the 100-day countdown to the London Olympics on Wednesday with a series of celebrations around the country.

Some 20,000 flowers were planted in the shape of Olympic rings in London’s Kew Gardens and were visible to planes flying into London Heathrow airport. With some 31 out of 42 sports test events completed so far, dress rehearsals for wheelchair rugby, synchronised swimming and shooting were also scheduled to take place on Wednesday.

“There is a groundswell of support and excitement, not just in the UK, but internationally as the final countdown to the London 2012 Olympic Games begins,” former Olympic gold medallist and London Games chairman Sebastian Coe told reporters at Kew Gardens.

“Whether it’s the competing athletes or people getting ready to join their communities in supporting torchbearers on the streets of the UK, the whole world is getting ready for London.” “Expectations are high, and we won’t disappoint,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Judges Right to Let Killer Have His Say: Survivors

Anders Behring Breivik must be allowed to speak about what pushed him to kill 77 people in Norway last year, even if it is painful to hear, survivors and relatives of the victims say.

Telling the court on Tuesday that he “would have done it again” if he could, Breivik read a prepared text on his xenophobic and anti-Islam ideology for an hour and 13 minutes, much longer than the 30 minutes initially granted.

Chief judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen occasionally reminded Breivik to wrap up quickly and tone down his comments, but nonetheless allowed him to finish, a decision backed by survivors and relatives of the victims at the courthouse.

“He was allowed to finish yesterday, which was important for the court to be able to determine who he really is, why and how he was radicalized to the point of becoming a terrorist,” Trond Henry Blattmann, the head of a support group for the families of victims killed in the July 22 twin attacks, told AFP.

“Breivik has been treated correctly, in line with existing legal principles in Norway,” he added. The head of the Norwegian Lawyers’ Association, Berit Reiss-Andersen, agreed. “He’s being treated like any other accused in Norway,” she told AFP, saying that was absolutely crucial.

“Of course, he could have been stopped occasionally on some of the sensitive points, but the important thing was for the court to hear him. Especially to determine whether or not he can be held accountable for his actions,” Blattmann said on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: ‘The Knights Templar Doesn’t Exist as You Describe It’

Lawyers rubbish claims mass killer Breivik was part of militant group

Lawyers in the trial of Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik today set about rubbishing his claims that he was part of a sophisticated anti-Muslim militant group.

Prosecutors said they believed the 33-year-old’s so-called Knights Templar group did not exist ‘in the way he describes it’.

Breivik grew visibly irritated and refused to answer questions about the group, as his trial on terror charges for the massacre of 77 people entered its third day.

He insisted the group did exist and blamed police in ‘not doing a good enough job in uncovering it’.

He added: ‘It is not in my interest to shed light on details that could lead to arrests.’

Observers said the issue was of key importance in determining Breivik’s sanity.

It could ultimately decide where he is sent to prison or compulsory psychiatric care for the bomb-and-shooting massacre that shocked Norway on July 22, 2011.

Breivik claims to have carried out the attacks on behalf of the organisation, which he described in a 1,500-page compendium posted online before the attacks as a militant nationalist group fighting a Muslim colonization of Europe.

Prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh pressed him about details on the group, its members and its meetings.

Breivik claimed to have met a Serb ‘war hero’ living in exile during a trip to Liberia in 2002, but he refused to identify him.

‘What is it you’re getting at?’ Breivik told the prosecutor, then answered the question himself, saying prosecutors want to ‘sow doubt over whether the KT network exists’.

The main point of his defence is to avoid an insanity ruling, which would deflate his political arguments.

One psychiatric evaluation found him psychotic and ‘delusional’, while another found him mentally competent to be sent to prison.

If found sane, Breivik could face a maximum 21-year prison sentence or an alternate custody arrangement that would keep him locked up as long as he is considered a menace to society.

If declared insane he would be committed to psychiatric care for as long as he’s considered ill.

Breivik also refused to give details on what he claims was the founding session of the Knights Templar in London in 2002.

He conceded, however, that he embellished somewhat in the manifesto when he described the other three members at the founding session as ‘brilliant political and military tacticians of Europe’.

Breivik testified that he had used ‘pompous’ language and described them instead as ‘four people with great integrity’.

Bejer Engh challenged him on whether the meeting had taken place at all. He replied: ‘Yes, there was a meeting in London. I haven’t made up anything. What is in the compendium is correct.’

Later, he answered with more nuance, adding: ‘There is nothing that is made up, but you have to see what is written in a context. It is a glorification of certain ideals.’

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Real Estate: Berlin Rivals London in Attracting Greek Money

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 17 — Greek capital transfers for the purchase of property abroad, particularly Germany, have acquired a steady pace in recent months, daily Kathimerini reports. “We are doing business with people interested in properties that are taxed less and yield higher returns than those at home,” says ImmoConsult’s Konstantin Vollbach. He notes, however, that most prospecting investors find it hard to sell a property they own in Greece in order to buy one abroad because of lack of interest and low prices. “Most investors have sums of around 250,000-300,000 euros and make up for the remaining required amount with a bank loan. As a rule, the preferred city is Berlin, where prices are relatively low compared to other cities,” Vollbach says. One of the main advantages of the German property market is easy access to financing. Banks cover up to 50% of the value of the property but tend to be particularly strict in scrutinizing the legitimacy of the origin of the funds transferred. London has traditionally been the top preference of Greek property investors, who account for about 3% of foreign purchases. The trend has tended to abate in recent months, in favor of cheaper destinations, including France, Switzerland and Turkey — which offers a wide price differential. According to Greek realtors, the average annual return of a local apartment now stands at 2-3%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Museum Evacuated After ‘Racist’ Bomb Threat

A Stockholm museum was evacuated on Tuesday afternoon after receiving a “racially motivated” bomb threat, just days after a controversial piece of artwork had been revealed. Stockholm’s Moderna Museet received the call on Tuesday at 4pm, directly after Queen Silvia and the Finnish prime-minister’s wife Jenni Haukio had been visiting.

“The person who rang spoke English and said that there was a bomb and that it wasn’t a joke. He said the museum was a racist one,” said Lotta Guffhe of the Stockholm police to Aftonbladet newspaper.

The building was evacuated and a bomb squad was called in, complete with sniffer dogs. By 8pm, the police confirmed that the threat was false. The Moderna Museet has caught the public’s attention in Sweden this week after the Swedish minister of culture Lena Adelsohn Liljeroth carved up a cake depicting a naked black woman.

The move by the minister, who claimed her actions were “misinterpreted”, sparked outrage amongst the National Afro-Swedish Association, resulting in spokesperson Kitimbwa Sabuni calling for the minister’s dismissal.

As part of the installation, which was reportedly meant to highlight the issue of female circumcision, the culture minister began cutting a large cake shaped like a black woman, symbolically starting at the clitoris.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Macedonia: Mysterious ‘Army’ Threatens ‘Liberation of Albanian Lands’

Skopje, 17 April (AKI) — Tensions were high in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia on Tuesday, less than a week after the murder of five Macedonians near the capital of Skopje, as a mysterious “army” threatened a “liberation of occupied Albanian lands”

Recently unknown “The Army for Liberation of Occupied Albanian Lands”, in a statement published by Macedonian media, gave the government an ultimatum to withdraw in two weeks from what it called “occupied Albanians lands” or face reprisals.

The “army’ said it has decided at the meeting of its “general staff” it would attack “Slavo-Macedonian police and military structures” if they don’t withdraw from the territory inhabited by ethnic Albanians.

Ethnic Albanians, who make about 25 percent of Macedonia’s two million population, are concentrated mostly in the west of the country bordering Albania, but there are numerous cities, like Skopje, with mixed population.

Five Macedonian youths and a middle aged man were killed last week near a lake north of Skopje while fishing and local media speculated the murders were ethnically motivated.

The police still haven’t discovered the perpetrators and about one thousand Macedonians protested in Skopje Monday evening, smashing windows on the government building and clashing with police.

Six people, including three policemen, were injured in the clashes and fourteen protesters were arrested as police blocked demonstrators from marching onto Albanian section of the city.

Ethnic Albanians rebelled in 2001, demanding more rights and regional autonomy, gaining concessions from the government under international mediation. But tensions have been running high ever since.

Macedonians are Slavs and the mysterious army has accused prime minister Nikola Gruevski of “daily violations of the rights of Albanians”, of “spreading anti-Albanian ideology, staging attacks on innocent Albanians and of blocking Albanian villages”.

“We have been silent long enough, the silence is now over,” the statement said. It vowed to “revenge brothers” and to “respond on fire with fire, an eye for an eye and an arm for an arm”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU Launches ‘ENPARD’ For Southern Neighbours

Supports agricolture in Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt and Jordan

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, APRIL 17 — ENPARD is the new programme launched by the EU aiming to support agriculture and rural development in the southern Mediterranean, as part of its response to the Arab Spring under the renewed European Neighbourhood Policy.

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), with the launch of this programme the EU aims to meet the needs of Southern Mediterranean countries and to further a more inclusive growth, through the identification and implementation of operations that can be funded under its new SPRING programme and that answer three objectives: to improve farmers’ revenue and rural employment, in particular among young people; to increase the productivity of production systems, improving at the same time the quality of products and the capacity to adapt to changes; to reinforce organizational and institutional capacities and adherence to the operational principles of good governance. To achieve these objectives, a multi-annual work programme will be set through a dialogue with national partners.

The Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Montpellier of the International Centre for Advanced Mediterranean Studies (IAMM-CIHEAM) has been tasked with the mission of accompanying this initiative in Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt and Jordan. This mission will last 30 months (January 2012-June 2014) and will be divided into two phases: a preparatory phase to identify the initiatives to be reinforced and to prepare the countries’ action plans by June 2012; the second phase will include the starting of a national dialogue to implement ENPARD by June 2014.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egyptian Presidential Hopefuls Banned

The candidates that were barred from standing in the upcoming Egyptian elections have lost their appeals, marking another twist in the Egyptian presidency saga.

Ten candidates in the Egyptian presidential election, including Hosni Mubarak’s spy chief Omar Suleiman, Muslim Brotherhood leader Khairat el-Shater and Islamic preacher Hazem Abu Ismail, lost appeals Tuesday against their disqualification.

“All appeals have been rejected because nothing new was offered in the appeal requests,” a member of the investigating judicial committee said.

The committee had spent all day hearing the candidates’ appeals. The three individuals were banned from standing for different reasons.

Suleiman was barred because of his failure to get enough endorsements from all 15 provinces, as the law demands.

Shater was rejected because of a law that stipulates that candidates linked to criminal activity in the past cannot stand in elections until they have been released or pardoned for six years; he was imprisoned last year for terrorism and money laundering.

Abu Ismail was disqualified because his mother holds a foreign passport. Election rules say that the parents of candidates must be solely Egyptian citizens.

The development is a boost for the country’s secular liberals and for other Islamists standing in the election.

The Muslim Brotherhood, the best organized political organization in Egypt, is still in the race. Mohamed Mursi, who heads the group’s political party, was nominated as a back-up candidate in the event of Shater’s disqualification.

The presidential election is scheduled to kick off with a first round of voting on May 23 and 24. Commentators expect that to lead to a run-off in June between the top two candidates. The ruling military council is scheduled to transfer power to the new president on July 1.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Group of 100 Tunisians Kidnapped Close to Libyan Border

(AGI) Tunis — Some 100 Tunisian workers were kidnapped on Monday in north-western Lybia’s Zauia, close to the Tunisian border. The incident was reported by the Tunisian Human Rights League.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italian Hostage Freed in Algeria

Maria Sandra Mariani kidnapped last year by Al Qaeda affiliate

(ANSA) — Rome, April 17 — Italian hostage in Algeria Maria Sandra Mariani was freed on Tuesday, the Italian foreign ministry confirmed. “She is free. I have just informed her family. I join them in their great happiness and relief over this wonderful news,” said Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi. Mariani, a 54-year-old tourist, was in the hands of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), which seized her in the Algerian Sahara near the border with Niger last February.

The Italian foreign ministry has been closely following the case, under tight reporting restrictions, with Algerian authorities.

AQIM, who have staged several kidnappings in the area between Mali, Mauritania and Niger in the last several years, had not issued any known demands for Mariani’s release.

The kidnapping was the first in Algeria since 2003, when 32 Western tourists were taken hostage.

Mariani is not believed to have been the initial target of the AQIM group that came into a tourist camp at Alidena, 2,000 km south of Algiers, reportedly looking for a party of Westerners.

Mariani, from Tuscany, had been going to the Djanet oasis city for five years, for spells of one or two months.

The foreign ministry is still working to free Italian aid worker Rossella Urru, abducted on October 23 in southwestern Algeria.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turks to Get Same Rights in Europe’s Economy as EU Residents — Commission Decision Taken Last Week — Brussels Bringing Turkey Into EU Under the Radar

Detailed plans to extend the same rights to Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Croatia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Israel

The Slog has obtained sight of an official Brussels Commission document which, while not confidential, has not as far as I can tell been the subject of MSM coverage, or indeed any vote at all among MEPs. Although dated March 30th 2012 as a ‘proposal for a decision’, I can reveal that the decision has been approved and is already going ahead. It is to grant Turkish citizens the same residency and labour rights in Europe as existing EU citizens.

The unelected European Commission has repealed the 1980 Ankara Accord between what was then the EEC and Turkey, and replaced it with a major change to the rights of Turkish citizens in the EU. The proposal was presented to a working group (we know not who) eleven days ago on March 30th, and approved by that same anonymous gathering. It specifically adds that ‘A first package with similar proposals in respect of Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Croatia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Israel was adopted by the Council in October 2010’ and that this too will be updated to bring it into line with the Turkish proposals.

I was certainly not aware of the October 2010 ‘package’, and I doubt very much if even the eurosceptic wing of the Conservative Party is up to speed with the fact that this Turkish grant of rights is about to pass quietly into law — as so many of these lunatic Commission decisions have a tendency to do. But the clauses in relation to non-eurozone members like the UK (already sinking under the weight of unrestricted migration) are truly mind-boggling. For example: (my emphasis)

‘this [Turkish accord] will facilitate the application of these provisions by Member States’ social security institutions. This Decision shall apply:

(a) to Turkish workers who are or have been legally employed in the territory of a

Member State and who are or have been subject to the legislation of one or more

Member States, and their survivors;

(b) to the members of the family of workers referred to in point (a) provided that these

family members are or have been legally resident with the worker concerned while

the worker is employed in a Member State;

This gives Home Secretary Theresa May-and-very-probably-will something of a problem: despite her protestations of ‘cracking down’ on migrant numbers and the rights of their dependents, as a Member State Britain will have to obey the diktat. Does Theresa even know about it, I ask?

I do not employ the phrase ‘ lunatic Commission decisions’ above lightly. Any unelected and yet sovereign body happy to take on the welfare needs of these workers at a time of euro meltdown must be deranged at least. To enumerate the idiocy involved here:…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Cyprus, Israel Discuss Exploitation of Hydrocarbons

Announcement of the two Foreign Ministers, accord soon

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, APRIL 17 — The Cypriot and the Israeli Foreign Ministers discussed here today the issue of shared development and exploitation of hydrocarbon deposits in the cross median line of the two countries and a mutual agreement soon to be signed between the two sides. The Israeli FM Avigdor Lieberman, in Cyprus on a two-day official visit, today met with his Cypriot counterpart Erato Kozakou Markoullis. Speaking to the press after the meeting which lasted an hour, as CNA reports, Markoullis said they had a discussion on some of the pending agreements currently under negotiation, “especially the one on the shared development and exploitation of hydrocarbon reservoirs in the cross median line”, noting that “we are in the final stages of the negotiations on this agreement and hopefully soon we will have the opportunity to sign it”. She described the visit of the Israeli FM and the talks they had today as an indication of the very high level of bilateral relations and of what the two countries have achieved during the past two years, especially with the exchange of visits and the signing of very important agreements and cooperation in a number of very important areas. The two Ministers also discussed other regional issues, the situation in the Middle East, the Cyprus problem and threats from Turkey as well as the situation in the countries of the Arab spring. Lieberman described the discussion very fruitful and expressed his satisfaction over the fact that a lot of tourists from Israel visit Cyprus, hoping that this tourist flow will increase. The Israeli FM said that they discussed water management and energy issues, stressing that “we will have more investments and more activities in these fields”. He expressed hope that both sides will reach an agreement on double taxation and the protection of investment, saying that the Israeli Finance Minister is expected to visit Nicosia in the coming months, “to accelerate on these talks regarding economic issues”. Regarding the situation in the region, Lieberman said that both Nicosia and Tel Aviv monitor the situation very closely and “hope to see a peaceful transition period in all our neighboring countries”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Bahrain: Amnesty Report, More Human Rights Violations

Reforms lacking, abuse victims have not received justice

(ANSAmed) — ROME, APRIL 17 — Human rights violations in Bahrain are continuing and the reforms implemented risk appearing hollow, according to a report published today by Amnesty International, as the emirate prepares to host the Formula 1 Grand Prix next weekend, after last year’s race was suspended because of the uprising in the country. In the 58-page document, entitled “Bahrain: Flawed reforms and absence of justice for protesters”, Amnesty reports that the reforms have not ensured justice for the victims of human rights violations, despite the government’s insistence that it would learn its lesson from the disorder of February and March 2011. “While the world’s eyes are focussing on Bahrain as it prepares to host the Formula 1 Grand Prix, no-one should be under the misapprehension that the human rights crisis has passed,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, the deputy director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme. “The authorities are trying to depict a country on the road to reforms, but we continue to receive new of torture and of excessive and unnecessary use of force against protesters,” Sahraoui said. “The reforms have only scratched the surface”.

Following last November’s publication of the report by the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry (BICI), known as the “Bassiouni Commission”, Amnesty International has concluded that, despite a few institutional and other reforms, the government’s overall response has been inadequate. The special department set up to assess the work of the security forces responsible for human rights violations against protesters is lacking independence and impartiality and no member of the security forces has been called to answer for their actions, while dozens of prisoners, detained after unfair trials, are still in prison and subject to torture and ill treatment. The report, which is available in English on Amnesty’s website (http://www.amnesty.it), says that the actions of the country’s security forces have remained largely unchanged. Amnesty International has asked the Bahraini government to release immediately and without conditions all political prisoners and to ensure that all individuals suspected of torture and killings, including those with responsibility for such individuals, be called to answer for their actions.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Exclusive: Iran Ships “Off Radar” As Tehran Conceals Oil Sales

LONDON (Reuters) — Iran is concealing the destination of its oil sales by disabling tracking systems aboard its tanker fleet, making it difficult to assess how much crude Tehran is exporting as it seeks to counter Western sanctions aimed at cutting its oil revenues.

Most of Iran’s 39-strong fleet of tankers is now “off-radar” after Tehran ordered captains in the National Iranian Tanker Co (NITC) to switch off the black box transponders that are used in the shipping industry to monitor vessel movements, oil industry, trading and shipping sources said.

“Iran, helped by its customers, is trying to obfuscate as much as possible,” said a senior executive at a national oil company that has done business with Iran.

And Iran may have countered a reported reduction in its oil sales in March by offering big discounts in the form of free freight, finance and insurance and generous credit terms, the sources said.

Europe’s July 1 oil embargo, and U.S. and European financial sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program have seen Tehran’s oil sales drop to most Western destinations and drawn promises from some Asian buyers that they will cut purchases.

But cheap, covert sales may have curbed or even reversed the reduction in shipments, the sources say.

Discretion is paramount.

Ship captains steering NITC supertankers have switched off recognition systems and customers are keeping business strictly under wraps.

“People are being very secretive right now. They are not talking about this on email, Yahoo or mobile,” said the head of a crude oil desk at a top oil trading houses.

A Reuters’ survey of the Iranian fleet via the ship tracking system AIS (Automatic Identification System) Live shows only seven of its 25 very large crude carriers are still operating on-board transponders, allowing computers to track vessels.

Only two of NITC’s nine smaller Suezmax size tankers now have their tracking systems in operation, shipping sources say.

“NITC oil tankers are going to operate in stealth mode,” said a shipping official, who declined to be identified.

Under normal circumstances, tankers would generally not turn off their tracking systems, which were introduced to improve safety at sea and allow marine authorities to locate vessels.

Ships are obliged by international law to have a satellite tracking device on board when travelling at sea. However, a ships’ master has the discretion to turn off the device on safety grounds with the permission on the vessel’s flag state.

Some tankers turned off their trackers to avoid detection last year during the Libyan civil war in order to trade with the Gaddafi government.

As sanctions make it harder to pay for and ship oil from Iran, it is increasingly difficult to gauge how much is moving out of the country’s main terminal at Kharg Island.

Iran’s Oil Minister, Rostam Qasemi, has said Tehran’s crude exports are steady at last year’s rate of 2.2 million barrels per day. But that has been hard to square with tanker tracker data and market intelligence.

Expert opinion is that Iran’s visible crude oil sales fell to about 1.9 million bpd in March.

These calculations are backed by some of the best oil industry forecasters in the business including the International Energy Agency and Geneva-based Petrologistics, the respected tanker tracking consultant which monitors global oil shipments.

New estimates for April put Iranian exports down by as much as 500,000 bpd from last year.

The trouble is there is no hard evidence that Iran’s oil production has actually fallen or that it is going into storage.

Millions of barrels of Iranian oil that were in storage in Iranian tankers a few weeks ago now seem to have disappeared, ship tracking data shows.

So where is it going? Has it been re-routed, has production been shut in or is the oil being stored somewhere else? Is it all being stored at sea?

“It’s the million-dollar question — the billion-dollar question even,” a senior executive in Asia at a large oil trading house said.

The hunt is getting more complicated as OPEC’s second biggest producer comes up with a range of tactics to avoid scrutiny.

“Some big Asian companies may be taking oil on Iranian ships provided they switch off the transponders,” said another European shipping industry source.

A trader in Singapore said Iran has managed to sell all the crude stored on half a dozen vessels floating off Singapore earlier in the year. The buyers were mainly Chinese and South Korean.

Given the lack of visibility of NITC’s fleet, it will become increasingly difficult to measure floating storage. Industry sources say parts of the fleet were storing up to 12 million barrels of crude in March. That has now disappeared.

An NITC official, contacted by Reuters, declined to comment. NITC have declined to give press interviews for several weeks…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Jordan’s Parliament Bans the Muslim Brotherhood’s Party

Under the country’s proposed political parties law, parties based on religion and ethnicity are banned. The Islamic Action Front, the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood’s and the main opposition party, will thus be excluded from the next parliamentary elections.

Amman (AsiaNews/ Agencies) — The Jordanian parliament has banned the Islamic Action Front (IAF), the country’s main opposition party, which is affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood. In the lower house, 46 out of 83 members yesterday voted to outlaw any political party based on religion or ethnicity. Now the vote goes to the upper house for final approval. Effectively, this means that the IAF will not be able to take part in next parliamentary elections.

For the leaders of the Islamist movement, the government is trying to silence the opposition to ensure the continued dominance of tribal groups loyal to the regime.

“This is only the latest in a series of measures by deputies to limit the influence of political parties and any dissenting views in parliament,” Zaki Bani Rsheid, head of the IAF’s politburo, said.

“We believe all Jordanian citizens-not only Islamists-should have the right to form a political party without conditions,” he added.

The proposal was made by Mamdouh Abbadi, deputy speaker of the lower house, and is part of a draft political parties bill presented to parliament in response to last year’s Arab spring protests by pro-democracy parties and later embraced by the Islamist opposition.

Starting on14 January 2011, people began protesting against poverty, youth unemployment and corruption with demonstrations continuing until the present.

Faced with the emergency, King Abdullah II changed prime minister twice. Then Prime Minister Samir Rifai resigned in February 2011 after two weeks of protests amidst accusations of corruption. His successor, Marouf Bakhit, who held office in 2005, quit on 17 October 2011 also because of corruption charges.

Awn Shawkat Al-Khasawneh, a judge and former vice president of the International Court of Justice, is the current prime minister.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Muslim Brotherhood Plans to Take Over Kuwait by 2013: Khalfan

KUWAIT: General Dhahi Ben Khalfan, Dubai Police Director General, warned of the dangers against ruling systems in the Gulf by the Muslim Brotherhood, after their successes in a number of Arab countries.

His information to the media extended to saying that the Muslim Brotherhood are conspiring against the GCC ruling systems, and they will be in control by the year 2016.

He said they will start with Kuwait in 2013.

“They are concerned only with ruling chairs and have nothing to do with implementing Islamic Jurisprudence. Whoever become one of them after they ruled Egypt is a traitor. They are also secret soldiers for America and they are executing plans to create tension,” he said.

Additionally, he described them as corrupt and very far from religion. He said they are morre dangerous for the GCC countries than Iran.

Khalfan released some declarations lately which met reactions in most of the GCC states and particularly in Kuwait. General Dhahi Ben Khalfan has a high ranking post, and people are not used to a man in his position speaking publicly. -Al-Watan

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]



Saudi to Create 12,000 Security Jobs for Women

(ANSAmed) — GEDDA, APRIL 18 — Saudi Arabia plans to generate 12,000 job opportunities for female security guards over the next five years, it has been reported. The scheme, which will be implemented by Jeddah’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI), is part of the gulf state’s government’s drive to get more Saudi nationals working in jobs, Arabian Business online reports.

The chamber will meet with the Minister of Labour, Adel Fakieh, at the end of April to discuss ways to encourage both male and female Saudi citizens to work as security guards, said Abdul Hadi Al-Qahtani, chairman of the security guard committee at the JCCI.

“We’re determined to remove all obstacles security guards face in the private sector and we will ensure that proper regulations are in place to serve this purpose,” he added. Saudi Arabia, the most populous nation in the GCC, is one of the few countries in the world where strict gender segregation is still largely enforced.

While Saudi women are permitted to work in some cases, social convention prevents them from driving cars and forbids them from associating with unrelated males and taking part in a large array of other social activities.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spengler: Recall Notice for the Turkish Model

Among all the dumb things said about the so-called Arab Spring last year, perhaps the dumbest was the idea that the new democracies of the Arab world might follow the Turkish model.

In fact, if you had invested in the Turkish model (that is, in the Turkish stock market) at the outbreak of the Arab revolts, you would have lost about half your money. If you leave your money in Turkey, you probably will lose the rest of it. Turkey is not a model. It is a bubble, and it is bursting, starting with the stock market and national currency.

Full disclosure: I shorted the Turkish market after I published my obituary for the country’s economic boom (see “Instant Obsolescence of the Turkish model”, Asia Times Online, August 10, 2011). And I was denounced as a Zionist plotter in the Turkish media. As a matter of record, I wish to state that I am shorting Turkey not for any political motivation, but only because the Turkish government economic policy is a clown show. I make a point, however, of contributing some of the profits to Zionist causes…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Syria: As Rebels and Regime Violate the Ceasefire, Kofi Annan’s Plan Collapses

Speaking to AsiaNews, sources describe a chaotic, unstable and dangerous situation. Extremists who flocked to Syria only to kill are among the opposition. UN-Arab League observers begin their mission.

Damascus (AsiaNews) — “Kofi Annan’s ceasefire has failed. Fewer deaths were reported in the first two days, but now shooting has restarted. More than 50 people were killed yesterday in clashes between the military and rebel groups,” sources told AsiaNews. They describe the situation in Syria as “chaotic, unstable and dangerous. [. . .] An Assad government official told us that neither side wants to end the violence. The war will last for a long time.”

Six observers from the joint UN-Arab League arrived in Syria yesterday. Their task is to monitor the ceasefire that came into effect on 12 April, and to implement Kofi Annan’s peace plan.

Today, after setting up their operational base the officials began contacting regime officials and rebel leaders. When the team sent by United Nations Security Council is up to full strength, it will have 250 members.

Annan’s plan calls for an end to the violence, gradual implementation of the ceasefire, shipment of humanitarian aid, release of people held without trial, free movement for journalists, and political talks between the government and the opposition.

Despite the best efforts by the UN-Arab league envoy to broker talks between the Assad government and rebels, sources say that people inside the country are pessimistic about its future. Even the capital Damascus is affected by explosions, clashes and violence.

“As described in the media, the opposition does not exist,” sources say. “Rebels are divided in various factions. They include groups of common criminals moving around the country, and foreign terrorists who have come to Syria only to kill.”

“The Free Syrian Army (FSA) is considered the opposition’s official representative, but in reality it is just one many armed groups fighting against the regime,” the sources added. “Both sides are violating the ceasefire. (S.C.)

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Yemen: Drone Strike Kills ‘At Least 7’ Militants

Sanaa, 17 April (AKI) — At least seven Al-Qaeda militants were killed early Tuesday during an overnight drone attack in different locations in southern Yemen, according to news reports.

The strikes took place in Yemen’s southern Shabwa province, according to the Xinhua news agency.

The drone strike hit several militant hideouts, training facilities and arsenals in the insurgent-controlled town of Azzan, around 150 kilometres east of Ataq, the provincial capital of Shabwa, the report said.

Among the dead are “foreign jihadist leaders,” from Syria and Algeria, the report said, citing unnamed security officials.

The Yemeni Defence Ministry on Monday said at least 11 militants were killed in a drone strike on Saturday.

The United States is increasingly depending on unmanned armed aircraft to target militants.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

South Asia


150 Afghan Schoolgirls Seriously Ill After Being Poisoned in Anti-Education Attack by Muslim Extremists

Ultra-conservative extremists have been blamed for poisoning the drinking water at a high school in north Afghanistan — making more than 150 girls seriously ill.

Students in the northern province of Kunduz suffered nausea and vomiting and some were left in a critical condition, a government education chief said.

Radicals who are fiercely opposed to female education may have carried out the attack — the official added.

Some of girls were allowed home after hospital treatment, but many remain unwell.

‘We are 100 percent sure that the water they drunk in their classes was poisoned. This is either the work of those who are against girls’ education or some other irresponsible armed individuals,’ said Jan Mohammad Nabizada, a spokesman for education department in northern Takhar province.

They said they knew the water had been poisoned because a larger tank used to fill the affected water jugs was not contaminated.

‘This is not a natural illness. It’s an intentional act to poison schoolgirls,’ said Haffizullah Safi, head of Takhar’s public health department.

Since the overthrowing of the Taliban government in 2001, females have largely returned to schools especially in Kabul.

The Taliban had enforced a six-year ban on education for women and girls between 1996 and 2001.

There are now thought to be around 2.7 million girls in school, compared to only a few thousand under Taliban rule.

Girls, teachers and school buildings frequently suffer attacks from insurgents; usually in the more conservative south and east of the country where radicals draw most of their support.

Government officials have not blamed any particular group for the attack, fearing retribution.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



How Pakistan Makes US Pay for Afghan War

By Dilip Hiro

The following ingredients should go a long way to produce a political thriller. Mr M, a jihadi in an Asian state, has emerged as the mastermind of a terrorist attack in a neighboring country, which killed six Americans. After sifting through a vast cache of intelligence and obtaining a legal clearance, the State Department announces a $10 million bounty for information leading to his arrest and conviction. Mr M promptly appears at a press conference and says, “I am here. America should give that reward money to me.”

A State Department spokesperson explains lamely that the reward is meant for incriminating evidence against Mr M that would stand up in court. The prime minister of M’s home state condemns foreign interference in his country’s internal affairs. In the midst of this imbroglio, the US decides to release $1.18 billion in aid to the cash-strapped government of the defiant prime minister to persuade him to reopen supply lines for US and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces bogged down in the hapless neighboring Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.

Alarmingly, this is anything but fiction or a plot for an upcoming international sitcom. It is a brief summary of the latest development in the fraught relations between the US and Pakistan, two countries locked into an uneasy embrace since September 12, 2001.

Mr M is Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, a 62-year-old former academic with a tapering, hennaed beard, and the founder of the Lashkar-e Taiba (the Army of the Pure, or LeT), widely linked to several outrageously audacious terrorist attacks in India.

The LeT was formed in 1987 as the military wing of the Jammat-ud Dawa religious organization (Society of the Islamic Call, or JuD) at the instigation of the Pakistani army’s formidable intelligence agency, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). The JuD owes its existence to the efforts of Saeed, who founded it in 1985 following his return to his native Lahore after two years of advanced Islamic studies in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, under the guidance of that country’s grand mufti, Shaikh Abdul Aziz bin Baz.

On its formation, the LeT joined the seven-year-old anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan, an armed insurgency directed and supervised by the ISI with funds and arms supplied by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Saudis. Once the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989, the Army of the Pure turned its attention to a recently launched anti-Indian jihad in Indian-administered Kashmir and beyond.

The terrorist attacks attributed to it range from the devastating multiple assaults in Mumbai in November 2008, which resulted in 166 deaths, including those six Americans, to a foiled attack on the Indian parliament in New Delhi in December 2001, and a successful January 2010 attack on the airport in Kashmir’s capital Srinagar.

In January 2002, in the wake of Washington’s launching of the “war on terror”, Pakistan formally banned the LeT, but in reality did little to curb its violent cross-border activities. Saeed remains its final authority. In a confession, offered as part of a plea bargain after his arrest in October 2009 in Chicago, David Coleman Headley, a Pakistani-American operative of LeT involved in planning the Mumbai carnage, said: “Hafiz Saeed had full knowledge of the Mumbai attacks and they were launched only after his approval.”

In December 2008, the United Nations Security Council declared the JuD a front organization for the banned LeT. The provincial Punjab government then placed Saeed under house arrest using the Maintenance of Public Order law. But six months later, the Lahore High Court declared his confinement unconstitutional.

In August 2009, Interpol issued a Red Corner Notice, essentially an international arrest warrant, against Saeed in response to Indian requests for his extradition. Saeed was again put under house arrest but in October the Lahore High Court quashed all charges against him due to lack of evidence.

It is common knowledge that Pakistani judges, fearing for their lives, generally refrain from convicting high-profile jihadis with political connections. When, in the face of compelling evidence, a judge has no option but to order the sentence enjoined by the law, he must either live under guard afterwards or leave the country.

Such was the case with Judge Pervez Ali Shah who tried Mumtaz Qadri, the jihadi bodyguard who murdered Punjab’s governor Salman Taseer for backing an amendment to the indiscriminately applied blasphemy law. Soon after sentencing Qadri to capital punishment last October, Shah received several death threats and was forced into self-exile.

Aware of the failures of the Pakistani authorities to convict Saeed, US agencies seemed to have checked and cross-checked the authenticity of the evidence they had collected on him before the State Department announced, on April 2, its reward for his arrest. This was nothing less than an implied declaration of Washington’s lack of confidence in the executive and judicial organs of Pakistan.

Little wonder that Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani took umbrage, describing the US bounty as blatant interference in his country’s domestic affairs. Actually, this is nothing new. It is an open secret that, in the ongoing tussle between Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and his bete noire, army chief of staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kiani, the Barack Obama administration has always backed the civilian head of state. That, in turn, has been a significant factor in Gilani’s stay in office since March 2008, longer than any other prime minister in Pakistan’s history…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



India: New Delhi Ready to Launch a Nuclear Missile That Can Reach China

The Agni-V will have a range of over 5 thousand miles and can reach all of Asia and some parts of Europe. If the launch proves successful, India will become the seventh country with intercontinental ballistic missiles in its arsenal, along with the United States, Russia, Britain, China, France and Israel.

Mumbai (AsiaNews / Agencies) — India is ready to test Agni-V, a long-range nuclear missile, capable of reaching across Asia (including China) and the eastern parts of Europe. In fact, the rocket will have a range of over 5 thousand miles and will be launched from Wheeler Island in the eastern state of Orissa. If the launch were to be successful, India would become the seventh country to have intercontinental ballistic missiles in its arsenal, thus joining the United States, Russia, Britain, China, France and Israel.

Costing more than 2.5 billion rupees (480 million dollars), Agni-V is 17.5 meters long and weighs 50 tons. It carries a single nuclear warhead weighing up to 1.5 tons that can penetrate up to China.

While waiting for the launch, the Indian authorities continue to insist that the country has a policy of “no first strike” and that the country’s missile program is purely defensive. However, many consider this launch a way to assert India’s supremacy in Asia. “This missile — said Uday Bhaskar, a retired Indian Navy commodore and analyst of the National Maritime Foundation in New Delhi — will neutralize the threat of China and create equality between the two countries.”

The Agni missile (the name of the Hindu god of fire) is the spearhead of the Indian arsenal and one of the most sophisticated weapons. The first was tested in 2002 and had a radius of 700 kilometers.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



India: Series of ‘Acid Attacks’, But Cops Inactive

NAGPUR: A brief entry on April 15 at the Ajni police station diary is all that cops have to show for a series of attacks on girls with a corrosive liquid, suspected to be acid, that leads to deep irritation and burning sensation.

The incidents took place at Kunjilal Peth, Chandramani Nagar and Rameshwari in the southern part of the city. Though the pain has subsided, the girls are still running scared. One of them told TOI, “Fear of the unknown assailants has compelled us to remain passive, instead of register offence.”

This is the second acid attack within a month. In the earlier incident, a woman professor suffered serious burns after her jilted lover threw acid on her near Telangkhedi. The culprit was let off with simple preventive action by Ambazari cops as the woman’s kin were not interested in lodging a complaint.

In the latest case too, police have cited the same excuse of uninterested complainants to wash their hands of any responsibility.

Puja (name changed), a first year student, said the incident took place in Kunjilal Peth when she was returning with family members from a programme. “Initially, I smelled thinner, then suddenly I started feeling the burning sensation on my back. The pain was so much that tears started flowing out of my eyes,” said Puja. She said the culprit seemed to have a spray can in his hand. “What surprised me was that the culprits were in no hurry to leave the place,” said the girl.

Puja says a neighbour too was attacked and sustained a big reddish swollen burn on her back. “We did not want to report the matter but approached the cops with the help of a neighbour to ensure the perpetrators do not feel they can get away with it,” said the student of arts.

A similar attack also took place on a girl in a mob at a fair at Chandramani Nagar. She was taken to Government Medical College and Hospital by cops after she raised an alarm. Similar incidents have also taken place at Rameshwari.

Assistant commissioner of police (Ajni) GM Sakharkar said that he would look into the matter. “It is a serious issue,” he said.

Former district government pleader Prashant Sathianathan said that police are bound to register an offence of cognisable nature upon being informed by a complaint under section 154 of Criminal Procedure code. “If the victim is ready to furnish a statement and there is a medical evidence then police can always register a complaint and start an enquiry,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Aceh’s New Governor Zaini Abdullah Pledges More Sharia

With his deputy Muzakir Manaf, Abdullah will run the province for the next five years (2012-2017) after winning 55.75 per cent of the vote. His programme includes fighting corruption and full implementation of Sharia in Indonesia’s most extremist province.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — For the second time in its recent history, the Indonesian province of Aceh will be led by a former separatist rebel leader. Zaini Abdullah, a doctor who spent many years in exile in Sweden, won by a landslide (55.75 per cent) the election of 9 April. He will take the place of outgoing Governor Irwandi Yusuf, also a former separatist leader. Together with his deputy Muzakir Manaf, Abdullah will be responsible for policy-making and administration in a province, where Islam is extending its grip on society in more radical and fundamentalist ways. Both ran for the newly established Aceh Party.

Until a few years ago, Zaini Abdullah topped Indonesia’s most wanted list. He was forced to flee to Sweden in 1981, where he spent the subsequent 24 years. In exile, he was the ‘foreign minister’ for the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM) under the late Hasan Tiro, a hero to many Aceh nationalists.

Last night, the new governor gave a brief speech to his supporters in the provincial capital of Banda Aceh. He told them that he would fight corruption, one of the most serious problems afflicting Indonesian society, and that he would fully implement Islamic law.

Indonesia is famous for its moralisation campaigns in the name of Sharia and Islamic customs. In Aceh, the latter have taken on a special character. Recently for example, a proposal was made to ban short skirts, local ulema launched a moralisation campaign against yoga and tobacco, and police cracked down on people wearing jeans and tight skirts.

During the fight between the pro-independence GAM and Indonesian Special Forces sent by then President Suharto, who ran the country from 1967 to 1998, claimed the lives of at least 15,000 people, mostly civilians.

However, the devastation caused by the December 2004 tsunami couple with the need to bring humanitarian aid to the affected areas created a window of opportunity that led to a hitherto unthinkable peace agreement.

The first gubernatorial election under the agreement reached by the Indonesian government and GAM was held in December 2006 and saw the victory of Irwandi Yusuf.

Protected by thousands of police officers deployed in 9,754 polling stations, last week’s election had been scheduled in 2011 but had to be postponed over a dispute concerning the right of independent candidates to run. After four postponements, threats and extremist intimidations, the poll went off without a hitch on 9 April.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Karachi Violence Heats Up Leaving at Least 7 Dead

Karachi, 18 April (AKI) — At least seven people have been killed and dozens injured in separate shooting incidents in the Pakistani port city of Karachi, according to news reports.

In one incident, a pair of bodies were found with their hands bound and police say their are signs of torture before the victims were killed late Tuesday, Pakistan’s Geo TV reported.

Demonstrators took to the streets on Wednesday to protest what they consider a lack of action by police to put an end to the violence that has left hundred dead in Pakistan’s business hub.

Ethnic and political violence is closely linked in Karachi’s numerous incidents of widespread violence between people of different ethnicity including Urdu, Balochs and Pushtun backgrounds.

The sprawling city accounts for over 60 percent of Pakistan’s revenue. The country’s main financial institutions, multinational corporations and industry are located there

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Bin Laden’s Family to be Expelled Wednesday

Islamabad, 17 April (AKI) — Osama bin Laden’s family is due to be expelled from Pakistan Wednesday, the AFP news agency reported, citing their lawyer and an intelligence official.

“They will go tonight or tomorrow early in the morning. After 12 tonight they can be deported any time,” their lawyer Mohammad Aamir told AFP on Tuesday.

The deportation of the 12 family members, including three widows, comes 11 months after American special forces flew by helicopter from neighbouring Afghanistan and killed the world’s most wanted terrorist at a compound where he was living in the city of Abbottabad, north of Islamabad.

A Pakistani intelligence official confirmed to AFP that the family was expected to be deported “sometime around midnight” and said “most likely they would be flown to Saudi Arabia,” AFP said.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Muslims Strip Christian Woman in Punjab Because She “Dressed Up”, Shoot at Her Son

A family in Gojra is attacked by some Muslims because they like to “dress up”. The mother is brutally beaten whilst her son is shot at, luckily without consequences. Police and the courts fail to apprehend the offenders. The local priest says that such violence is used to maintain people in “conditions of inferiority”.

Faisalabad (AsiaNews) — A Christian woman was harassed, beaten and stripped in public by some Muslims belonging to the local land mafia because in her family people like to dress up too much. Her son almost suffered a worse fate. When he tried to help her, they fire at him but narrowly missed. As tragic as this is, it is typical of the violence and persecution Christians endure. More than a month after the incident, which occurred in mid-March, both police and the courts have not brought any redress or punished the offenders. “These thugs pursue their own interests,” a local priest said; in so doing, they violate the rights of the “weakest elements in society.”

Shamin Bibi, a 42-year-old mother of five, works in a brick kiln. She is originally from Chak 179 G.B., in Gojra, a town in Toba Tek Singh District (Punjab), where several Christians died in an attack in 2009.

During her brutal assault, her attackers badly beat her and ripped her clothes off. When her 22-year-old son Naqshaq Masih tried to intervene, they attacked him with bricks and shot at him. Luckily, they missed.

Two Muslim landlords, brothers Sajid Ali and Abid Ashan, were responsible for the attack. They exert a mafia-style control over the area.

The reason for their action appears even more absurd than the action itself. They do not want Christians to “dress up”, even on holidays or Sunday for Mass.

As second-class subjects, not much better than animals, minority Christians are not allowed to wear elegant clothes. They can only dress rough garments. In the past, they have often been subject to mafia-styled threats and “warnings”. In fact, another of Shamin Bibi’s sons had to flee to avoid being killed.

On the day of the atatck, the Christian woman was at home alone with a daughter, and pleaded to the men to go away because there was no male member of the family present.

Initially, police opened a first information report and arrested the offenders. However, a week later they were released after paying off the police.

On Monday, Shamin Bibi filed a suit against her attackers, appearing before a district judge in Gojra. The latter however rejected her application. Her family plans to continue their battle for justice but their chances in court are slim.

A resident in her town spoke to AsiaNews on condition of anonymity. “Landlords have no pity,” he said. “They can only waste the wealth” their parents accumulated. They engage in violence and abuse the poor. “If the latter refuse to follow their orders, they are beaten.” These people “walk around with guns and have no respect for Christians,” he said.

Fr Yaqub Yousaf, a parish priest in Gojra, agrees. “Social injustice and divisions are used by cruel landlords to protect their vested interests and maintain people on the margins of our society in conditions of inferiority.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Poison Scare Highlights Threats to Girls’ Education in Afghanistan

More than 100 schoolgirls have been rushed to hospitals in northeastern Afghanistan after drinking what is feared to be poisonous water from a tank at their school. More than 100 schoolgirls in Afghanistan have fallen sick after drinking water that is suspected to have been poisoned in the small town of Rustaq in the northeastern Afghan province of Takhar.

In what appears to be an attempt by opponents of education for girls, the poison scare incident highlights threats to girls’ education in Afghanistan. “I think some radical elements who oppose girls going to school are behind this act,” said district governor Mohammad Hussain, adding that police were investigating the incident.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Volkswagen Builds New Car Factory in China Trouble Region

The German auto giant is due to sign an agreement with China for a new car plant to be built in the western region of Xinjiang. The region is home to the Uighurs — a Muslim minority opposed to Chinese central power.

The new Volkswagen (VW) car factory is to be set up in the provincial capital Urumqi with a production capacity of up to 50,000 vehicles per year, German news agency DPA said Wednesday.

Funding for the project worth 2 billion yuan (240 million euros) would be provided by a joint venture between VW and Chinese automaker Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation (SAIC), the agency said.

In addition, news agency Reuters quoted a German government source as saying that the agreement for the plant would be signed in Germany on Monday in the presence of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao.

The Urumqi plant, which is scheduled to start production in 2013, will be Volkswagen’s fifth car factory in China with an additional four plants on the drawing board. The German auto giant already has six component factories in the Asian country.

In China, Volkswagen reached a new sales record of 633,000 vehicles in the first quarter of 2012, and has announced investments in China to the tune of 14 billion euros until 2016.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Extended Somalia Pirate Plan Creates Waves

Germany could fly bombing missions into Somalia to destroy pirate bases, if a plan set to be discussed in cabinet on Wednesday is adopted. The idea has infuriated opposition parties who described it as senseless and dangerous.

The European Union anti-pirate mission “Atalanta” which has for the last three years been patrolling around the Horn of Africa, currently involves up to ten ships at any one time — in an ocean area nearly the size of Europe.

Expanding the mandate to include airborne missions up to two kilometres inland to target “logistic facilities of the pirates” as the text describes it, has infuriated German opposition parties.

But Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet approved the expansion on Wednesday, which Defence Minister Thomas de Maiziere denied was a radical transformation of the initial mandate.

“This is a small, useful, additional military operation — it doesn’t take the mission to a new level,” he told reporters on the sidelines of a NATO meeting in Brussels. “This is about additional action on the beach, not inland.”

But Green Party defence expert Omid Nouripour said it was “a bad, senseless adventure,” while his counterpart from the Social Democrats, Rainer Arnold said his party would either vote against or abstain in a parliamentary poll. Despite opposition, the mandate is expected to be approved in the vote on May 11.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Expands Military Mission Against Somali Pirates

The German cabinet has agreed on new rights for the Bundeswehr in the fight against piracy off the coast of Somalia. If parliament approves, the mission — previously restricted to the sea — will be taken inland.

The German government agreed to expand an EU mandate on Wednesday to allow the Bundeswehr to target inland Somali pirate bases as part of the European Union anti-piracy Atalanta mission.

The German military had previously been restricted to only carrying out missions at sea, but the cabinet has now advocated that airborne attacks be allowed up to two kilometers inland. In line with an EU amendment in March, pirates’ weapons, ships or fuel depots can all be targeted. The mandate does not sanction the deployment of any military personal on the ground.

“It is a small, useful additional military option,” German Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere said as he arrived at a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Asian Investment Boom Seen in Latin America

Selling soybeans, iron and copper ore and other commodities to Asian countries has transformed Latin America over the past decade, stabilizing economies despite worldwide crises and lifting tens of millions of people into the middle class. Now, say officials from both Asia and Latin America, a second gold rush is under way.

Asian investors flush with hundreds of billions of dollars in cash now see Latin America as a top business opportunity, and they’re flooding into manufacturing, construction and other industries, particularly in up-and-coming countries such as Brazil, Peru and Mexico. That’s transforming the lucrative relationship that was based primarily on exporting raw materials to Asia, an arrangement that frustrated governments eager to stimulate their own manufacturing.

Government and business officials meeting this week at the World Economic Forum in Mexico said the investment surge means Asia is poised to overtake the United States and the European Union as Latin America’s top trading partner over the next decade. Asian representatives have been an unmistakable presence at the forum, with South Korean, Chinese and Japanese investors making the rounds at this seaside city’s gleaming white convention hall.

“We’re talking about tens of billions of dollars in just Korean banks looking for a destination,” said Kevin Lu, Asia Pacific regional director of a World Bank Group agency that insures foreign investments against political risk. “When I meet with investors, Latin America is in every conversation about this.”

Already, Chinese investment in Latin America has jumped from a few million dollars just a few years ago to about $15 billion in 2010, with most of the money going into mining and other extractive industries in Brazil, Peru and other nations, said Alicia Barcena, executive secretary for the Chile-based United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. Chinese investment in the region jumped again last year, to about $23 billion, Barcena said.

Japan, meanwhile, surpassed even that figure last year and displaced China as the region’s top Asian investment and trade partner, Barcena said. She didn’t provide a precise number for Japan’s total.

China already ranks among the top three trading partners with Peru, Brazil, Chile and Argentina, and Asian investment in auto and other manufacturing in Mexican industrial cities has greatly expanded the middle class.

“I don’t have any doubt that Asia will soon become the region’s top trading partner,” said Mexican Economy Secretary Bruno Ferrari Garcia de Alba. “In Mexico, we believe we need to get closer and closer to Asia.”

According to the U.N. economic commission, 17 percent of Latin America’s exports went to Asian-Pacific countries in 2010, more than tripling from 5 percent in 2000. Over the same span, the share of the region’s total exports that went to the United States dropped from 60 percent to 40 percent.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Latin America Must Open Up’

The opening of the World Economic Forum on Latin America is overshadowed by a row over Argentinian plans to nationalize a Spanish-owned oil company. Spain has reacted with anger.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s visit to Mexico began on an unexpected note. As he arrived in the resort town of Puerto Vallarta for the opening of the World Economic Forum for Latin America, there was only one issue on the agenda — Buenos Aires’ plans to nationalize YPF, Argentina’s biggest oil company which is controlled by Spanish energy giant Repsol.

Dozens of camera teams lay in wait, hoping for a statement from the Spanish delegation. But Rajoy was in no mood for a press conference.

On Monday, Argentine President Cristina Kirchner asked her country’s Congress to put 51 percent of YPF- Argentinina’s biggest oil company — in state hands, ousting flagship Spanish energy firm Repsol as the majority shareholder.

The decision likely took the Spanish delegation at the WEF unawares, and counter-measures were hurriedly discussed on the long flight from Madrid to Mexico. Prime Minister Rajoy however did use strong words as he took the stage at the WEF.

“This decision by Argentina will cause lasting damage to the economic relations between the two countries,” Rajoy said at the opening, which was originally meant to focus on the state of the global economy. “If laws are simply changed, when rules are not upheld any more — that will have consequences for investments by Spanish companies in Argentina.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Germany: Deportation to Kosovo Means a Life in Misery

Deportation to Kosovo from Germany often threatens young people’s mental and physical health, says a new UNICEF report. Ardian Canaj was repatriated against his will and is now living in misery, he says.

Peja in Western Kosovo is a miserable slum area that’s drowning in garbage; rubbish piles are being burnt carelessly in the streets. This is where Ardian Canaj is supposed to feel at home now. The 20-year-old was born and raised in Germany, but seven months ago he was deported to his parents’ home country.

“I went to school in Germany, but that’s over now. I have to work to pay my rent,” Canaj explained. He earns a mere 100 euros a month — and rent costs 120. “I’m feeling awful here. I don’t have my family here or anybody who’s close to me. I don’t see a future here for me” he said.

Germany received permission to deport Kosovars in 2009. Kosovo was considered safe enough now for them to return. And so, in 2010, German interior minister Thomas de Maizière signed a repatriation agreement with the Republic of Kosovo, which foresaw the return of some 12,000 members of minority groups to the Balkans — among them 6,000 children and teenagers. UNICEF, the UN’s child protection organization, says the deportation of young people should be stopped if it threatens their mental and physical health.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Deportees on Alitalia Flight With Taped Mouths

Italian film director posts picture on Facebook

(ANSA) — Rome, April 18 — A photo of two Tunisian men being deported from Italy on an Alitalia flight, their mouths sealed with duct tape and their hands cuffed with plastic bands, was posted by Italian film director Francesco Sperandeo on Facebook Wednesday.

Under the picture showing a policeman in street clothes standing over a seated man with his mouth taped, Sperandeo commented that the worst part of the incident was “the indifference of the other passengers”.

Sperandeo said that he was ordered to return to his seat by police when he requested that the deportees be treated humanely and was told that the methods used were “normal”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Switzerland: Sex Box for Kids Sparks Call to Action

Politicians from different parties have joined forces for an initiative aimed at preventing children under the age of nine from receiving sex education just months after the use of educational “sex boxes” sparked uproar in Basel.

“Increasingly, our children are being molested in kindergartens and primary schools with pornography and sex education,” a committee of parents and civic leaders told newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung.

The committee, made up in large part by members of the far-right Swiss People’s Party, launched the initiative on Tuesday to “protect against sexualization in kindergarten and primary schools”.

The proponents of the initiative no longer want children younger than nine to be taught any sex education at all, although certain education relating to child abuse would be permitted. From ages nine to twelve, the committee wants sex education to be non-compulsory so that families can choose to either opt in or out.

From age twelve onwards, the initiators say, children would receive education about sex and reproduction during biology lessons, which they argue is the proper place for such instruction.

The root of the initiative lies in the canton of Basel City, which came to media attention with reports of “sex boxes” being used as educational tools. The boxes contained various materials for teaching young children about sex, including wooden replicas of penises and fabric vaginas.

Benjamin Spüler of the Basel City Parents Committee believes such materials to be pornographic, he told news agency SDA. He says giving children such tuition when they are so young serves only to sexualize them at an unnecessarily early age.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Italy: Another Northern League Heavyweight Resigns

Lombardy regional assembly chief Davide Boni probed for graft

(ANSA) — Milan, April 17 — Another Northern League heavyweight resigned Tuesday when Lombardy regional assembly president Davide Boni stepped down.

Boni, 50, was placed under investigation for fraud and corruption last month.

Earlier this month League leader Umberto Bossi resigned after an unrelated probe into his party’s treasurer appeared to show party funding had been diverted to the personal use of his family.

Bossi’s son Renzo, who was being groomed for a top political career, also resigned from the Lombardy regional assembly.

The scandal about alleged misuse of taxpayers’ money has dealt a hard blow to the image of the League, which had always stood against corruption.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



‘Rogue’ Alien Planets May Circle Billions of Stars

Billions of stars in our Milky Way galaxy have captured rogue alien planets that once cruised freely through interstellar space, a new study suggests.

Many wandering alien worlds, which were ejected from the solar systems in which they formed, likely find new homes with different suns, according to the study. The finding could explain why some alien planets orbit extremely far from their stars, researchers said.

“Stars trade planets just like baseball teams trade players,” study lead author Hagai Perets, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, said in a statement.

Perets and co-author Thijs Kouwenhoven of China’s Peking University simulated the evolution of young star clusters containing about as many free-floating planets as stars. They found that 3 to 6 percent of the stars would grab a rogue over time. The more massive a star, the more likely it is to snag a planet.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120417

USA
» America’s Quiet Muslims
» AP Wins Pulitzer for Exposing NYPD’s CIA-Linked Intel Program, Leading Widespread Spying on Muslims
» CAIR: Mo. Jailers Forcibly Remove Muslim Woman’s Hijab
» Video Shows Agonising TSA Pat-Down — as Woman Sobs in ‘Sexual Violation’ At Hands of TSA Agent
 
Europe and the EU
» Belgian Doctor Suspended for Alleged Anti-Semitism
» Czech Republic: Hanif Kureishi — The Famous British Author on Prague, Islam and Multiracial Societies in Europe
» Italy: A Head of the Best, Milan’s Master Hatmaker
» Italy: Luxury at Its Best: ‘Made in Veneto’
» Michael Gove, Celsius 7/7, And the Mainstreaming of the Counter Jihad
» Netherlands Profile [BBC News]
» Norway: Judge in Breivik Trial Dismissed
» Norway: In Breivik, Troubling Echoes of West’s Views of Islam
» Sweden: Minister in ‘Racist Circumcision Outrage’
» Sweden Democrats ‘Unchanged’ In Wake of Breivik Terror: Expert
» Switzerland: Trial Begins for ‘Honour Killing’ of Teen Daughter
» UK: Find Out About Islam at M Shed
» UK: George Osborne Puts the Fabric of Britain at Risk With the ‘Heritage Tax’
» UK: Human Rights Debate Suffering ‘Democratic Deficit’
» UK: Ken Livingstone Refuses to Stump for Labour Candidate
» UK: Mayor for Muslims or the Rich?
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Third of Britons: Dislike of Jews Understandable Because of Israel
 
Middle East
» Byzantium and Islam: Age of Transition, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
» UAE: Man Who Insulted Islam on Facebook ‘Not Sane’
 
South Asia
» Taliban Commander Turns Self in… For Reward on ‘Wanted’ Poster
 
Latin America
» Barack Obama Makes Falklands Gaffe by Calling Malvinas the Maldives
 
Immigration
» Abu Qatada Arrested Pending New Extradition
» Abu Qatada Deportation Case: As it Happened
» Abu Qatada is a Microcosm of Everything That’s Wrong With Britain’s Dimwitted Immigration and Welfare Systems
» It’s Qatada D-Day

USA


America’s Quiet Muslims

by Karen Lugo

Muslims who value American liberty must oppose an insidious new campaign.

If America is going to fare better than Europe in halting the development of a de facto sharia society, the unabashed efforts of Muslims who understand the unique value of America’s legacy of liberty will be crucial. Estimates indicate that more than half of American Muslims are quietly appreciative of constitutionally guaranteed individual rights. The challenge lies in persuading them to take a public stand. The stage is now set for all freedom-supporting Muslims to step up and counter the Islamic Circle of North America as it rolls out its $3 million campaign to convince Americans that the goals of sharia law and the objectives of the United States Constitution are one and the same. As enunciated in a fatwa by the Islamic Fiqh Council of North America, which interprets Islamic law for this continent, Muslim authorities claim there is “no inherent conflict between the normative values of Islam and the US Constitution and Bill of Rights” (emphasis added). The proclamation also asserts that “secular legal systems in Western democracies generally share the same supreme objectives, and are generally compatible with Islamic Shari’ah” (emphasis added).

The ICNA campaign to soften sharia for American consumption is based on dizzying historical spin, as demonstrated by Zulfiqar Ali Shah (also known as Al Fokkar Ali Shah and Tho Al Fokkar Ali Shah), the former president of ICNA and current executive director of the Fiqh Council of North America. His showcase essay, “Founding Father’s [sic] of America’s Indebtedness to Islamic Thought,” makes the specious argument that John Locke, the authority behind much of the Founding philosophy, had a “political outlook [that] closely resembled the Islamic teachings.” For evidence, Shah sprinkles into his fable some odd incidentals, like the assertion that the inquisitive Locke owned a copy of the Koran and had friends who were Muslims or Muslim sympathizers — as if these happenstances could prove that Locke was “greatly influenced by Muslim philosophers.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



AP Wins Pulitzer for Exposing NYPD’s CIA-Linked Intel Program, Leading Widespread Spying on Muslims

We speak with Matt Apuzzo, co-author of the Associated Press series that revealed the New York City Police Department has extensively spied on Muslim Americans not only in the tri-city area, but throughout the eastern United States. The series won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting. Beginning last August, the AP detailed how the NYPD established a vast operation to monitor Muslim neighborhoods after the 9/11 attacks. Hundreds of mosques, businesses and Muslim student groups were investigated, monitored and, in many cases, infiltrated. Police observed and cataloged daily life in Muslim communities, from where people ate and shopped to where they worked and prayed. Police used informants, known as “mosque crawlers,” to monitor sermons, even without any evidence of wrongdoing. Also falling under NYPD’s scrutiny were imams, cab drivers and food cart vendors. According to the AP, many of these operations were built with help from the CIA, which is prohibited from spying on Americans. In the process, the NYPD became “one of the nation’s most aggressive domestic intelligence agencies,” targeting ethnic communities in ways that would run afoul of civil liberties rules if practiced by the federal government. The revelations sparked a national controversy that only grew as the AP continued to reveal more details of the NYPD’s actions. “We try to provide that information so people can make informed decisions,” Apuzzo says. “This wasn’t a series we set out to do … I think it continues if more information makes itself available. And we’ll go where the story leads.” [includes rush transcript]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



CAIR: Mo. Jailers Forcibly Remove Muslim Woman’s Hijab

Muslim civil rights group asks jail to grant religious accommodation

ST. LOUIS, April 17, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The St. Louis chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-St. Louis) is calling on the St. Louis County Jail in Clayton, Mo., to grant religious accommodation for Muslim inmates who wear a religious headscarf, or “hijab.” CAIR-St. Louis made that request after a Muslim woman who was jailed recently for several hours because of an unpaid traffic ticket reported that an officer forcibly removed her hijab. The officer allegedly told the woman, “take it (the hijab) off or we will take it off for you.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Video Shows Agonising TSA Pat-Down — as Woman Sobs in ‘Sexual Violation’ At Hands of TSA Agent

A traveller’s sobs were left ignored this weekend, as she was subjected to an invasive pat-down despite her cries — in another blow to the TSA.

A video posted to YouTube captures the weeping woman’s ordeal during the security checkpoint at an airport in Madison, Wisconsin.

Jim Hoft, who runs the political blog Gateway Pundit, posted the video on the site, as well as YouTube yesterday.

Mr Hoft wrote: ‘This morning at a Midwest airport I witnessed this poor woman suffering through this horrible sexual violation’.

It’s the latest in a long line of disturbing behaviour during security checkpoints.

Loud sobs can be heard as the woman, wearing a pink sweater, is patted down by a female TSA agent.

The woman’s hands are shaking as the agent moves her hands down the woman’s legs.

The woman is then left alone, and can be seen hunching over, her arms crossed across her body in humiliation.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Belgian Doctor Suspended for Alleged Anti-Semitism

Surgeon an Brussels hospital allegedly abused a Jewish colleague, hurling Nazi slogans and racial slurs at him.

A hospital in Brussels on Monday suspended one of its surgeons for allegedly hurling Nazi slogans and racial slurs at a Jewish colleague.

The surgeon later offered apologies via emails sent to the management of the hospital, Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel, and to Belgium’s main Jewish publication which first reported on the incident, Joods Actueel.

The surgeon reportedly called out “sieg heil” and told his Dutch-born, Jewish subordinate to “head back into the gas chambers,” according to a complaint which the Jewish doctor filed with the Center for Equal Opportunities, a watchdog on discrimination.

The incident reportedly happened on Monday morning at the hospital during an argument between the suspended physician — specializing in orthopedic surgery — and the younger Dutch-born doctor.

The complainant, who recently returned from a vacation in Israel, further said the surgeon told him to “go back to the Dead Sea and be dead.”

Edgard Eeckman, spokesperson for the hospital, said that hospital management would investigate the incident by hearing both sides and witnesses to “quickly determine whether to sanction the man.”

Hospital authorities identified the man as Dr. Frank H. Eeckman added he was “a difficult man,” referring to a previous complaint against the surgeon for alleged violent behaviour in July.

Michael Freilich, editor-in-chief of the paper Joods Actueel, said that in his mail to the newsroom, the surgeon said he “never meant what was said in a moment of rage,” adding that a relative of his had spent four years at a prisoners camp under Nazi occupation. He added he had “a lot of respect for the Jewish people and Israel.”

Additionally, the surgeon sent an apology to the Jewish doctor he is accused of verbally attacking.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Czech Republic: Hanif Kureishi — The Famous British Author on Prague, Islam and Multiracial Societies in Europe

Undoubtedly the most famous guest at this year’s Prague Writers’ Festival, the British novelist, screenwriter and playwright Hanif Kureishi rose to international fame in 1985, with his screenplay for the film “My Beautiful Laundrette”. Since then, he published the novel “The Buddha of Suburbia” to great acclaim and continues to write extensively, both for the screen and works of fiction. Ahead of his first reading at the festival, I asked him about his work, why he enjoys the short story form and if he had previously visited Prague.

“I came to Prague probably about 20 years ago, and it’s a great literary city for me. There are many writers here that I am interested in, like Kafka and Kundera, and I am interested in the history of the city under communism. So I am very happy to be here, to meet people and talk about their lives here.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italy: A Head of the Best, Milan’s Master Hatmaker

Clients travel from around the world for Lorenzo Borghi’s shop

(ANSA) — Milan — Via dei Piatti is a narrow street hidden in a labyrinth of picturesque alleys behind the Duomo, the landmark cathedral in the centre of Milan. It seems an unlikely location for a modest shop that welcomes clients from all over the world.

There is nothing more than a single display window with a handful of striking hats and a small sign to mark the entrance.

Inside his shop the master hatmaker Lorenzo Borghi has been working for nearly 60 years, creating elegant hats for clients ranging from well-heeled Milanese women to international royalty, including the British monarch Queen Elizabeth II who received one of his hats a decade ago. Borghi, who is in his 70s, can still be found working in the shop at least six days a week. Among the stunning creations inside his shop are a wide-brimmed violet hat with a profusion of purple feathers and a maroon beret covered with vibrant purple and red silk flowers the size of marbles. Using a special machine he created himself — a Cimbali espresso maker which he turned into a steam machine — Borghi heats pieces of felt before fitting them to one of the dozens of wooden hat forms lining the walls. Once this foundation is ready, Borghi painstakingly decorates it with feathers, pearls, ribbons, lace or whatever other materials he thinks will work best, sometimes responding to his client requests, but often drawing on his own creative instincts. “With artistic hats, the client doesn’t always know best,” says Borghi. “Usually they have to be guided, helped along with their choices. “I ask a client to provide some basic details like color, materials and information about what she will be wearing, and she lets me exercise my creativity”. Borghi was born into a poor family in wartime Milan in 1940. His earliest memories are of scouring the local marketplace at dusk with his siblings, looking for shattered fruit crates their mother could burn as firewood. “In those days, everybody had to make do. We all learned to turn necessity into a virtue,” he says. Borghi’s father abandoned the family shortly after World War II and he was forced to leave school and find work to help support the family. The only professional artisan he knew, a local milliner, was willing to take on an apprentice, but Lorenzo was barely 13 and Italian law forbade children under the age of 14 from working. Desperate for a job, the young man lied about his age to secure a spot in the hat maker’s shop. When the owner learned the truth, Borghi had proven his worth in the atelier. The young Borghi had creative flair and a knack for selecting the right materials. A quick learner, he was also humble enough to keep a close eye on his employer, picking up whatever tricks of the trade he could. “That’s how it was done,” says Borghi with a wink. “You had to pay attention and copy the master. I learned some of my best tricks by watching him when he thought no one was looking.” Before long, the young apprentice learned to be critical as well and developed the courage to experiment. He moved past the more traditional styles embraced by his master and began adding details in silk, organza and stiffened lace that exploded in a burst of color. These flourishes continue to distinguish Borghi’s most elaborate hats, eye-catching creations that can sell for as much as 400 euros. They also caught the eye of some of Italy’s most best-known designers — big names including Valentino and Gianfranco Ferre’. After more than half a century of hat making, Borghi still believes the creation he loves the most is the hat he “hasn’t made yet”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Luxury at Its Best: ‘Made in Veneto’

Bottega Veneta has unusual recipe for success

(ANSA) — Vicenza — It’s in the name. Bottega Veneta, one of the most exclusive Italian brands with double-digit growth and understated marketing strategy.

While Made in Italy is the headline, the subtitle Made in Veneto is equally, if not more, indicative. Founded in 1966 and famous for its ‘intrecciato’ or woven handbags, the brand was purchased in 2001 by Gucci Group and has become the best performer of the parent company.

The magic of these bags that fetch from 2,000 to 75,000 euros each, comes from “the passion that creative director Tomas Maier and the craftspeople that work closely with him instill in the products”, says 48-year old CEO Marco Bizzarri. Bizzarri requires Bottega Veneta sales-force members from around the world to visit the workshop in Vicenza, “because only seeing the way our products are made you can understand their peculiarities and transfer it to the consumer”.

Eighty percent of the brand’s bags are handmade and all are woven in the northern Italian region of Veneto. Despite joining the company in 2009, on the eve of the global luxury crisis, Marco Bizzarri has guided Bottega Veneta through surprising growth. In 2010, revenues rose 27% to 510.6 million euros and earnings rose 45% to 133 million euros (before interest and tax). Because of the demand fueled by this growth, production capacity had to be increased in 2011, adding on to the 100 artisans already working in the Vicenza factory. “For us it is very difficult to find skilled labor, and bearing in mind the growth in recent years, this is starting to become a problem”, says Bizzarri. The answer, he found, was right in front of him. With local unemployment in the company’s hometown of Vicenza on the rise, and a once-thriving artisan community pulling down its shutters, Bottega Veneta decided to stay local.

“The goal was to create jobs and know-how, and so…we established the Women’s Cooperative Montana. They all have previous experience in working leather and fabrics and were further trained by our master craftsmen”. The special weaving technique that gives Bottega Veneta bags their midas touch is called ‘intreccio infilato’ and has been used by ‘Vicentini’ (from Vicenza) artisans for centuries. Bottega Veneta has accomplished two deft moves with the production cooperative.

Says Regional Councillor Marino Finozzi, “It is an example of how to employ those who have dropped out of the work circuit, restoring strength to a disadvantaged area, while maintaining and revitalizing traditional skills that are disappearing”. Now that sales of luxury goods are expected to rise through 2015, Bizzarri remains confident that the brand will continue its growth. As it is, the Vicenza factory can hardly produce to keep up with demand. Bizzarri doesn’t hide the fact that “one of the reasons why we did this operation is to ensure production capacity”.

That said, the initiative is proving so successful that it will most likely be replicated to meet the increasing demand for one of the country’s, and region’s, most subtly famous brands.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Michael Gove, Celsius 7/7, And the Mainstreaming of the Counter Jihad

Hope not Hate recently released a report about the Counter-Jihad movement, perhaps not by accident on the eve of the trial of Anders Behring Breivik. There has been a systematic effort since last July to try to implicate the Counter-Jihad movement in Breivik’s reprehensible actions. Such efforts have been acts of political opportunism undertaken in the poorest possible taste and those who have tried and continued to try to score cheap political points on the back of tragedy and suffering should be ashamed of themselves. This has happened despite the fact that the concerns of the Counter-Jihad are a matter of mainstream political discussion.

The Counter-Jihad is primarily concerned about the growing political power of those who want to make our societies sharia compliant. Organisations like the International Civil Liberties Alliance are concerned about the human rights implications of the rise of sharia compliance in the West and the actual exercise of sharia law elsewhere in the world. The efforts of those who seek to demonise and misrepresent Counter Jihad activists may therefore have sinister motives of their own for doing so.

Western Governments seem to be actively promoting the agenda of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) whose campaigns implies that it wants to institute a new order of global sharia compliance which could adversely affect the freedoms of the whole of society including those of Muslim minority communities. Later this year the European Union plans to host a meeting of the ‘Istanbul Process’ that seeks to make freedom of speech sharia compliant. Of course, reasonable mainstream opinion would rightly label the idea of sharia compliant free speech as an oxymoron but this does not seem to deter some Western political leaders. Outlawing freedom of speech has huge implications for society but discussions with the OIC will of course more than likely focus on how to shut up dissidents who ask awkward questions.

A stifled atmosphere has been created since 9/11 in which expressing concern about sharia has become taboo. Fear rather than reason has begun to permeate our society and sensible policy making is rendered impossible. Some factions within the Western elite clearly do not want to discuss the issues, and opinion formers have been unleashed to conduct campaigns of demonization, misrepresentation, and outright nastiness against those who acknowledge the pressing need to discuss them.

However, some members of the political elite have had the courage to speak out and this illustrates how Counter-Jihad ideas have had a place in the political mainstream for many years. The current Secretary of State for Education, Michael Gove, wrote a book called Celsius 7/7: How The West’s Policy of Appeasement Has Provoked Yet More Fundamentalist Terror — And What Has To Be Done Now back in 2006. The Counter-Jihad was in its infancy at that time and its ideology was not yet developed. Books like Celsius 7/7 had an impact on the formation of that ideology, an ideology that, contrary to the rantings of the modern day Torquemadas who revel in hunting down an demonising the heretics of our age, is peaceful and law abiding. Counter-Jihad ideology is treated as new heresy by some factions in the establishment and that is why there are well funded efforts to link it and its advocates to the appalling and inhuman actions of Anders Behring Breivik. It is much easier for opponents of the Counter-Jihad to actively demonise it than it is to openly discuss the issues raised, issues that they want to cover up. Back in 2006 Mr Gove himself identified this serious problem — on page 3 of Celsius 7/7 he wrote:…

[Return to headlines]



Netherlands Profile [BBC News]

Head of state: Queen Beatrix

Prime minister: Mark Rutte

Mark Rutte heads a minority government propped up by the controversial anti-Islam party of Geert Wilders. His government — a coalition of his liberal People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) and the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) — was installed in October 2010, following lengthy negotiations after elections in June. Elections were called after the former CDA-led government of Jan Peter Balkenende collapsed in February in a dispute over continued military support to NATO forces in Afghanistan. The VVD-CDA coalition commands only 52 seats out of 150 in the lower house of parliament, but has made a deal with the right-wing Party for Freedom (PVV) for the support of its 24 MPs to pass policy through parliament. The party does not hold any government positions. The PVV is headed by Mr Wilders, who campaigns for an end to Muslim immigration and a ban on new mosques. He has faced charges of inciting hatred and discrimination against Muslims. Mr Wilders’ party made significant gains in the June elections, nearly tripling its support from nine seats previously. Observers said the new power wielded by Wilders would test the Netherlands’ reputation for multi-cultural tolerance. On taking office, Mr Rutte said his government’s priority was to revitalise the economy and to meet election promises on burning issues such as immigration. Mr Rutte is a former human resources manager at Anglo-Dutch multinational Unilever.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway: Judge in Breivik Trial Dismissed

One of five judges in the Breivik trial has been dismissed following revelations he had called for the death penalty for the man who killed 77 people in Norway last July.

After a 30-minute recess to reach a decision this morning, chief judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen said lay judge Thomas Indreboe was unfit to continue because of comments he posted on a website the day after the attacks and would be replaced by one of two substitute judges already in court.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Norway: In Breivik, Troubling Echoes of West’s Views of Islam

Editor’s note: Timothy Stanley is a historian at Oxford University and blogs for Britain’s Daily Telegraph. He is the author of the new book “The Crusader: The Life and Times of Pat Buchanan.”

(CNN) — The trial of mass murderer Anders Breivik has confirmed one thing so far: He seems quite mad. Looking plump and dumb, with a slightly receding hairline, the Norwegian gave a right-wing salute as he entered the courtroom and smirked his way through CCTV footage of his handiwork. Breivik claims that he killed 77 people as an act of self-defense against the Islamification of Norway, that he is a member of the Knights Templar and part of an “anticommunist” resistance to multiculturalism. Reading his insane manifesto, it is tempting to dismiss him as a nut with a gun.

Nevertheless, there’s no denying the political context to what Breivik did. Since 9/11, fringe and mainstream politicians in Europe and America have spoken of Islam as incompatible with Western values. Breivik quoted many of them in his manifesto. This is not to say that he took direct inspiration from those public figures, or that they bear personal responsibility for his crimes. But Breivik’s paranoia does conform to a popular — wholly negative — view of the twin problems of Islam and multiculturalism. Tragically, it is a view that few mainstream politicians have been willing to challenge.

Breivik makes two false claims. The first is that Islam is ethically inferior to Christianity and cannot exist peacefully within the secular democracies of the post-Enlightenment West. That is the open view of the Dutch Party for Freedom, the French National Front, the English Defense League and the Finnish True Finns. It was implicit in Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain’s aversion to the building of mosques. We might also infer it from much of the testimony presented at Rep. Peter King’s congressional hearings into the radicalization of American Muslim youth. King has opined that there are “too many mosques” in the United States and that roughly 80% of American Muslims are radical.

The mistake being made by all these people is to conflate a tiny minority of political Islamists — whose precise ideology has only really emerged in the last 30 years — with the entire global and historical community of Muslims. It is true that Islam has never undergone a total Reformation, but it has experienced mini-enlightenments. The most celebrated is the Islamic Golden Age (750- 1258), centered in Baghdad, in which the arts and sciences flourished in a manner that left Dark Ages Europe far behind. (You can also find humanist poetry and art in Persia and even a small amount of erotica in Northern Africa.) Islam never outright rejected scientific empiricism but instead tried to reconcile and integrate it into its religious beliefs, with a surprising amount of debate about the primacy of either faith or reason. It preached that divine revelation could be found in other religions and so practiced tolerance in the lands that it conquered — a kind of Islamic multiculturalism. One of the giants of the European Enlightenment, Voltaire, favorably opined that Islam was more tolerant in its treatment of minorities than Christianity (consider the comparative persecution of Catholics in Ireland or of Jews in Spain).

Today, Islamic society looks different in every region where it is found. The royal families of Saudi Arabia have promoted ultra-conservative Wahhabism, which discourages personal vice, idolatry, veneration of saints, etc. The Bangladeshis prefer the more mystical Sufism, which places greater emphasis upon a subjective experience of Allah and is traditionally more tolerant of human foibles and dissent. Almost every part of the Islamic world has produced progressive movements, some headed by women. Pakistan gave the world Benazir Bhutto and Indonesia Megawati Soekarnoputri. In all cases, the political development of Muslim countries has been as much shaped by poverty and the legacy of colonialism as it has Islam. Iran might have continued on a course toward liberalism had the West not sponsored an anti-democratic coup in 1953. In short, there is no monolithic Islamic history or experience, which makes it hard or even disingenuous to talk about the challenge that Islam as a whole poses to the West. Put another way, no American would want anyone to think that the Westboro Baptist Church spoke for all of Christianity.

Breivik’s second, equally fallacious claim is that Islam’s growth in the West has been encouraged by liberal elites as a means to destroy traditional Christian culture. Indeed, multiculturalism has been strongly critiqued by two British prime ministers — Tony Blair and David Cameron. Cameron said that it had “failed” because it did not demand submission to the liberal principles of gender and sexual equality. But multiculturalism is not a Marxist ideology carefully plotted by the “Saul Alinksy radicals” so loathed by Newt Gingrich. Rather, it was free-market economics and globalization that caused the mass migration of Muslims from East to West — and multiculturalism was simply a policy response. The aim was to protect the cultural integrity of both host and guest populations by allowing them separate spaces in which to develop.

Far from intending to threaten the religious or civil liberties of the majority Christian population (which remains vastly superior in numbers), the goal was to create a common framework of laws but otherwise leave everyone to their own devices. If Christianity has declined in the West, it’s the fault of the Christians who stopped going to church — not the small groups of Muslims quietly attending their local mosque. And yet Muslims in Western countries now live under the pressures of anti-terrorist surveillance and social ostracism. They are forced to defend their Britishness, their Frenchness or their Americaness — even if they are third- or fourth-generation citizens of those countries. Breivik’s attack has raised the threat level against the West’s Muslims: They are now the target of our politically engaged sociopaths. Given how widespread the condemnation of both Islam and multiculturalism is across the West, perhaps it is apt to describe Breivik as a symptom of Western psychological angst. It is a condition of neurosis about decline and paranoia about foreign invasion that is in desperate need of remedy.

[JP note: Troubling signs of an historian holding the wrong end of the stick.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Minister in ‘Racist Circumcision Outrage’

Swedish minister of culture Lena Adelsohn Liljeroth’s participation in a “racist spectacle” in which she carved up a cake depicting a naked black woman has sparked outrage and prompted calls for the minister’s dismissal. “In our view, this simply adds to the mockery of racism in Sweden,” Kitimbwa Sabuni, spokesperson for the National Afro-Swedish Association (Afrosvenskarnas riksförbund) told The Local. “This was a racist spectacle.”

Sabuni’s comments come following Adelsohn Liljeroth’s participation in an art installation that took place at Stockholm’s Moderna Museet in connection with World Art Day on April 15th.

As part of the installation, which was reportedly meant to highlight the issue of female circumcision, the culture minister began cutting a large cake shaped like a black woman, symbolically starting at the clitoris.

Makode Aj Linde, the artist who created the installation and whose head is part of the cake cut by the minister, wrote about the “genital mutilation cake” on his Facebook page. “Before cutting me up she whispered, ‘Your life will be better after this’ in my ear,” he wrote in a caption next to the partially eaten cake.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden Democrats ‘Unchanged’ In Wake of Breivik Terror: Expert

While the far-right Sweden Democrats initially distanced themselves from the deadly attacks by Anders Behring Breivik, currently on trial in Norway, the party hasn’t undergone a major transformation, the AFP’s Nina Larsson discovers. Right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik’s deadly attacks in Norway sent shockwaves through the serene Nordic lands, rocking their populist parties and prompting at least one to clean up its act.

In the nearly nine months since Breivik massacred 77 people on July 22nd, such parties have experienced several setbacks amid accusations their criticism of immigration and Islam helped pave the way for the tragedy. “There has been a very infected debate. It is a very uncomfortable feeling to be accused of such a thing,” Mattias Karlsson, party secretary for the Sweden Democrats, told AFP.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Trial Begins for ‘Honour Killing’ of Teen Daughter

A 53-year-old Pakistani man known as Scheragha R goes on trial on Tuesday for the vicious murder in 2010 of his 16-year-old daughter, Swera. Almost exactly two years have passed since Scheragha R killed his teenage daughter in their family apartment in Zurich Höngg.

At first, it was assumed that the murder was a so-called honour killing in response to the shame that the father claimed his daughter had brought upon the family.

But recent psychiatric reports suggest that this theory does not fit with the killer’s profile, and that he may instead have killed his daughter a fit of emotion. These are the questions that the court will examine on the first day of the trial.

The fact that Scheragha R deeply regrets his actions and no longer wishes to live are factors that will be advanced by the defence and which point away from the honour killing theory, online news site Blick reported.

The prosecutor, Ulrich Krättli, will nevertheless argue that this was an honour-killing, carried out consciously and deliberately, and brought about by the father’s inability to bear his daughter’s wayward and un-Islamic behaviour. He is looking for a sentence of between 10 years and life imprisonment.

The murder took place on May 10th 2010, not long after 16-year-old Swera had been picked up at a Zurich police station by her parents. She had been caught stealing cigarettes.

It was the first time the girl had seen her father for two weeks: she had run away after her father had allegedly tried to electrocute her by throwing a hairdryer into the bath, online news site 20 Minuten reported.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Find Out About Islam at M Shed

VISITORS to M shed next Sunday can learn more about Bristol’s Muslims through a free, hands-on fun and creative “Journey of the Heart”. The event is a partnership initiative with Bristol’s Muslim community and supported by the British Museum. The one-day event runs from 10.30am to 4.30pm and visitors of all ages will be able to take part in a range of activities including arts and crafts, food samples, Islamic artefacts on display, short films and opportunities to ask questions about Islam. Visitors can also find out more about belief, prayer, fasting, charity and Hajj — the sacred journey to Mecca. There will also be a chance to record personal messages about special journeys made in Bristol or throughout the world.

[JP note: Shame on the British Museum for assisting in this proselytizing campaign.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: George Osborne Puts the Fabric of Britain at Risk With the ‘Heritage Tax’

by Philip Johnston

Levying VAT on repair work is a very bad idea, whether for cathedrals or country cottages.

From the same Budget production team that had us cowering at the granny tax, recoiling from the pasty levy and watching the charity shambles through our fingers comes the latest spine-chilling horror: the heritage tax. The Chancellor’s decision to impose VAT at 20 per cent on alterations to listed buildings was, like closing the supposed philanthropy loophole, motivated by a belief that the rich are not paying their fair share. The Treasury says it is ending an “anomaly” that allows millionaires to install swimming pools without paying VAT just because they happen to own a Jacobean manor house. How often does that happen?

However, it is not only the wealthy living in grand country homes who can carry out restoration work free of VAT. Many of the buildings that have benefited from the zero rate are the very fabric of our nation — its cathedrals, churches and about 400,000 listed properties up and down the land, many of whose occupants are by no means well off. Church leaders spotted the likely impact of the new tax early on and have bombarded MPs and ministers with protest letters, as well as setting up an e-petition on the Downing Street website.

The dean and chapter of the 12th-century Wakefield Cathedral in West Yorkshire have been planning a £3 million restoration project for several years, raising money from charity events and the Heritage Lottery Fund. The work began in early March — but within days the Budget had pushed up the cost by £200,000 and the scheme may have to be halted while more money is found, assuming it can be.

Given their great age, most cathedrals and ancient churches need millions of pounds spent on them every year if they are not to fall apart. This money has to be raised from congregations, donations (which could be also be hit by the cap on charitable tax relief) and special events. The Church of England reckons the Chancellor’s decision will cost up to £20 million a year extra on works to its 12,500 listed buildings, if they go ahead at all. The Treasury said it would make up the shortfall by increasing grants for alterations, but the Church says these are already inadequate and will simply be divided into even smaller amounts among a larger group of claimants. Anthony Priddis, the Bishop of Hereford, said: “There has been more anger about this decision than any other I have witnessed for a very long time.”

You have to wonder sometimes what goes on in the Treasury ahead of a Budget. Clearly, officials want to maximise the revenue and hang the consequences. It is the job of the politicians to ensure this rapacity does not lead to disproportionate pain or is simply self-defeating. The boneheadedness of the revenue collectors is nothing new, of course. We can still see buildings with their window spaces bricked up to avoid a tax introduced in 1696. It is thought the term “daylight robbery” originated from this time, though its first known usage was much later. How might the churches remember this Budget 300 years from now — the Destruction of Gideon, perhaps? In the West Country, they are calling it the “thatch snatch” because of its potential impact on the region’s thatched cottages.

[…]

[JP note: To be expected from a dhimmi government pandering to the Ummah.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Human Rights Debate Suffering ‘Democratic Deficit’

Unelected judges do not take the views of politicians seriously enough in the increasingly “ferocious” debate about human rights, an academic report suggests today.

Murray Hunt, legal adviser to Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights, warns that action must be taken to address a “debilitating democratic deficit”. He says that although elected governments express their commitment to human rights, these rights are enforced by “profoundly undemocratic” unelected judges, leading to “genuine concerns” that “unaccountable” figures are “sidelining Parliament”. “As a result, there is a genuine and profoundly felt impression that elected decision-makers and not taken sufficiently seriously by courts, and human rights discourse is everywhere bedevilled by a permanent crisis of democratic legitimacy.”

His report, published by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, found that politicians’ interest in human rights has increased markedly in recent years. Between 2000 and 2005 there were only 23 references to reports of the Joint Committee on Human Rights in parliamentary debates, but there were 1,006 during the 2005-2010 Parliament. Most were about terrorism and criminal justice. Two-thirds of the comments were made in the House of Lords. There were a “staggering” 23,343 references to human rights in court reports since 2001 but only 72 references to the Joint Committee by judges. But Prof Hunt, visiting professor of law at Oxford University, adds that the question of “who decides” and has the ultimate authority is an “obstacle” and an “unhelpful distraction” from the more important matter of making sure rights are protected. His comments come on the eve of a rare opportunity for the British Government to bring about lasting reform of the European Court of Human Rights. Ministers have been left exasperated by rulings from the Strasbourg justices that have paved the way for prisoners to have the vote and prevented terrorists and convicted criminals from being deported. Meanwhile attempts to replace Labour’s Human Rights Act with a more limited Bill of Rights have been delayed while ministers have ignored calls from backbench Tories to ignore the ECHR’s rulings.

But an a conference in Brighton later this week, Ken Clarke, the Justice Secretary, will lead attempts for the Council of Europe to agree ways in which the number of cases reaching Strasbourg can be cut and more power given back to national courts. Just 45,000 cases went to the court during its first 40 years, but in 2010 alone 61,300 applications were made. There is now a backlog of more than 160,000 cases awaiting consideration. Prof Hunt’s report states that the “problem” regarding the idea of human rights and who is their “legitimate guardian” is not new. But he goes on: “Today in the UK, however, it is a debate which is being played out with a new ferocity.” He says that court rulings are “widely criticised”, even by ministers, while lawyers themselves have called for the Government to ignore some of the decisions made by Strasbourg. However Prof Hunt insists there is also a “new consensus” that human rights are important, that they must be protected by law, and that Parliament, Government and the judiciary have a “shared responsibility” for protecting them.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ken Livingstone Refuses to Stump for Labour Candidate

by Andrew Gilligan

Ken Livingstone at one stage promised to campaign in every London council byelection — and he’s certainly been to the vast majority, including hopeless Shortlands in Bromley (where Labour got 10%), Worcester Park in Sutton (11%), Southfields in Wandsworth (17%), and so on. But there’s one byelection coming up the day after tomorrow which Ken has not so far managed to fit into his busy schedule — even though Labour has an able candidate, a big operation on the ground, and an excellent chance of gaining back a seat from the opposition. This seat, indeed, was won by Labour at the last council election with 43 per cent of the vote and a majority of more than 500, but the sitting Labour councillor defected to the opposition before being sacked from the council for housing benefit fraud.

Ken has been repeatedly asked by the Labour Party to come and help its candidate in this byelection. Sadly, according to local Labour councillors, he has refused, even though he knows the area all too well and has campaigned here before. The problem, you see, is that when Ken campaigned here before, it was… for the opposition, and against Labour.

This byelection is in Tower Hamlets — fiefdom of the Livingstone-backed and extremist-linked executive mayor, Lutfur Rahman, thrown out of the Labour Party for his close relationship with the Islamist group, the IFE. In this very ward, Spitalfields, Lutfur was himself once a councillor — and still maintains at least an official residence. In this very ward, Ken was filmed endorsing Lutfur and dissing Labour’s own candidate for the mayoralty, Helal Abbas. In this same ward, Spitalfields, the IFE has helped secure some truly astonishing swings to Ken — from 29 per cent of the vote in the 2004 mayoral election to 68 per cent in the 2008 one — and with London voters in general proving resistant to the Livingstone message, that sort of assistance is especially badly needed as Ken’s own election day nears. No wonder there’s a conflict of loyalties!

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Mayor for Muslims or the Rich?

Does Boris not care for poor Londoners? A new question in today’s Evening Standard polling reveals that 40 per cent of voters believe that Boris is the candidate to aid rich Londoners. Ken has also carved his own niche, successfully winning over many Muslin voters — around 20 per cent state he is particularly keen to help them. Here are the full numbers: […]

But such perceptions have made little difference to either candidate’s chances. The headline voting figures remain steady at 53 per cent for Boris and 47 per cent for Ken, despite the above and also the recent tax saga.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Third of Britons: Dislike of Jews Understandable Because of Israel

More than a third of Britons believe dislike of Jews is understandable given the actions of Israel. According to a Europe-wide survey on prejudice and discrimination on the continent, conducted by Germany’s Friedrich Ebert Foundation, 13.9 per cent of people in the UK believe that Jews wield too much influence in this country. Although 71.5 per cent of those surveyed said that they believed Jews enriched British culture — the second highest number out of the eight countries included in the report — more than a fifth claimed that Jews “try to take advantage of having been victims during the Nazi era”. Nearly 23 per cent supported the view that Jews “in general do not care about anything or anyone but their own kind”.

More than two out of five Britons asked agreed that Israel was “conducting a war of extermination against the Palestinians”, and nearly 36 per cent said that considering Israel’s policy, they could “understand why people do not like Jews”.

The study, entitled “Intolerance, Prejudice and Discrimination,” will be officially presented in Tel Aviv at the start of May but has been published this week to coincide with Yom Ha’Shoah. About 1,000 people were survey in each country, including in Poland, France and Hungary. The authors also looked at attitudes toward immigration and Muslims, with questions on social issues including homophobia, sexism and other forms of extremism. In their conclusions, the authors noted that “the data also shows antisemitism often appearing in the guise of criticism of Israel”. They added: “Antisemitic criticism of Israel comes close to majority support in all European countries. “In that context we also need to discuss whether secondary antisemitism — refusal to acknowledge the crimes of the Holocaust — has taken the place of traditional antisemitism.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Byzantium and Islam: Age of Transition, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

by Ed Voves

Byzantium and Islam, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, addresses two of history’s most amazing developments. This landmark exhibition, organized by Helen C. Evans, the Metropolitan curator responsible for two previous presentations of Byzantine art, brilliantly surveys historical themes of vital interest to the contemporary world.

The Eastern Roman Empire, known to historians as Byzantium, lasted over one thousand years. From its foundation by Emperor Constantine I in 330 A.D. to its conquest by the Turks in 1453, Byzantium was the most influential and resilient Christian state during the Middle Ages. From its capital city of Constantinople, Byzantium projected a political and cultural example that profoundly affected the peoples of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.

Several centuries into this long-lived span, Byzantium was challenged by a sudden and totally unforeseen event. Having struggled for survival against the Goths, Vandals and other barbarian invaders, as well as the revived Persian Empire, Byzantium now faced a formidable spiritual foe. Islam, whose precepts were set down by the Prophet Muhammad during the early years of the seventh century, spread with lightning speed. In a few short decades following the death of Muhammad in 632, the zealous adherents of this new faith swept westward from Arabia to Spain by 711 and then reached the border provinces of China in the east in 751. The Byzantine Empire staggered and nearly collapsed, as the armies of Islam conquered key provinces such as Syria and Egypt. Many of its citizens embraced the new faith or willingly accepted Islamic rule while adhering to Christianity. Yet Byzantium endured, even as a vibrant culture took shape in the vast regions dominated by the successors of the Prophet Muhammad.

[…]

Byzantium and Islam is not merely an outstanding exhibit in its own right, but serves as a perfect introduction to the Metropolitan Museum’s New Galleries for the Art of Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia and Later South Asia, opened on November 1, 2011. No work of art on display in the Byzantium and Islam exhibit better illustrates how the culture of the ancient world was transformed into a new and vibrant dispensation than the display of pages from the fabled Blue Qur’an, dating to ca. 900-950. Byzantine scribes had earlier written in gold and silver upon purple-dyed parchment, producing luxury books, including copies of the Gospels. Here Muslim scribes followed the Byzantine lead, while producing a unique expression of their own religious faith. One cannot help admiring the priorities of these Muslim scribes and scholars, taking a color traditionally reserved for the robes of kings and emperors and devoting it to the word of God.

Byzantium and Islam: Age of Transition March 14 — July 8, 2012, The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue (at 82nd Street), New York, NY 10028

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UAE: Man Who Insulted Islam on Facebook ‘Not Sane’

ABU DHABI // A man who insulted Islam on Facebook is not responsible for his actions, a court heard today. A medical report presented to the Abu Dhabi Criminal Court found that an Egyptian graphic designer, who posted indecent pictures next to the titles of Quranic chapters, could not be considered sane. The court asked for the medical report after a previous hearing in which the man admitted it was “possible” that he was suffering a psychological illness. He confessed to posting the images, telling Chief Justic Sayed Abdulbaseer, head of the Abu Dhabi Criminal Court, that he would withdraw his actions if he could. Police arrested the graphic designer after members of the public complained about the posts. In one of them, he posted a photo of three naked women next to An-Nisa (women) chapter. In another he posted a photo of a table topped with alcoholic drinks next to Al Maeda (table) chapter, and in another, a cow next to Al Baqara (the cow) chapter. The court adjourned the case to May 1.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Taliban Commander Turns Self in… For Reward on ‘Wanted’ Poster

Sometimes, capturing a Taliban commander requires vast resources and complex operations. Last week in eastern Afghanistan, it required neither.

Mohammad Ashan, a mid-level Taliban commander in Paktika province, strolled toward a police checkpoint in the district of Sar Howza with a wanted poster bearing his own face. He demanded the finder’s fee referenced on the poster: $100.

Afghan officials, perplexed by the man’s misguided motives, arrested him on the spot. Ashan is suspected of plotting at least two attacks on Afghan security forces. His misdeeds prompted officials to plaster the district with hundreds of so-called “Be on the Lookout” posters emblazoned with his name and likeness.

When U.S. troops went to confirm that Ashan had in fact come forward to claim the finder’s fee, they were initially incredulous.

“We asked him, ‘Is this you?’ Mohammad Ashan answered with an incredible amount of enthusiasm, ‘Yes, yes, that’s me! Can I get my award now?’“ recalled SPC Matthew Baker.

A biometric scan confirmed that the man in Afghan custody was the insurgent they had been looking for.

“This guy is the Taliban equivalent of the ‘Home Alone” burglars,” one U.S. official said.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Barack Obama Makes Falklands Gaffe by Calling Malvinas the Maldives

Barack Obama made an uncharacteristic error, more akin to those of his predecessor George W Bush, by referring to the Falkland Islands as the Maldives.

President Obama erred during a speech at the Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia, when attempting to call the disputed archipelago by its Spanish name.

Instead of saying Malvinas, however, Mr Obama referred to the islands as the Maldives, a group of 26 atolls off that lie off the South coast of India.

The Maldives were a British protectorate from 1887 to 1965 and the site of a UK airbase for nearly 20 years.

Cristina Kirchner, the Argentine president, has renewed her country’s sovereignty claim to the Falklands in the build-up to the 30th anniversary of the Argentine invasion of the islands, which triggered the Falklands War, on April 2.

She has accused David Cameron of maintaining a “colonial enclave” in the South Atlantic and taken Argentina’s claim to the UN.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Abu Qatada Arrested Pending New Extradition

Hate cleric Abu Qatada has been arrested and returned to custody pending a fresh attempt to deport him to Jordan.

Theresa May, the Home Secretary, is expected to tell MPs this afternoon that an agreement has been reached with Jordan to ensure his removal.

Assurances have been sought to allay fears by the European Court of Human Rights that he will face trial with evidence obtained by torture.

However, despite facing a fresh deportation order, Qatada’s lawyers will be able to launch a fresh legal challenge against his removal.

He is expected to appear at the Special Immigration Appeals Commission on Tuesday afternoon, when the home secretary will update MPs on his case

A Home Office spokesperson said: “UK Border Agency officers have today arrested Abu Qatada and told him that we intend to resume deportation proceedings against him.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Abu Qatada Deportation Case: As it Happened

Hate cleric Abu Qatada has today been arrested and returned to custody pending a fresh attempt to deport him to Jordan. Follow the Telegraph’s live blog for the latest updates on the case.

  • Abu Qatada arrested at his home
  • He has appeared before the Special Immigration Appeals Commission
  • Theresa May tells Commons she believes Qatada can be deported
  • Jordan has agreed assurances to allow deportation
  • Home Office intends to remove him on or around April 30
  • Qatada’s lawyers say they will appeal

Latest

17.20 This concludes our live blog for today. Thank you very much for joining us and please do keep checking the Telegraph website for more updates.

16.55 Shami Chakrabarti, director of civil rights group Liberty, has said: Since the Court of Human Rights ruled that Abu Qatada should not be sent to Jordan for a trial based on torture, the Home Secretary faced many calls to deport him and flout the law. Shame on them. She has not courted popularity by doing this and has recognised there will be new legal scrutiny of the latest assurances that she has obtained from that country. Credit must go where it is due and it is due to the Home Secretary today. We don’t always agree on the application of human rights but she seems to understand that if the Government does not respect the rule of law, why should anyone else?

16.41 Donna Bowater adds: Justice Mitting said: “The only possibility of the deportation going ahead in accordance with the intention of the secretary of state is if the application is certified and if any challenge to that certification is turned down by the courts in short order.” Mr Tam told the court there was an increased risk that Qatada would abscond. He said: “He has wide and high levels of support, which of course has consequences if he were to abscond in terms of what could and would be provided to him.” He added: “Given where we are in the deportation process, this is a time when conventionally the risk of absconding increases.”

16.32 Donna Bowater reports from SIAC: Arguing that Qatada’s deportation was compatible with the ECHR ruling, Mr Tam said there had been talks at ministerial and prime ministerial levels — involving the King of Jordan — to address Strasbourg’s concerns. He said: “These are changes of real weight…these are meetings which are not liable to produce inaccurate information that has been put together merely to put together a case. There’s real substance behind the secretary of state’s view that the deportation can now be carried out compatible with the convention.”

16.23 Theresa May has said the government could not simply have ignored the decision of the European court. She said putting Qatada on a plane would involve ministers, Government officials, the police, law enforcement officers and airline companies all breaking the law. The Government would also have risked being ordered to bring Qatada back to Britain and pay out compensation, she added.

Instead, our approach will bring an enduring solution.

16.16 The English Defence League are protesting outside the Home Office, central London, this afternoon.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Abu Qatada is a Microcosm of Everything That’s Wrong With Britain’s Dimwitted Immigration and Welfare Systems

by Ed West

Is Abu Qatada finally on his way home? The Telegraph reports that Theresa May, the Home Secretary, is expected to tell MPs this afternoon that an agreement has been reached with Jordan to ensure his removal. Abu Qatada’s case was a microcosm of everything that was wrong with how the British state dealt with a range of issues, such as immigration, welfare, Europe and extremism. He arrived in Britain from Jordan, with his five children, and was able to claim asylum on account of “religious persecution”, not because the Jordanians were extreme but because he was. As I wrote in last week’s Spectator, Britain does little to help Christians in the Middle East escaping persecution but neither do we help our fellow liberals of any religion. Rather than helping our friends, we help our enemies; only the most dim-witted individual would claim that radical Islam is not a threat to Britain.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



It’s Qatada D-Day

May in new bid to deport cleric

THE Home Secretary will today reveal new plans to get hate preacher Abu Qatada booted out of Britain.

In an emergency statement to the Commons, Theresa May will say she believes a deal with Jordan will let the UK deport the al-Qaeda suspect. Her comments will raise hopes the vile Islamic militant could be back behind bars within days. But a fresh legal battle means it could be months before he is thrown out of the country. The European Court of Human Rights ruled in January that Qatada could not be deported. Mrs May’s statement will come after the deadline to appeal against that decision passed at midnight. Ministers must now move swiftly to launch a fresh bid to kick out the fanatic — once dubbed Osama Bin Laden’s right-hand man in Europe.

The Sun — which has launched a campaign to kick out Qatada — told last month how his lawyers are set to make a legal bid to axe tough restrictions imposed on the cleric when he was released in February. But Ministers plan to short-circuit this move by starting their new drive to deport the fanatic. They will also ask judges to put him back behind bars again.

The European Court of Human Rights’ ruling said Qatada, 51, could not be deported if there was a risk evidence extracted by torture would be used against him. Home Office officials have spent weeks thrashing out a deal with Jordan. Mrs May last month travelled to Amman to ask for a water-tight pledge that they will not use torture evidence. But her handling of the affair was last night condemned by Labour. Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “There has been too much drift and delay. The Home Secretary needs to explain urgently to Parliament what she is doing to get Abu Qatada deported, and to make sure there are safeguards to protect public safety.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120416

Financial Crisis
» EU Employment Chief Hails Italy Labor Reforms
» EU: Spain Prompts Leaders to Seek Bigger IMF Support
» Greece: Healthcare Assistance Now a Privilege
» Greece Pins Recovery Hopes on Solar Energy
» Greeks Oppose EU-IMF Economic Programme
» Hungary Complains of EU ‘Blackmail’ On IMF Loan
» Italy: Monti Announces More Hard-Hitting Labour Reforms
» Moody’s Sees Nokia on the Wane, Cuts Rating
» Plan to Set Up European Rating Agency Under Threat
» Rising Interest Rates: Spain Slides Further Into Crisis
» Sarkozy Wants New Role for Euro Bank
» Soros Calls on Germany to Pay or Leave Euro
 
USA
» 2012 Pulitzer Prize Winners Announced
» Caton: Tampa ‘At Risk’ Of Islamic Takeover
» Charlottesville’s First Constructed Mosque Has Its Ribbon Cutting
» Forgerygate: Demand a Special Counsel Appointment
» Hacking Expert David Chalk Joins Urgent Call to Halt Smart Grid
» Obama’s Open Mic Comment
» Occupy: New Violent Phase Begins to Use Germany’s Black Bloc Tactic
» Oklahoma City Bombing Anniversary
» Stakelbeck: Elites Failing America in Battle Against Jihadists
» Trayvon Case Unlikely to Change US Gun Laws
» US Physician Kim Voted World Bank Head
» US Vigilant in Fight Against Chocolate Eggs
 
Canada
» Thousands Visit New Mosque
 
Europe and the EU
» British Library Buys $14.3m Ancient Gospel
» EU Authorities Accused of Blindness on ‘Counter-Jihad’
» EU Pledges Extra Funds for Energy in Developing Nations
» Fuels From Waste: A New EU Project
» Germany: Vegan Sex Shop Offers Responsible Romping
» Germany: Kurds Try to Hijack Rhine Pleasure Boat
» Italy: Chinese Names in Top Ten of Milanese Surnames
» Italy: Rome’s Famous Gelato Finds New Ways to Tease the Tastebuds
» Italy: Stripper ‘Nuns’ Danced for Berlusconi: Trial Witness
» Italy: Witness Tells of ‘Incriminating’ Berlusconi Sex Tape
» Italy: Fugitive in Berlusconi Sex Scandal Arrested After Months on Run
» Italy: Lega Nord Money Used to Buy Diamonds, Investigators
» Italy: De Gregorio’s Accountant, He Was Paid to Defect to the PDL
» Mentally-Disabled Boy in Italy Denied Communion for “Not Understanding” Rite
» ‘Muslims Being Discriminated in UK’
» Nordic Populists Search Souls After July Attacks
» Norway: Anders Behring Breivik: The Boy Next Door Turned Serial Killer
» Norway: Terror Trial Gets Underway in Oslo
» Norway: Film Unleashed Tears From Breivik
» Norway: Breivik’s Tears Flow on First Day of Trial
» Sweden: Police Arrest Three Over Slain Malmö Teen
» Tax Deal Rewards Germans With Swiss Bank Accounts
» Taxes Never So High in Germany Since 1995, 10,000 Eur. Each
» UK: “If You Look at What Labour Did to Our Country Why on Earth Would You Let Them Anywhere Near Your Council?”
» UK: Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin Faces Death Penalty in Bangladesh
» UK: The Evils of Secrecy in Our Family Courts
 
Mediterranean Union
» Anna Lindh Foundation: Deadline 2012 Call Extended
 
North Africa
» Interview With German Intelligence Chief: ‘We Must be the First to go in and the Last to Leave’
» Morocco: EU, Nine Energy Efficiency Projects Launched
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» IDF: Attack on Activist Doesn’t Represent Army Conduct
» Israel’s Other Temple: Research Reveals Ancient Struggle Over Holy Land Supremacy
 
Middle East
» Ashton Says Iran Nuclear Talks ‘Constructive’
» ‘Both Sides Must Move or There Will be War’
» Qatar: Multimedia Plan for Arab and Western Mutual Understanding
» Turkey: Modern Turkish Designs Spread Across Globe
» UAE: Islam is Key to Peace, Convention Concludes
» We Want to Invest in Italy, Emir Says
 
Russia
» European Court Faults Russia Over Katyn Massacre
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Taliban ‘Spring Offensive’ Dampens Optimism
» Himalayan Glaciers Are Not Melting, Study
» India: Chandy’s Communal Card Will Kill Kerala’s Political Culture
» Indonesia: Jakarta: Hundreds of Christians Ask President for Justice on Places of Worship
» Italian Marines’ Incarceration Extended by Two More Weeks
» Karzai: NATO Failings Led to Attacks by Taliban
» UK: Leading British Muslim Leader Faces War Crimes Charges in Bangladesh
 
Far East
» British Businessman’s Death Spurs Probe Into Murder, Greed and China’s Leadership
» China Eases Currency Controls in Long-Awaited Move
» Global Nuclear Production Dropped After Fukushima, IAEA
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Swiss Woman Kidnapped in Timbuktu: Confirmed
 
Latin America
» US, Haiti Kick Off Vaccination Campaigns
 
Immigration
» Asylum Requests Surge in Switzerland
 
Culture Wars
» UK: London Mayoral Elections Gay Hustings: Ken Livingstone Urges Muslims to be Treated Fairly
 
General
» A Brave Telling of the Koran’s Human Stories
» Best Evidence Yet That a Single Gene Can Affect IQ
» Blind Hydra Relies on Light to Kill Prey
» Salt Levels in Fast Food Depend on Where You Buy it

Financial Crisis


EU Employment Chief Hails Italy Labor Reforms

‘Important objectives’ says Andor

(ANSA) — Brussels, April 16 — The European Union Employment Commissioner hailed Italy’s labor-market reforms on Monday. “Their objectives are very important,” said Lazslo Andor.

The endorsement is a boon to Premier Mario Monti’s emergency government which is currently trying to push the reforms through parliament and make it easier for firms to fire workers.

Monti says the measures will boost growth and productivity and reduce unemployment because companies will be more inclined to hire workers if they know they can dismiss them if they need to.

Before presenting the bill to parliament earlier this month, the government reinstated the possibility of rehiring, and not just compensation, for workers deemed to have been unfairly dismissed for business reasons under Article 18 of the labour code. Monti apparently bowed to pressure from the centre-left part of the government’s broad coalition and the change has angered employers who, despite other changes to Article 18, believe it will still continue to be tough to shed workers in hard times.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU: Spain Prompts Leaders to Seek Bigger IMF Support

Brussels, 16 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — European officials travel to Washington this week seeking a bigger global war chest to combat the debt crisis as Spain’s government battles to quell renewed market turmoil over its finances.

Three weeks after European leaders unveiled emergency euro- area funding exceeding the symbolic $1 trillion mark, concerns about Spain’s position have ratcheted the nation’s borrowing costs to the highest levels this year. Crisis-fighting resources will dominate talks at the International Monetary Fund’s spring meeting in Washington from April 20-22.

While the U.S. insists that Europe can overcome the crisis using its own financial firepower, euro-area officials say they’ve done enough to trigger additional global assistance. The urgency was underscored last week as Spanish and Italian yields jumped, challenging assumptions among the region’s leaders that the worst of the fallout was behind them.

“After three months that were calmer than expected, the euro crisis is back,” said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London. “The speed of the recent surge in yields has elements of a renewed market panic.”

Spain’s 10-year bond yield climbed 19 basis points last week to 5.98 percent, while similar-maturity Italian yields increased seven basis points to 5.52 percent. The euro declined to a one-month low against the dollar today. The 17-nation currency fell 0.4 percent to $1.3022 at 2:05 p.m. in Tokyo, after touching $1.3009, the lowest since March 15.

The surge in borrowing costs prompted one of Spain’s deputy economy ministers, Jaime Garcia-Legaz, to call on the European Central Bank to resume its direct intervention in the markets.

Increase Bond Purchases

“They should step up purchases of bonds,” Garcia-Legaz said in an April 13 interview, wading into a debate that has split the ECB. While Executive Board member Benoit Coeure signaled April 11 the ECB may buy up Spanish bonds, his Dutch colleague Klaas Knot said two days later that the ECB is “very far” from reactivating the measure.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who is pushing through an austerity agenda targeting spending on health and education, won backing from his party’s regional leaders over the weekend. People’s Party chiefs from regions including Madrid, Valencia and Galicia agreed to streamline bureaucracy and write deficit targets into budget laws.

“We need to manage a reality that is very tough,” Maria Dolores Cospedal, the deputy party head and president of Castilla La Mancha, told reporters after a party meeting. Rajoy’s government has struggled to convince investors after last month saying it would not meet budget deficit targets set by the European Commission and the previous government.

Spanish Auctions

European governments are banking on a bigger safety net to soothe markets as the crisis continues to simmer, with Spanish borrowing nearing the level that prompted Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek bailouts. Sentiment will be gauged again on April 19, when Spain auctions two- and 10-year debt.

The Europeans’ appeal for funds may find more success after IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde last week scaled back her request for $600 billion in new contributions. Lagarde said April 12 that she is hoping to make “real progress” at this week’s meetings. She has also said the IMF needs more cash to quell economic risks separate from Europe’s woes, such as higher oil prices and slowing U.S. growth.

Her retooled strategy reflects international and particularly U.S. reluctance to deliver more cash amid suspicion Europe isn’t doing enough to save itself. The IMF has less than $400 billion available to lend.

‘Non-European Friends’

Bowing to international pressure to do more while stopping short of a bolder proposal, European governments agreed last month that 500 billion euros ($654 billion) in fresh money would be placed aside 300 billion euros already committed to create an 800 billion-euro defense against contagion.

By also offering to give the IMF 150 billion euros, “European governments have done their part,” ECB Executive Board Member Joerg Asmussen said April 13. “I would now expect our non-European friends and partners to contribute their part to IMF resources.”

Foreign governments have been slow to rally, although emerging markets including Brazil and Mexico have indicated they are willing to participate.

Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi said April 11 that “if we’re asked if we’re 100 percent satisfied with Europe’s efforts, I would say they need further efforts.” U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner has already ruled out more support for the IMF from its largest shareholder, saying last month the lender already has “substantial financial resources.”

French Elections

After spending or committing at least 386 billion euros to bailing out Greece, Portugal and Ireland, Europe now has the money to fully finance Spain through the end of 2014 if needed, according to Schmieding at Berenberg Bank. Italy — with a sovereign debt of 1.9 trillion euros — is not so easily saved and would require the ECB to intervene if faced with an investor revolt, he said.

Added to the mix are the looming French presidential elections, with the first round due on April 22. EU officials and investors will be looking to see how the Franco-German partnership could be altered if Socialist candidate Francois Hollande beats President Nicolas Sarkozy in the second-round vote on May 6.

Both candidates addressed supporters in Paris yesterday after Hollande extended his advantage in a possible head-to-head race by two points to 56 percent against 44 percent, according to a TNS Sofres survey published April 13.

“France faces a highly intriguing election, which could add to market woes,” Jim O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, wrote in an e-mailed note to clients.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Greece: Healthcare Assistance Now a Privilege

After years of recession, huge cuts to state budget

(ANSAmed) — ATENE, APRIL 16 — Four years of a recession and two years of wide-ranging cuts to the state budget to reduce expenditure and balance accounts is making healthcare in Greece into ever more a luxury for the privileged few. With public healthcare spending at around 10 billion euros, 25% less than in 2009, staying healthy “risks becoming a privilege”, said Haralambos Economou, who teaches sociology at Athens’ Panteion University. Two years of harsh austerity have led to over a million officially unemployed people in Greece, over 20% of the workforce. Sector experts say that up to 10% of the population, when in need of treatment, are now forced to dip into their steadily-diminishing savings.

In the past, most Greeks (whenever possible) made use of private healthcare facilities, even if they had to pay almost 40% of the total treatment costs out of their own pockets, one of the highest rates in developed countries. Now, however, the demand for treatment in public hospitals has risen by 20-30%, with expenditure once again falling on a state system already suffering due to a cut in costs. However, even worse, many people try to get round the system (and reduce costs) by showing up at the emergency room in order to get immediate treatment instead of requesting an appointment in advance for which they would need to pay. Hospitals are trying to do their best to deal with the situation. “After the recent reforms forced us to request money from patients who are not covered by health insurance, ever more people avoid making appointments because they do not have the money for them,” said Dr. Meropi Manteou, specialist in pneumology at Athens’ Sotiria hospital. “They come here with the flu and try to pass it off as an emergency. We do what we can to help the poorest, but I don’t know how long we will be able to close a blind eye.” However, the problems are not only for the less well off, with the situation now difficult even for those who have made contributions into the healthcare system for years, since — due to the crisis — the health ministry has reduced the list of medicines and medical tests that can be reimbursed by the social security institute, which is going through a very difficult period due to bad past financial management as well as chronically low contributions, a problem now worse due to growing unemployment levels. Public hospitals are every day having to fight against reduced financing, doctors’ salaries cut by a quarter, a chronic lack of nurses and no payment of overtime hours since December. This is also a reason why many Greeks have begun to go to the centre run by Doctors of the World NGO, which have been working in the country for over 20 years and which until recently worked almost exclusively with immigrants and emarginated groups. “Since the end of 2010 ever more Greeks, and not only immigrants, are coming to us,” said Christina Samartzi, spokesperson of the NGO, “and now they number more than 100 per day, the people who are requesting assistance solely in Athens.

This is a new phenomenon, and is a consequence of the economic crisis.” Most Greeks requesting assistance from the NGO are unemployed, pensioners or families that can no longer afford the compulsory vaccinations for their youngest children. “We are seeing a lot of elderly people suffering from high blood pressure or diabetes who cannot buy the medicines that they need every month,” said Giorgos Papadakis, a young diabetologist. “They come to us and ask whether we can give them to them.” But the worst thing, as many of the volunteers from the NGO confirmed, is that ever more Greeks are asking not only for medicine but also for food.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece Pins Recovery Hopes on Solar Energy

Economically depressed Greece is working to become the EU’s largest exporter of solar-generated electricity, the Greek energy minister said. Talks with investors from Italy and Luxembourg are already underway. The planned state-sponsored project “Helios” is expected to pour annual revenues to the tune of 15 billion euros ($19.5 billion) into empty Greek state coffers and create 60,000 jobs, Greece’s Energy Minister George Papakonstantinou said on Monday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greeks Oppose EU-IMF Economic Programme

A majority of Greeks is against the EU-IMF austerity programme being imposed in return for bailout money, a poll showed Saturday, reports Ekathimerini. The MRB poll found 66% favoured Greece staying in the eurozone but adopting an alternative recovery plan, while 13.2% said the country should drop the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hungary Complains of EU ‘Blackmail’ On IMF Loan

Imposing political conditions on a desperately needed EU-IMF loan is unfair, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Friday. “Creating political conditions — for example over the justice system — would amount to blackmail, which is unacceptable within the European Union,” Orban told national radio MR.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti Announces More Hard-Hitting Labour Reforms

(AGI) Rome — Mario Monti has said the labour reform bill is “much broader and more incisive than the November proposal.” Speaking after his meeting with the Emir of Qatar, he said “this bill is much more far-ranging than the one I outlined to the Chamber during the 17th November planning session. I spoke then about greater flexibility for new employees only, and on a trial basis, but this latest bill, which was drawn up just a few days ago, applies to all workers, not just new employees.

It is a definitive bill, not an experimental one.” It is significant that Monti should have added “some people felt that this bill did not go far enough.” .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Moody’s Sees Nokia on the Wane, Cuts Rating

International ratings agency Moody’s has cut the credit rating of mobile phone maker Nokia, describing an investment in the Finnish firm as speculative. The move comes in anticipation of ‘disappointing’ sales. Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the creditworthiness of Nokia from “Baa2” to “Baa3,” meaning that the Finnish mobile phone maker has fallen to the bottom of the agency’s “speculative, non-investment” category.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Plan to Set Up European Rating Agency Under Threat

The project to set up a European rating agency to challenge the dominance of American firms is at risk of collapsing, the German business daily Financial Times Deutschland reported on Monday. International consulting firm Roland Berger can’t find enough investors for its plan, the report said. But it hasn’t completely given up hope.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Rising Interest Rates: Spain Slides Further Into Crisis

The situation on the financial markets is getting tougher for Spain. The interest rates the country must pay on longer-term, 10-year bonds rose on Monday to over 6 percent for the first time this year. The government in Madrid is also warning that Spain has fallen back into recession.

Spain is once again experiencing tremendous pressure from the financial markets. With the economy sliding and Spanish banks no longer able to finance themselves independently, doubts are growing among investors that the country can service its debts without outside help. Some are already speculating that Spain will have to request aid from the European Union’s euro rescue fund.

On Monday, the interest rate on 10-year government loans rose for the first time this year to over the 6-percent mark, increasing by 0.13 points to 6.12 percent. Investors are demanding increasingly higher risk premiums in order to buy Spanish bonds.

The cost for credit loss insurance also rose to a record high. For securities with a five-year term and a face value of $10 million, insurers are demanding an annual premium of $520,000.

“We’re back in full crisis mode,” Rabobank strategist Lyn Graham-Taylor said, according to Reuters. “It is looking more and more likely that Spain is going to have some form of a bailout.” For weeks now, markets have been rife with speculation that Spain may have to borrow money from the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) in order to shore up its foundering banks. Figures ranging from €50 billion to €100 billion are being bandied about.

The Spanish banks are so saddled with a mountain of non-performing real estate loans that few other European banks are willing to continue to lend them money. Instead they must rely on the European Central Bank (ECB) for fresh infusions of cheap money. In March, the banks borrowed a record €316 billion from the ECB — close to twice the amount borrowed in February.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy Wants New Role for Euro Bank

With just a week to go until the presidential elections, French incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy on Sunday (15 April) said the European Central Bank should get a new mandate on reviving economic growth — a no-go area for Germany.

“On the question of the ECB’s role in boosting growth, we French are going to open the debate,” Sarkozy told supporters in central Paris during the biggest rally of his re-election campaign to date.

He said that there must be “no taboos” in discussing the rules of the eurozone, including a more growth-oriented role for the ECB: “We cannot have taboo subjects. We cannot have banned debates.”

The Frankfurt-based ECB was a political target for Sarkozy five years ago during the 2007 presidential election campaign. Since then he has regularly spoken out in favour of a more active role by the bank in saving ailing governments in the eurozone.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Soros Calls on Germany to Pay or Leave Euro

US billionaire investor George Soros called on Germany to contribute more or leave the eurozone. “The Germans should decide if they want the euro or not. If so, they have to carry out financial transfers. If not, they should leave the eurozone,” he told Welt am Sonntag in an interview.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


2012 Pulitzer Prize Winners Announced

The New York Times won two Pulitzer Prizes on Monday, one for its reporting on Africa and another for an investigative series on obscure tax code provisions that allow wealthy corporations and citizens to avoid paying taxes. But the bigger surprise this year came from new media. Online news outlets The Huffington Post and Politico both won their first Pulitzer Prizes, a sign of the changing media landscape.

Also notable this year was the lack of prizes in some categories. The Pulitzer Prize board did not name a winner in the editorial writing category and more notably declined to name a winner in the coveted fiction category for the first time in 35 years.

[Return to headlines]



Caton: Tampa ‘At Risk’ Of Islamic Takeover

The head of a Florida-based pro-family organization is deeply concerned that the “Islamization” of Tampa is not far behind that of Dearborn, Michigan. The Florida Family Association (FFA) has been instrumental in warning parents that a representative of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) had been invited several times to Steinbrenner High School in Tampa to indoctrinate children with Islamic propaganda, including sharia law. But The Tampa Tribune has criticized the family group for doing so and supported CAIR, whose Florida office is located in Tampa.

David Caton, president of the FFA, says there is a reason the radical Islamic group has taken up residence in the area. “Tampa has a very large population of Muslims,” he explains. “We’ve had numerous public officials embrace various political aspects of Islamist extremism and changes of policy that trend more toward sharia. Tampa is at risk; it’s one of the top five cities at risk.” And the pro-family advocate warns that the Islamization of the city is not far behind that of Dearborn, Michigan, which Jan Markell of Olive Tree Ministries has nicknamed “Dearbornistan.” “Dearborn is almost lost because 50 percent of their population is Arabic-Muslim,” Caton reports. “They can elect and dominate the government there. But we have a smaller population [of Muslims] in Tampa than Dearborn, and we’re already having non-Islamic leaders embracing their progressive agenda.” So he contends that the Islamization of Tampa must be brought to a halt.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Charlottesville’s First Constructed Mosque Has Its Ribbon Cutting

A Charlottesville Muslim group finally has a home of its own. The Islamic Society of Central Virginia had been fundraising for a dozen years to make the new mosque a reality. Of the three stories in Charlottesville’s first purpose-built mosque, one is complete, the other two remain largely in the rough. “If you go inside, you’ll see a lot of it’s unfinished, but we still have a place to call our own,” Irtefa Binte-Farid, who will soon be entering graduate school, said. Emaad Abdel-Rahman cited help from people in Northern Virginia and Washington D.C. in raising funds for the building. He joked that people now develop sudden allergies whenever he brings up fundraising, but said efforts will have to continue to finish the inside of the building. The Quran forbids borrowing money at interest, which means the group has to have all the money in hand before it can undertake a given piece of work.

Among those in attendance for the building’s ribbon cutting Saturday were Charlottesville Mayor Satyendra Huja and City Councilor Kristin Szakos. “Things don’t happen by themselves,” Huja said. “People make it happen.” City Councilor Dave Norris was unable to attend, but sent a message. “I am thrilled, as I know you are,” he wrote. Members of the Islamic Society of Central Virginia did express happiness at their new facility, which replaces a home that had been housing the program while members raised money for the new Pine Street mosque. “The ISCV and this mosque, for us, is really a grounding point,” said University of Virginia fourth-year Mohib Tora of the Muslim Students Association. The group works closely with the MSA, and the new facility will also mean more space for students. The mosque will offer five daily prayers, including the especially important Friday prayers. The new facility, which will eventually include a kitchen in the basement, will also have enough capacity for big holiday events, said Khan Hassan, the group’s treasurer and a member of its board of directors. The society lists spreading the word of God and correcting misperceptions about Islam among its missions

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Forgerygate: Demand a Special Counsel Appointment

Barack Hussein Obama aka Barry Soetoro aka Barry Dunham aka Barack Dunham — all known aliases of the occupant in the White House. I will refer to him as Barry Soetoro since that appears to be the last known legal name of the mystery man.

Over the past four years I have followed every case filed, read every brief submitted and a million words on the constitutional meaning of ‘natural born citizen’. Only those in denial or whose ideological agenda depends on Barry staying in office refuse to acknowledge that Soetoro was born with dual citizenship. He was ineligible in 2008 and he’s still ineligible in 2012.

In the only oral arguments to actually take place out in Georgia, the end result has been the same. Two weeks ago, the Georgia Supreme Court checked their manhood at the door and ruled against all the plaintiffs. Those judges followed the cowardly path taken by Judge Mahili in his original decision to allow Barry on the Georgia ballot despite the undeniable legal facts presented by plaintiffs during the original hearings. However, what the Georgia Supreme Court did was even more reprehensible according to Van Irion, Liberty Legal Foundation, who represented David Welden:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hacking Expert David Chalk Joins Urgent Call to Halt Smart Grid

“100% certainty of catastrophic failure of energy grid within 3 years”

The vulnerability of the energy industry’s new wireless smart grid will inevitably lead to lights out for everyone, according to leading cyber expert David Chalk. In an online interview for an upcoming documentary film entitled ‘Take Back Your Power’ ( www.ThePowerFilm.org ), Chalk says the entire power grid will be at risk to being taken down by cyber attack, and if installations continue it’s only a matter of time.

“We’re in a state of crisis,” said Chalk. “The front door is open and there is no lock to be had. There is not a power meter or device on the grid that is protected from hacking — if not already infected — with some sort of trojan horse that can cause the grid to be shut down or completely annihilated.”

“One of the most amazing things that has happened to mankind in the last 100 years is the Internet. It’s given us possibility beyond our wildest imagination. But we also know the vulnerabilities that exist inside of it. And then we have the backbone, the power grid that powers our nations. Those two are coming together. And it’s the smart meter on your home or business that’s now allowing that connectivity.”

Chalk also issued a challenge to governments, media and technology producers to show him one piece of digital technology that is hack-proof.

“The computer companies that are involved, the manufacturers that are involved, bring forward a technology and I will show you that it’s penetrable,” said Chalk. “I’ll do it on national TV, I’ll do it anywhere. But I can guarantee you 100% that there is nothing out there today — nothing — that can’t be penetrated.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Open Mic Comment

Believing himself off the record, President Obama, then in Russia, leaned over to outgoing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, and said in reference to prospective negotiations on reduction of American missile defenses: “This is my last election. After my election, I have more flexibility.” In response, Medvedev replied in English, “I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladmir,” meaning to incoming President (and de facto Russian dictator) Vladmir Putin.

The comment is problematic for at least five reasons. First, President Obama is revealing to the Russian president that Obama will act after his re-election in less of a representational capacity, but more on his own behalf as if he too were a dictator. Second, President Obama is signaling that he presently maintains a public position that will change after the election albeit the intended change is one not to be revealed to the American public. Third, President Obama is suggesting that he will move to reduce American missile defenses, thus making the United States more vulnerable to nuclear attack. Fourth, President Obama’s statement in this instance suggests that he may well have a hidden agenda on a host of other vital issues that will become apparent only after he is re-elected. Fifth, the President is confiding in an enemy of the United States in a rather casual manner, revealing that he fails to recognize that when he appears abroad he represents at all times and in all places the United States of America.

The fickle statement of the President is an embarrassment for the entire nation. It proves once again that President Obama cannot be trusted.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Occupy: New Violent Phase Begins to Use Germany’s Black Bloc Tactic

A black bloc is a protest tactic where the point is to cause destruction and chaos to the system with organized violence. It was named in Germany where Anarchists developed the tactic. The protesters wear black clothing and mask their faces to make it harder for police to pick out individuals.

This weekend in New York where the Occupy movement began the tactic was employed for the first time. New York Times reported a long-time Occupy organizer was one of those arrested for attacking a NYPD officer with a metal pipe. 41-year-old Alexander Penley, is an attorney and has been an Occupy Wall Street organizer since the movement began in the fall. The group tried to use eight-foot-long galvanized metal pipes to smash windows.

[Return to headlines]



Oklahoma City Bombing Anniversary

Hamas comes from the MB, and in Steven Emerson’s American Jihad: The Terrorists Living Among Us, he listed Hamas as having groups and conventions in Oklahoma City. Relevant to the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19, 1995 (anniversary this coming Thursday), Jim Crogan in “An Oklahoma Mystery: New hints of links between Timothy McVeigh and Middle Eastern terrorists” (L.A. Weekly, July 24-30, 2002) wrote that “an undated intelligence report by [Director of the U.S. House of Representatives Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare Yossef] Bodansky discusses alleged terrorist training inside the U.S. that included some ‘Lily Whites.’… Bodansky states the training was ordered by Iran and conducted by Hamas operatives… Bodansky’s sources also report that at least two of the 1993 participants came from Oklahoma City.”

[…]

Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh’s alleged bombing partner, Terry Nichols, first met Ramzi Youssef (Al Qaeda 1993 World Trade Center bombing mastermind) in the Philippines on December 17, 1991. The FBI could have prevented the 1993 bombing, because the bomb designer asked his FBI contact to give him fake bombmaking material, but the contact didn’t. The FBI also could have prevented the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City, but it prevented the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF) from its planned raid of Elohim City to arrest Andreas Strassmeir, described as the bombing “instigator.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck: Elites Failing America in Battle Against Jihadists

It’s the first rule of war: know your enemy. Yet the U.S. government refuses to use terms like “jihadists” or “radical Islamists” to describe the terrorists who attack us.

My new report examines how America’s “elites” in government, academia and the mainstream media are misleading the American people about the threat we face—and endangering our national security as a result.

Click the link above to watch the report, which features interviews with Rep. Michele Bachmann and former Israeli govt. advisor Michael Widlanski.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



Trayvon Case Unlikely to Change US Gun Laws

In February, an unarmed teenager was shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer. The man has been charged with second-degree murder, but the incident is not likely to change liberal gun laws in the US. Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old black American, was on his way home when he became a target of George Zimmerman.

Because the youth seemed “suspect” to him, Zimmerman, a member of an armed neighborhood watch group, decided to follow him. The situation then apparently escalated, and Zimmerman and shot and killed Martin.

Police summoned to the scene first checked whether the victim had a criminal record. Zimmerman, who claimed to have acted in self-defense, was allowed to walk free, in accordance with Florida law, as gun laws in the state are — even by American standards — particularly “generous.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US Physician Kim Voted World Bank Head

The World Bank has chosen public health expert Jim Yong Kim of the US as its new president. The South Korean-born physician will assume the top post at the international development agency in July. The World Bank announced on Monday that Kim had been chosen to lead the Washington-based institution. Kim, 52, will replace Robert Zoellick, who is stepping down after a one five-year term. He is currently head of Dartmouth College in the US state of New Hampshire.

His nomination by President Barack Obama came as a surprise. As a physician and pioneer in HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis treatment in the developing world, he was an unorthodox choice. In the past, political, economic and legal figures have led the bank. The choice of Kim cements the tradition of an American leading the 187-nation development agency. Developing countries had unsuccessfully lobbied to have one of their own named president.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US Vigilant in Fight Against Chocolate Eggs

Bringing Kinder Surprise eggs into the US can incur a fine of hundreds of dollars because the famous chocolates with toys inside are illegal there under a 1938 law. Seizures of the eggs have doubled since 2010, but egg-lovers are now petitioning for the ban to be lifted.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Canada


Thousands Visit New Mosque

Thousands of Hamiltonians, most Muslims but many not, came out to celebrate the city’s newest and largest mosque Friday. And as the guests flooded into the main prayer hall at the Hamilton Mountain Masjid, Kamran Bhatti was especially emotional. This mosque — the first in the city to be built from the ground up — had been a dream of his father’s, who moved to Hamilton from Pakistan in the 1970s. Looking around the room, he said his story is special but not unique. “There are 3,000 owners of this place, 3,000 personal connections to this place,” said Bhatti, a spokesperson for the Muslim Association of Hamilton. Last Friday, it was a full house. More than 3,500 took advantage of the statutory holiday to come out for prayers at the mosque. This week, more curious faces — many from outside the Muslim community — gathered to celebrate the milestone. Worshippers and visitors alike strolled around, admiring the finished product.

Sabeeha Quader was just thrilled. The 29-year-old woman has called Hamilton home for two years, and has seen how much this project means to the city. “It’s just a really nice feeling to have a facility that can accommodate so many people,” she said. “Just the diversity of this community … so many new faces coming in and out of these doors.” In his sermon Friday, Imam Hamid Slimi spoke of the undeniable excitement in the air. “No one doubts there is a mood in this masjid today … a spirit of happiness, of celebration … a spirit rarely seen except on these occasions like Ramadan, weddings and new birth.” The mosque fell silent only for the sermon and prayers, and then a buzz quickly filled the space as people toured the new facilities.

The old Stone Church Road East mosque was based in a former racquetball club on the site that held 500 people. Now, thousands can worship there. A special mezzanine was built upstairs for the women with additional areas for children. On the main floor are a ‘wadou’ or washing area, conference and board rooms, a community centre and a kitchen.

But beyond the physical improvements, Friday was all about community. Hamilton is home to 30,000 Muslims from 35 nationalities. There are seven mosques across the city. Khadija Krichel moved to Hamilton from Morocco in 1978. She was thrilled to see the new space, but more than anything, “I’m just so happy because everyone is here to share it.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


British Library Buys $14.3m Ancient Gospel

The British Library has paid 9 million pounds (US$14.3 million) to acquire the St. Cuthbert Gospel, a remarkably well-preserved survivor of seventh-century Britain described by the library as the oldest European book to survive fully intact.

The palm-sized book, a manuscript copy of the Gospel of John in Latin, was bought from the British branch of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits), the library said Tuesday.

The book measures 96 mm (3.8 inches) by 136 mm (5.4 inches) and has an elaborately tooled red leather cover. It comes from the time of St. Cuthbert, who died in 687, and it was discovered inside his coffin when it was opened in 1104 at Durham Cathedral.

The British Library said the artifact is one of the world’s most important books.

“To look at this small and intensely beautiful treasure from the Anglo-Saxon period is to see it exactly as those who created it in the seventh century would have seen it,” said the library’s chief executive, Lynne Brindley.

“The exquisite binding, the pages, even the sewing structure survive intact, offering us a direct connection with our forebears 1300 years ago,” she added.

Cuthbert’s coffin arrived in Durham after monks had removed it from the island of Lindisfarne, 330 miles (530 kilometers) north of London, to protect the remains from Viking raiders in the ninth and 10th centuries. The book will be displayed at the British Library in London and then in Durham, northeast England, next year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Authorities Accused of Blindness on ‘Counter-Jihad’

Security services in Europe have neglected the kind of right-wing extremism which inspired Norway’s Anders Behring Breivik to commit mass murder, a UK-based rights group has warned.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Pledges Extra Funds for Energy in Developing Nations

(BRUSSELS) — The European Union vowed fresh funds Monday to help developing nations provide sustainable energy to 500 million people by 2030.

“Today, while one part of the planet lives in the digital era and in the times of digital communication, the other part has still no access to basic electricity, power or energy,” said European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso.

“Being in the dark every day is the tragic reality of 1.3 billion people in the world today.”

Speaking at a sustainable energy summit attended by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, Barroso pledged 50 million euros ($65 million) over two years for technical assistance and said EU nations would seek hundreds of millions of euros more to support investments in sustainable energy for developing countries.

“With today’s strong pledge that we will assist developing countries in providing energy access for 500 million people by 2030, we are demonstrating our own commitment and hope that others will join us in making sure that by 2030, energy access is no longer a privilege but the right of all.”

The UN chief welcomed what he described as “a very ambitious initiative” in the run-up to the UN Conference on Sustainable Development in Rio in June.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fuels From Waste: A New EU Project

(AGI) Brussels — Reducing the quantity of waste sent to European dumps is the aim of a new project on bioenergy, that has just started and is funded by the Eu. The project ‘BioenNW’ (‘Delivering Local Bioenergy to NW Europe’), puts together researchers from Belgium, Germany, France, The Netherlands and UK, who will study how waste materials, like straw, wood, algae and sewage could become sources of biofuels, calcelling out the dependance on the production of food crops to be used for producing fuels. The details nof the initiative were published in the Cordis newslatter. BioenNW is partly funded, with 4 million Euros, as part of the INTERREG IVB North Western Europe of the European fund for regional development (EFRD) .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Germany: Vegan Sex Shop Offers Responsible Romping

A Berlin sex shop has taken clear-conscience consumerism to an intimate new high, with organic, vegan sex aids. “Other Nature” a women-orientated eco-friendly sex shop offers organic lubricants, silicon vibrators, and whips recycled from old bike tyres as an alternative to mainstream sex shop wares.

Their manifesto is a brave one — to bring customers away from big name sex shops, which they believe sell poor quality, potentially hazardous sex toys. They say fun, healthy sex can be environmentally responsible.

A wide range of dildos, hand selected in every for colour and size are set out across the counter and they all have one thing in common — nothing was created using animal products, nor was any ingredient tested on animals. Because, unlike organic foods, there is no official framework for assessing intimate toys, the women check personally that everything they sell passes strict guidelines.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Kurds Try to Hijack Rhine Pleasure Boat

Ten members of the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK) attempted to hijack a pleasure boat on the Rhine in Cologne, western Germany, on Sunday, hoping to use loudspeakers to propagate their manifesto. The pleasure boat was on a tranquil, Sunday afternoon cruise when suddenly half the approximately 20 passengers turned out to be Kurdish activists in disguise.

Some of the group shoved the boat’s captain and driver to one side. “They demanded that the crew steer the boat along the bank, and wanted to read out their manifesto through loudspeakers,” police spokesman Bruno Ethen told Der Spiegel magazine.

No-one was injured in the incident, and the activists, who were unarmed, have been interviewed and are expected to be released on bail, according to police.

In September last year more than 30 PKK sympathizers briefly occupied the studios of commercial TV channel RTL in Cologne. They tried to get the broadcaster to air a report on captive PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan who was arrested in Germany in 1999 and deported to Turkey.

The PKK is fighting an armed struggle in eastern Turkey in an attempt to establish an autonomous Kurdistan and greater rights for Kurds in Turkey. It is listed as a terrorist organization by the US and the European Union.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Chinese Names in Top Ten of Milanese Surnames

(AGI) Rome — Brambilla is no longer synonymous with being Milanese, which has been replaced by Hu. Rossi still sits at the top of the list, but Hu now comes second in the register.

That is not the only surprise. The first ten most common names at the Municipality of Milan’s registry are Chinese, which shows how the demographics of the city are changing. The Milanese name Brambilla has slipped to 9th place and Fumagalli to 30th. It was very different 25 years ago with not a single foreign name among the top 30 names against 4 today. The only name that still dominates is Rossi. The top ten Milanese names are; 1) Rossi 4,379, 2) Hu 3,694, 3) Colombo 3,685, 4) Ferrari 3,568, 5) Bianchi 2,784, 6) Russo 2,337, 7) Villa 1905, 8) Chen 1,625, 9) Brambilla 1,536, 10) Zhou 1,439.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Rome’s Famous Gelato Finds New Ways to Tease the Tastebuds

Italian capital is heaven for ice-cream lovers

(ANSA) — Rome, April 13 — Dripping with chocolate, covered with strawberries or laden with cream, there is a gelato to tease the tastebuds of every ice-cream lover. It’s no surprise to learn that thousands of foreign tourists who come to Rome take time out to scour the cobbled streets of the Italian capital in search of the perfect gelato.

Historians seem to be divided about whether it was the Greeks or the Egyptians who pioneered the icy delight. Some even claim that Alexander the Great had holes dug along his ancient battle routes that were then filled with snow and fruity flavours, while the Chinese are rumoured to have had their own version of flavoured ice. But most experts agree that the Italians have perfected the art of gelato making and have exported their expertise around the world. Giolitti (Via degli Uffici del Vicario 40, near the Pantheon) was established in 1890 by Giuseppe and Bernadina Giolitti and is a Rome institution. After three generations it still delivers the same authentic flavours today and attracts thousands of children and adults. Among the gelateria’s legendary ice creams is the Coppa Giolitti, a sinful blend of chocolate ice-cream, custard and chilled zabaglione, all topped off with cream and hazelnut shavings. The more eclectic customers can be seen mixing classical flavours such as rich stracciatella with a scoop of lemon or chocolate combined with strawberry. Across town exhausted tourists leave the Vatican Museum and line up outside The Old Bridge (Viale dei Bastioni di Michelangelo 5, just off Piazza Risorgimento). This tiny gelateria makes truly delicious ice-cream, dishes out generous, creamy portions of caramel, nutella, coffee, pine nuts and refreshing fruit — all for less than two euros. And, since it’s made with cream and not milk, it won’t even drip. The highly-recommended La Gelateria dei Gracchi (in Via dei Gracchi 272), offers luscious combinations such as peach and fig, apple and cinnamon as well as pear and ricotta cheese. An alternative to the traditional aperitivo is their popular Cubano, made with rum and chocolate ice-cream. The popular Italian food guide, Gambero Rosso, recommends La Gelateria del Gracchi as well as Il Gelato (Viale dell’Aeronautica 105) in the EUR distric in the south of Rome.

The latter offers over 100 flavours, even catering for those with more exotic taste, offering eccentric tastes such as celery and peperoni or an espresso and sambuca ice cream. In the trendy San Crispino (Via della Panetteria 42) back in Rome’s historic centre tourists will find no cones as the ice cream is always served in coppe, or cups. Service isn’t always with a smile and it’s a little more expensive, but it is a still a legend and prides itself on its quality and home-made ingredients. Established in the 1800s, it is said that the preparation of the ice-cream still follows the secret traditions of an ancient recipe once popular with the 16th-century Italian noblewoman and French Queen consort, Catherine de Medici. Al Settimo Gelo (Via Vodice 21, close to Piazza Mazzini) produces a range of exceptional ice creams and sorbets. Sorbet flavours include chestnut, date, mandarin and even hibiscus flavours. Apart from their popular tiramisu and a Sicilian cream gelati, this gelateria creates chilli chocolate, bergamot, ginger and cardamom flavours and an unusual Iranian ice-cream, made with saffron and rose water. The Gelateria Artigianale Corona (Largo Arenula 27, Piazza Argentina) is also regarded as an ice-cream innovator serving refreshing scoops of lemon and basil and even biscuit flavours.

For a taste of Brazil, you can try their Pitanga, made from bittersweet Brazilian fruits or their dark chocolate gelato, made from Amazon nuts. Others popular gelaterie include: Vice (Via Gregorio VII 385) specialising in ricotta, orange and chocolate mixes and Fata Morgana (Via Lago di Lesina 9) with its irresistible Muller Thurgau wild strawberry and Kentucky chocolate (sprinkled with coffee, liquorice and tobacco) flavours. According to the Istituto del Gelato, a staggering 95% of Italians have a soft spot for their national dessert, and 56% confess they eat it at least once a week in summer. In 2010 some 589 million portions of take-away cups and cones were sold throughout Italy (an average of around 4 kilos of ice cream for every Italian), with more ice-cream sold on Sunday than any other day of the week

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Stripper ‘Nuns’ Danced for Berlusconi: Trial Witness

Strippers in nun costumes danced in front of Silvio Berlusconi at his villa, a witness told a Milan court where the former Italian prime minister is on trial for allegedly having sex with an underage prostitute.

Model Imane Fadil said today that the first time she went to a party she was given 2,000 euros ($2,600) in cash by Berlusconi, who told her: “Don’t be offended.”

That night she said she saw two young women in nun costumes with “black tunics, white veils and crosses” stripping in front of the then prime minister.

One of the two was Nicole Minetti, now a regional councillor for Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party in Milan, Moroccan-born Fadil said.

She said Minetti and the other woman ended up staying the night at the villa near Milan and alleged that women who stayed were paid more for sex.

Fadil said she had heard of Berlusconi having sex for money with at least two of the women invited to his parties, Italian media reported.

Fadil also said she had come under pressure from a mysterious man to go back to the villa last year when the Berlusconi trial had already started.

“A man stopped near my house and gave me an untraceable phone to organise a visit to Arcore. But I didn’t want to,” she told the courtroom.

Berlusconi is charged with having sex with an underage prostitute, Karima El-Mahroug, and then allegedly abusing his powers by getting police to release her when she was arrested for theft so that his crime would not be revealed.

El-Mahroug, a dancer who was 17 when she allegedly had sex with the then prime minister, is better known by her stage name of “Ruby the Heart Stealer”.

Berlusconi rejects all charges and El-Mahroug denies having sex with him.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Italy: Witness Tells of ‘Incriminating’ Berlusconi Sex Tape

‘Ruby could have taken revenge’

(ANSA) — Milan, Aril 16 — A new witness told a Milan court Monday she had heard that Karima ‘Ruby’ El Mahroug, the underage Moroccan-born runaway accused of taking money for sex with Silvio Berlusconi, has compromising photographs and videos of the former premier. “(Ruby) could have taken revenge,” said Imane Fadil, a Morroccan model who says she refused offers to attend Berlusconi’s alleged ‘bunga bunga’ sex parties. Fadil said in a deposition that Barbara Faggioli, another guest at Berlusconi’s home, told her that Ruby “had very compromising videos and photos of the parties”. Berlusconi is currently on trial for allegedly paying for sex with Ruby after several of the parties at his villa at Arcore outside Milan and allegedly coercing police into releasing her after an unrelated theft claim to hush up the fact. Fadil, who is listed as an injured party in a separate case involving three people who allegedly provided Berlusconi with prostitutes, is the first witness to testify that she turned down offers to participate in the parties. She told the court she first heard of Ruby two years ago from Faggioli, who “was nervous about this girl who could get Berlusconi and all of us in trouble”. Fadil said that Berlusconi personally offered her an envelope with four 500-euro notes inside to “stay over” the first time she visited his villa in Arcore north of Milan. “There were specific handouts for girls who stayed the night. They got the most. They did everything they could to stay,” she said. Fadil recalled one evening in which Faggioli allegedly engaged in a strip-tease while dressed as a nun along with Nicole Minetti, Berlusconi’s former dental hygienist who is now a Lombardy regional councillor for his People of Freedom (PdL) party and is one of the three people accused of supplying the premier with prostitutes. “Minetti organized the evenings,” said Fadil, who described the performance as a sort of “sexy dance in the bunga-bunga room,” with Minetti and Faggioli both dressed in “black habits with a white cross on the headdress”. The other two accused of supplying prostitutes are bankrupt talent scout Lele Mora and long-time Berlusconi news anchor Emilio Fede, a close friend of the media magnate’s.

Fadil, who said she did not come forward sooner out of fear, said Fede told her to keep quiet. “Fede told me that I could not speak about what I had seen at Arcore. He told me ‘I’ll take care of it’,” she said. Fadil also testified that she was “pressured” to go back to Arcore as recently as May and June of last year, after the current trial of the former premier had begun. “A man met me close to my home to give me an untraceable telephone in order to organize meetings in Arcore, but I didn’t want to,” she said. Prosecutors say Berlusconi had sex with 33 prostitutes at his villa over the course of several evenings. Berlusconi, who says his parties were innocent and “elegant” affairs, has stressed that both he and Ruby deny having sex, and has quipped “33 women in two months is too many even for someone who likes pretty girls, like me”.

He claims to be the victim of biased prosecutors who have allegedly been conducting a witch-hunt against him since he entered politics in 1994.

The charge of having sex with an underage prostitute carries a jail term of up to three years, and abuse of office 12 years.

The Ruby trial, which opened last April , is expected to run for years, with dozens of witnesses called by the prosecution and defence including George Clooney and soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fugitive in Berlusconi Sex Scandal Arrested After Months on Run

Rome, 16 April (AKI) — A fugitive accused of involvement in corruption and a sex scandal involving billionaire Italian politician Silvio Berlusconi was arrested Monday after six months on the run.

Ex-director and editor of Socialist newspaper Avanti! Valter Lavitola at 6:40 am local time was arrested at Rome’s Leonardo Da Vinci airport upon the arrival of his flight from Buenos Aires, Argentina before being transferred to a prison in Naples.

Prosecutors in September issued an arrest warrant for Lavitola for suspicion of having the job of passing hush money from Berlusconi money to Bari businessman Giampaolo Tarantini and his wife Angela Devenuto. The couple allegedly were blackmailing the former prime minister over a sex scandal involving prostitutes investigators say Tarantini provided for Berlusconi’s sex parties.

On 24 August Lavitola allegedly telephoned Berlusconi from Sofia , Bulgaria to ask him if he should come home to answer prosecutors’ questions.”What should I do, return and clear everything up?” he said, according to excerpts of wiretaps released Thursday by left-leaning weekly L’Espresso magazine and republished on the front page of many of Italy’s major newspapers . “Stay where you are,” Berlusconi advised him, according to the published transcripts.

Blackmail charges against Tarantini and Devenuto have been dropped. Prosecutors now say Berlusconi paid money to Tarantini to offer false testimony that Berlusconi didn’t realize the women were prostitutes.

Berlusconi is on trial in Milan for allegedly paying a minor for sex.

All the accused say they have done nothing wrong.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega Nord Money Used to Buy Diamonds, Investigators

(AGI) Milan — Rosy Mauro, Piergiorgio Stiffoni and Belsito may have used Lega Nord money to buy 400,000 euro worth of diamonds. It emerges from ongoing investigations into the Lega Nord’s alleged financial misdealing. Investigators said 200,000 euro of party money were also spent to buy 5 kg of gold ingots.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: De Gregorio’s Accountant, He Was Paid to Defect to the PDL

(AGI) Naples- De Gregorio’s defection from the IDV, for which he was first elected in 2006, to the PDL, was “handsomely rewarded”. The senator’s accountant, Andrea Vetromile, who was heard on 29 February this year as a person informed of the facts, revealed this to Naples’ magistrates. “It was Lavitola who endorsed Sergio De Gregorio with Berlusconi. De Gregorio is a former socialist like Lavitola”. The Senator was due to stand in 2005 on the Forza Italia lists, but Fulvio Martusciello, “didn’t think well of him and managed to exclude him.” De Gregorio stood with Di Pietro and was elected with about 80,000 votes. “Once elected he went over to the ranks of the centre-right. So it was Lavitola, with his strong personal relationship with Berlusconi, who made this agreement happen. I heard Lavitola endorsing the defection operation … I would also like to point out that the defection agreement was very ‘lavishly remunerated …. (omitted). Also it was the job of Lavitola like De Gregorio to ferry many more possible MPs from the centre-left to the centre-right.” .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Mentally-Disabled Boy in Italy Denied Communion for “Not Understanding” Rite

Near the northern city of Ferrara, a priest has denied communion to a mentally-disabled child, saying that it can only be offered to those who “understand the mystery” of the rite. The parents are taking their case to the European Court of Human Rights — and the Vatican.

Giacomo Galeazzi

Controversy has erupted both inside and outside the Catholic Church after a parish priest in northern Italy refused to offer communion to a disabled child. Father Piergiorgio Zaghi of the Immaculate Conception church in Porto Garibaldi, a village near Ferrara, denied the sacrament at Easter mass, saying that the mentally-disabled boy was unable to “understand the mystery of the Eucharist.”

The parents of the boy in the Emilia-Romagna region have taken their case both to the European Court of Human Rights and to the higher authorities at the Holy See in Rome. Antonio Marziale, a sociologist and head of the Children’s Rights Observatory as well as a consultant for the Italian Parliamentary Committee for Childhood, denounced the denial of the rite as “cultural obscurantism from the Middle Ages.”

Parishioners are divided between those who share the priest’s view and those who disagree, and are calling for Pope Benedict XVI to weigh in and defend the right of the mentally disabled to receive the sacrament. A boy who attends catechism classes with the disabled child wrote a letter to the priest: “If he was with us, it would be a great joy for him, and we would see the actual value of Communion.”…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



‘Muslims Being Discriminated in UK’

London mayoral candidate Ken Livingstone has called on the Londoners to be united after stressing that it is the Muslims’ turn to be discriminated against. Labour party’s candidate for mayor of London declared that he would like to see Muslim residents of the capital be represented in a “better balance.” Livingstone, who is competing to take back his former post from Conservative mayor Boris Johnson, said that Britain’s “right-wing politicians pander to bigotry.” He insisted that in 1906 Daily Mail’s front pages mostly covered the headlines about “Jews bring crime and disaster to Britain.” However the headlines then were about the blacks, Irish and later the lesbians and gays. He accused the right-wing politicians of aiming to show that there has always been an enemy in the society. “I remember the deputy leader of the Tory group at the GLC, when we launched our lesbian and gay policies, said to me ‘Every time I make a homophobic speech in Ruislip-Northwood I get an extra 1,000 votes’. It is the Muslims’ turn now. Don’t be divided,” he said. “No Muslims ever came to me and said ‘I want homosexuality banned’. Muslims came to this city to flee oppressive culture. They came here so their children could have democracy, that they could achieve their best.” Meanwhile, while visiting Finsbury Park Mosque last month, Livingstone promised to turn the capital into a “beacon” for the words of the Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him.) he considered Prophet’s last sermon as “an agenda for all humanity.” He insisted that he wanted to spend the next four years ensuring that “every non-Muslim in London knows and understands [its] words and message.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nordic Populists Search Souls After July Attacks

Right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik’s deadly attacks in Norway sent shock waves through the serene Nordic lands, rocking their populist parties and prompting at least one to clean up its act. In the nearly nine months since Breivik massacred 77 people on July 22nd, such parties have experienced several setbacks amid accusations their criticism of immigration and Islam helped pave the way for the tragedy.

“There has been a very infected debate. It is a very uncomfortable feeling to be accused of such a thing,” Mattias Karlsson, party secretary for the Sweden Democrats, told AFP.

In the 1,500-page manifesto he published online shortly before the attacks, Breivik claimed to be on a crusade against multi-culturalism and the “Muslim invasion” of Europe.

He hailed the sentiments expressed by Norway’s Progress Party, the Sweden Democrats, the Danish People’s Party (DPP) and members of the Finns Party.

Horrified to find themselves mentioned in the document and to find the confessed killer voicing support for some of their cherished ideas, the parties immediately distanced themselves from Breivik.

“I resent everything that he stands for. I resent his actions and will not be associated with this guy. Really, I will not,” Progress Party chief Siv Jensen told AFP shortly after the attacks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Anders Behring Breivik: The Boy Next Door Turned Serial Killer

Anders Behring Breivik came across as your average guy but behind his courteous exterior lurked one of history’s most gruesome killers, fuelled by a hatred of multiculturalism and Islam.

Tall, blond and with piercing blue eyes, the 33-year-old right wing extremist has confessed to killing 77 people on July 22, 2011, when he gunned down youths attending a Labour party camp after setting off a bomb outside the government offices in Oslo. The massacre was “a preventive attack against state traitors” guilty of “ethnic cleansing” due to their support for a multicultural society, Breivik told a court hearing in February. His trial opens in Oslo on Monday.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway: Terror Trial Gets Underway in Oslo

WITH VIDEO FROM THE TRIAL: Confessed Norwegian terrorist Anders Behring Breivik showed predictable disregard for the Norwegian court system when his trial began on Monday, leading off with a Nazi salute and objecting to the court’s legitimacy. Many of those involved otherwise praised the “quiet, dignified” nature of proceedings on opening day, while Breivik showed no emotion when forced to listen to the details of all 77 of the murders he committed last summer.

Breivik, well-groomed and wearing a dark suit and tie, was handcuffed when he entered the Oslo City Court Monday morning. Police removed his handcuffs just before the trial began, and Breivik immediately made a Nazi salute to those assembled in the packed courtroom. When the court took a break, Breivik refused to stand when the judicial panel hearing his case left the courtroom.

Judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen began by introducing the prosecution and defense counsel, the judiciary panel hearing the case (two professonal judges including herself, three lay judges and two reserve lay judges), the court-appointed psychiatrists and, finally, the defendant. Breivik immediately objected, saying he did not recognize the legitimacy of the court because its “mandate” comes from “political parties that support multi-culturalism” in Norway.

Breivik formally identified himself by name and birthdate and corrected Arntzen when she suggested he was unemployed. He claimed he was a skribent (writer) and was working from prison.

Breivik also objected to Arntzen herself, claiming she is a “personal friend” of Hanne Harlem of the Labour Party, a former Norwegian justice minister and younger sister of former Labour Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland. The party and Norway’s Labour-led government were Breivik’s foremost targets when he bombed government headquarters and carried out a massacre at Labour’s youth summer camp on July 22.

Breivik’s objections were, however, deemed “informal” by his own defense counsel and thus merely taken under advisement by the court. He then had to listen, along with everyone else, to the formal reading of the charges against him. It took prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh nearly 90 minutes to name all 77 of his victims, where they were when attacked, and how they died. While some family members of the victims quietly cried in their seats inside the courtroom, Breivik showed no emotion, refusing to look at the prosecutor as she spoke and demonstrably fixing his gaze on the table in front of him.

When asked by Arntzen whether he would plead guilty to all or any of the charges, Breivik responded by saying he acknowledged the factual evidence but declared himself innocent of punishable crimes, adding that he acted out of necessity and could justify his attacks.

Breivik will be allowed to defend and explain his attacks over the next five days starting on Tuesday. Many Norwegians, including the head of the Labour youth organization AUF and the spokesman for a victims’ group, have complained that Breivik will be given a public platform to spread his anti-Muslim ideology. Others, from legal experts to Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, agree that Breivik’s testimony will be difficult to hear but that it’s “absolutely necessary” he be accorded the same rights as all other criminal defendants in the Norwegian legal system.

“I can understand that many feel he’s getting too much attention,” Stoltenberg told Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK) early Monday morning. “But it’s important that a full court case moves forward.” Stoltenberg and other state officials argue Breivik’s trial “must be as normal as possible.”

It continued Monday with introductory remarks by the prosecution and defense counsel, including an overview of the events of July 22 and an overview of Breivik’s life from 1995 to 2006 and then from 2006 to 2011. The trial is scheduled to run until June 22.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Film Unleashed Tears From Breivik

SEE THE VIDEO: Terror defendant Anders Behring Breivik displayed little if any emotion when his trial started in the Oslo City Court on Monday. He broke into tears, though, when prosecutors showed the court a 12-minute propaganda film Breivik had made about his own battle against multi-culturalism.

Breivik earlier in the day had been stoic, showing no emotion at all when prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh spent around an hour-and-a-half reading off the names of all his victims and how they died during his attacks of July 22.

On a few occasions he smiled, otherwise he barely flinched when legal proceedings got underway.

Just before the court recessed for lunch, however, Engh’s co-counsel Svein Holden made introductory remarks including an overview of Breivik’s life from 1995 until last year, when he bombed government headquarters and massacred 69 persons attending a Labour Party summer camp. He killed a total of 77 persons.

Breivik has repeatedly said he has no regrets, and he showed no remorse at his custody hearings either. But when Holden thought the court should see a short propaganda film Breivik made that was related to his fears of Muslim dominance in Norway and Europe, Breivik started to cry.

Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK), one of two broadcast outlets allowed to air Monday’s proceedings, had opted against showing the propaganda film itself. NRK cut back in with video from the courtroom, however, when Breivik’s eyes welled up with tears.

A psychiatrist following the proceedings was surprised by the first sign of emotion from Breivik, but suggested it indicates that he is “extremely pre-occupied with himself and his own cause.” She also believed the video showed signs of narcissistic tendencies. An NRK commentator notes that Breivik’s tears were among the “most dramatic” events to come out of Monday’s proceedings.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik’s Tears Flow on First Day of Trial

Anders Behring Breivik, whose trial opened on Monday for the killing of 77 people in Norway’s twin attacks last July, welled up in tears as the court viewed a film he posted online the day of the attacks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Police Arrest Three Over Slain Malmö Teen

Three teenagers have been arrested in Malmö, in southern Sweden, under suspicion of the murder of 15-year-old Ardiwan Samir in the Rosengård district on New Year’s Eve. “We are happy that the police have arrested them, but it isn’t going to bring Ardiwan back,” said his cousin Catrin Fadhul, to daily Aftonbladet, when she heard of the arrest.

According to the police, all the suspects are under 18 but over 15 years old. A warrant had been issued for their arrest a few days ago and they were brought in by police on Monday morning. All three are under suspicion of murder or accessory to murder, according to a police statement.

Samir died shortly after arrival at the hospital after having sustained gunshot wounds to the head and chest while out enjoying the fireworks. Despite a number of revellers being out and about at the time of the shooting, it was initially difficult for investigating officers to find witnesses willing to come forward to discuss the incident.

“We have interrogated a large number of people in this case. Motives have been investigated. We have now arrested three people and they have been taken to the police station at Davidshall,” said Bertil Isberg of the police during a police press conference on Monday.

The murder, the fourth to be committed in Malmö over the course of a month, was followed by two additional shootings in a wave of violent crime that hit the city. There were also several demonstrations in Malmö against the growing violence in the area following the incidents, one of which was held in connection to the funeral of the dead 15-year-old.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tax Deal Rewards Germans With Swiss Bank Accounts

Berlin wants to make life easier for German tax evaders. Under a new agreement, those who have hidden their assets in Switzerland can now make them legal while remaining anonymous. But some experts question whether the move is constitutional.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Taxes Never So High in Germany Since 1995, 10,000 Eur. Each

(AGI) Berlin — The German Revenue system is ever more greedy.

According to data provided by the Ministry of Work, an average German worker paid around 9,943 Euros in personal income tax and social contributions in 2011, 553 euros more than the previous year, an absolute record since 1995. The heaviest rise was for the personal income tax, which increased 300 Euros for each German taxpayer, while the average net income was 17,650 Euros, 16 Euros less compared to the previous year 2010.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



UK: “If You Look at What Labour Did to Our Country Why on Earth Would You Let Them Anywhere Near Your Council?”

by Tim Montgomerie

Back from his overseas trip (for which the Prime Minister made an excellent defence in yesterday’s Sunday Telegraph) David Cameron will today launch the Conservative Party’s local election campaign. His key message is the one at the top of this post:

“If you look at what Labour did to our country why on Earth would you let them anywhere near your council?”

A very, very good question.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin Faces Death Penalty in Bangladesh

Andrew Gilligan, in the Daily Telegraph reports:

Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, director of Muslim spiritual care provision in the NHS, a trustee of the major British charity Muslim Aid and a central figure in setting up the Muslim Council of Britain, fiercely denies any involvement in a number of abductions and “disappearances” during Bangladesh’s independence struggle in the 1970s.

He says the claims are “politically-motivated” and false. However, Mohammad Abdul Hannan Khan, the chief investigator for the country’s International Crimes Tribunal, said: “There is prima facie evidence of Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin being involved in a series of killings of intellectuals. We have made substantial progress in the case against him. There is no chance that he will not be indicted and prosecuted. We expect charges in June.”Mr Mueen-Uddin could face the death penalty if convicted.

Readers of Harry’s Place will be well aware of the nature of the evidence against Mr Mueen-Uddin, which has been extensively covered on this and other blogs. It was the subject of a documentary on Channel 4, and has also been reported on by The Guardian. On each occasion that such allegations were reported, Carter Ruck would swoop, and the offending article swiftly removed, pending litigation.

It is an inevitable peculiarity of any system of libel law that, the more serious the allegation, the more serious the potential libel. Where facts are easily proved, that is no deterrent to reporting of the evidence. But where the alleged wrong-doing has taken place overseas, the costs of defending any litigation make such matters effectively unreportable. It is, perhaps, for that reason that Mr Mueen-Uddin managed to establish, in the United Kingdom, a British ‘Jamaat-e-Islami’: the organisation which ran death squads in Bangladesh in the 1970s, that murdered intellectuals, patriots and democrats. Here is a snapshot of the organisational reach of the man:

Since moving to the UK in the early 1970s, Mr Mueen-Uddin has taken British citizenship and built a successful career as a community activist and Muslim leader.

In 1989 he was a key leader of protests against the Salman Rushdie book, The Satanic Verses. Around the same time he helped to found the extremist Islamic Forum of Europe, Jamaat-e-Islami’s European wing, which believes in creating a sharia state in Europe and in 2010 was accused by a Labour minister, Jim Fitzpatrick, of infiltrating the Labour Party. Tower Hamlets’ directly-elected mayor, Lutfur Rahman, was expelled from Labour for his close links with the IFE. Until 2010 Mr Mueen-Uddin was vice-chairman of the controversial East London Mosque, controlled by the IFE, in which capacity he greeted Prince Charles when the heir to the throne opened an extension to the mosque. He was also closely involved with the Muslim Council of Britain, which has been dominated by the IFE. He was chairman and remains a trustee of the IFE-linked charity, Muslim Aid, which has a budget of £20 million. He has also been closely involved in the Markfield Institute, the key institution of Islamist higher education in the UK.

Here, from the Daily Mail, is a photograph that says it all [Mueen-Uddin with Prince Charles]

It goes without saying that Mr Mueen-Uddin’s lawyer is Toby Cadman, who will also be familiar to readers of this site as a speaker at Jamaat-e-Islami and Muslim Brotherhood dominated rallies. In this instance, however, his activities are entirely respectable. He is representing a man who is awaiting charges on a serious criminal matter. Moreover, the criticisms that Toby Cadman makes of the conduct of the International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh are wholly proper and, indeed, correct. There is no way that Mr Mueen-Uddin should be extradited to Bangladesh, and I would oppose and indeed campaign against any such extradition myself, despite what I know about this man. It is fair to say, sadly, that Bangladesh has pointlessly and stupidly vandalised a process which ought to have brought justice and closure to the victims of the Bangladesh genocide.

Notwithstanding the dismal failure of the Bangladesh process, it does appear to be the case that it is now possible to write about, and discuss, the evidence against Mr Mueen-Uddin. I encourage you to do so. If these allegations are true, they throw a stark light on this man’s legacy in the United Kingdom. He left his home country, wrecked by religious extremism, sectarianism and bloodsheed. So we should be wholly unsurprised at what he has achieved, here.

[Reader comment by billy on 15 April 2012 at 10:18 pm.]

The New York Times wrote about him in 1972

“to his fellow reporters on the Bengali-language paper where he worked, Chowdhury Mueenuddin was a pleasant, well-mannered and intelligent young man…there was nothing exceptional about him except perhaps that he often received telephone calls from the leader of a right-wing Moslem political party. But, investigations in the last few days show that those calls were significant. For Mr. Mueenuddin has been identified as the head of a secret, commando like organization of fantatic Moslems that murdered several hundred prominent Bengali professors, doctors, lawyer and journalists in a Dhaka brick yard. Dressed in black sweaters and khaki pants, members of the group, known as Al-Badar, rounded up their victims on the last three nights of the war…Their goal, captured members have since said, was to wipe out all Bengali intellectuals who advocated independence from Pakistan and the creation a of a secular, non Moslem state.” More here: www.genocidebangladesh.org/fact-sheet-on-chowdhury-mueen-uddin/

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Evils of Secrecy in Our Family Courts

by Bruce Anderson

A few days ago, I was feeling complacent. Although I wrote that there were moments when we all felt that the country was going to the dogs, I was in too mellow a mood to mean it. A few hours later, no more complacency, and forget about moments. It was as if the United Kingdom had been renamed the United Kennels. Five fire engines and 25 firemen arrive at a pond to rescue a seagull. Why does it take 25 men to rescue one bird? I refer my honourable readers to the renaming of the UK, as mentioned above. There used to be some not especially funny jokes about how many Jewish American princesses it took to switch on a light-bulb. But there is a difference. In those jokes, the light bulb was turned on. In this true joke from the fire service of the United Kennels, 25 firemen stood there. For an hour. And did nothing. They decided that health and health and safety would not like it. Water can be wet.

[…]

Then we come to another story, where the mockery has to end. In the last few days, there has been a lot of debate about the question of secret trials for terrorist suspects, to protect intelligence sources. As usual, the argument comes down to the two contending Latin tags. Fiat justitia, ruat coeli and salus populi, suprema lex. “Let justuce be done, even if the heavens fall” and “the safety of the people is the supreme law”. In the course of that recent dispute, we have overlooked the fact that secret trials are already taking place in Britain: over 200 of them every week, in our so-called “family courts”. As a result of the trials, parents can be sentenced to lose their children: innocent children can be parted from their parents.

The defendants are denied many of the normal safeguards which they would enjoy if they were merely charged with armed robbery or murder. Hearsay evidence is admissible, which it would not be in a criminal trial. The prosecution — social services departments — can spend large sums on expert witnesses. Not only are the parents unable to counter this; there is the suggestion that in many cases, these experts have never actually seen the children concerned, and are simply relying on social workers’ reports. Expert witnesses are well paid.

It is easy to understand why this has happened. Those heart-rending photographs of Baby P, in the days when he could still stretch out his arms in the expectation of a cuddle, rather than to ward off a beating; none of us wants to think about the tortures which that little boy endured. All of us want to ensure that there will never be another Baby P. But safeguarding the innocent must not mean punishing the innocent. In order to prevent a repetition, social workers are seeking twice as many care orders as in 2008. Is this to protect children, or to protect themselves?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Anna Lindh Foundation: Deadline 2012 Call Extended

A total of 1.35 million funds, 50 projects to finance

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, APRIL 12 — The deadline for application to the Anna Lindh 2012 Call for project proposals has been extended to Thursday 19 April 2012 (16.00 Egypt time), to take into consideration the timing of local religious festivities.

The Call, worth a total of 1.35 million euros, is aimed at supporting projects that promote the mobilisation and empowerment of civil society. According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), around 50 projects are expected to be awarded through this call.

The duration of the project must be between a maximum of 12 consecutive months and a minimum of 8 consecutive months, and the duration of the implementation must fall within the period between 18 July 2012 and 18 October 2013. Applicants can download the guidelines of the call at http://grants.annalindh.org/guidelines. To apply for the Call for Proposals: http://grants.annalindh.org.

The Anna Lindh Foundation for Inter-Cultural Dialogue promotes knowledge, mutual respect and inter-cultural dialogue between the people of the Euro-Mediterranean region, working through a network of more than 3,000 civil society organisations in 43 countries. Its budget is co-funded by the EU and the EU member states.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Interview With German Intelligence Chief: ‘We Must be the First to go in and the Last to Leave’

The new head of Germany’s BND foreign intelligence service, Gerhard Schindler, 59, tells SPIEGEL he wants the agency to become more willing to take risks. He also says al-Qaida is becoming more influential in northern Africa and that the killing of Osama bin Laden hasn’t significantly weakened it.

SPIEGEL: A year ago a US special forces unit killed Osama bin Laden. What impact did that have on al-Qaida?

Schindler: That was definitely a blow to the structure of the core group. But we don’t have the impression that the terrorism network or its structures have become significantly weaker.

SPIEGEL: The Egyptian Ayman al-Zawahiri has officially claimed to be the successor to bin Laden. Is the doctor now the uncontested Number One?

Schindler: According to what we know, yes. Zawahiri had very much influence within the network even while Bin Laden was alive. Its structure hasn’t changed since then: with the core al-Qaida at the top and many branches for example in Iraq, in Yemen or in the Maghreb. They remain closely connected with each other.

SPIEGEL: So the fragmentation of al-Qaida is not a weakness but a strength?

Schindler: This network is highly flexible. Where the pressure becomes too great, al-Qaida withdraws. Where conditions are more favorable, it expands its activities. The terrorist threat has definitely increased in North Africa in recent months. In Nigeria the terrorist group Boko Haram has joined al-Qaida. In Somalia it’s the Shabab militia.

SPIEGEL: So the Islamist terrorist scene has moved?

Schindler: There are indeed signs of a relocation towards Somalia and into Yemen. We are also observing that al-Qaida is reorientating itself in North Africa. I think there are good conditions for a terrorist oreganization there: We have high unemployment in these countries, in some areas the population isn’t being provided with basic services and there aren’t proper security structures based on the rule of law .

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Morocco: EU, Nine Energy Efficiency Projects Launched

Challenge will be responding to a new demand by 2020

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, APRIL 12 — Nine energy efficiency pilot projects for buildings in the social housing and tourism sector were launched in Morocco. The projects are funded by the European Union, in partnership with Morocco’s National Agency for Development of Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (ADEREE), for a total amount of 83.5 million dirhams (around 7.5 million euros).

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), the energy sector plays a very important role in the partnership of the European Union with the Southern Mediterranean countries, and particularly Morocco, said a press release on the EU Delegation’s Facebook page. One of the biggest challenges that Morocco is facing now is a demand for energy that will double by 2020, which can be tackled by a rapid increase of its production capacity in renewable energy, and by adopting large-scale measures of energy efficiency to curb the growth of energy demand. Therefore, the promotion of pilot initiatives that will stimulate the interest of the players and test the results before applying them on a larger scale is essential. These nine projects “show that it is possible to make interesting energy savings with relatively small investments” said Ambassador Eneko Landaburu, Head of Eu delegation to Morocco. This launch fits into a larger partnership of the EU with Morocco, and in particular in a support programme to the national energy strategy that has been running since 2008 and that covers electricity, renewable energy, energy efficiency as well as the oil and gas sectors.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


IDF: Attack on Activist Doesn’t Represent Army Conduct

The IDF on Monday condemned an officer filmed striking a pro-Palestinian activist, but stated that the incident should not be taken out of context to misrepresent the values of the Israeli army.

According to a video, posted on YouTube by the International Solidarity Movement, Lt.-Col. Shalom Eisner, deputy commander of the Jordan Valley Brigade is seen taking his M-16 and slamming it in the face of a blond-haired activist. The demonstrator, a Danish national, falls to the ground and is carried away by fellow activists.

The protester, named as Andreas Ias, was treated in a Palestinian hospital for light injuries and told Israeli media on Monday that he was well.

“We were just walking slowly towards the soldiers, we were chanting Palestinian songs calling for the liberation of Palestine. I don’t believe that is a provocation,” he told Israel’s Channel 10 television.

Related: •Israel pleased ‘flytilla’ fails to disrupt airportSpeaking to Israel Radio, IDF Spokesman Brig.- Gen. Yoav Mordechai said that “these are harsh pictures, but I still can’t divorce the filmed episodes from the incident that lasted over an hour and which included violence by the anarchists and Palestinians.” At one point there were over 200 demonstrators, he said, indicating that the video was being taken out of context.

Nevertheless, Mordechai called the event “grave” and said it could not be taken as a representation of the values of the IDF.

The IDF’s OC Central Command Maj.-Gen. Nitzan Alon ordered the opening of an investigation into the incident. Upon receiving the preliminary results of the investigation Sunday night, Alon suspended Eisner until the completion of the probe.

In addition, the Military Advocate-General’s office decided to open a criminal investigation into the incident, which IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz said Sunday evening was not representative of the IDF’s ethics and morals and would be fully investigated and treated with the utmost gravity.

Yesha Council chairman Danny Dayan on Monday condemned what he termed an “overwhelming hysteria” in Israel over the incident. Speaking to Israel Radio, Dayan said that the officer who struck the activist should not have been judged by a 7-second video from an incident that lasted two hours. Moreover, the fact that the IDF had already condemned the officer just hours after the incident displays a loss of control on the part of the IDF and an irresponsible course of action taken by Israeli political leaders.

Dayan called the pro-Palestinian activist an enemy of Israel and implied that the Jewish state is more concerned with its image abroad than protecting its soldiers.

Dayan also condemned the Israeli political and military establishment for its “hysteria” over the incident, saying there was no reason for the prime minister, the defense minister, and other high-ranking political authorities to be involved.

Such violence by a senior officer is rare in the West Bank and soldiers serving in the West Bank are generally trained to show restraint during demonstrations or civil disturbances.

According to the Palestinians, the incident took place on Saturday during a cycling tour around the Jordan Valley by European, Israeli and Palestinian activists.

The Wafa news agency said that the IDF stopped the 250 participants along Road 90 near the West Bank village of al Ouja and refused to allow them to continue. When the cyclists refused, scuffles broke out. A number of the participants in the demonstration were injured and taken to hospital in Jericho. The IDF arrested a number of the activists.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Israel’s Other Temple: Research Reveals Ancient Struggle Over Holy Land Supremacy

The Jews had significant competition in antiquity when it came to worshipping Yahweh. Archeologists have discovered a second great temple not far from Jerusalem that predates its better known cousin. It belonged to the Samaritans, and may have been edited out of the Bible once the rivalry had been decided.

Clad in a gray coat, Aharon ben Ab-Chisda ben Yaacob, 85, is sitting in the dim light of his house. He strikes up a throaty chant, a litany in ancient Hebrew. He has a full beard and is wearing a red kippah on his head.

The man is a high priest — and his family tree goes back 132 generations. He says: “I am a direct descendent of Aaron, the brother of the prophet Moses” — who lived perhaps over 3,000 years ago.

Ab-Chisda is the spiritual leader of the Samaritans, a sect that is so strict that its members are not even allowed to turn on the heat on the Sabbath. They never eat shrimp and only marry among themselves. Their women are said to be so impure during menstruation that they are secluded in special rooms for seven days.

Outside, on the streets of Kiryat Luza, near Nablus, a cold wind is blowing. The village lies just below the summit of Mount Gerizim. There’s a school, two shops and a site for sacrifices. This is home to 367 Samaritans. It’s a small community.

Everyone here is required to attend religious services in the synagogue on Saturdays. “Every baby boy has to be circumcised precisely on the eighth day,” says the high priest — not beforehand, and not afterwards.

Most important of all: the sect only believes in the written legacy of Moses, the five books of the Pentateuch, also commonly known as the Torah. They reject all other scripture from the Bible.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Ashton Says Iran Nuclear Talks ‘Constructive’

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton over the weekend said talks with Iran on its nuclear programme had been “constructive and useful.” She is due to meet the Iranian delegation again in Baghdad on 23 May, with Iran recently subject to a series of EU-imposed economic sanctions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Both Sides Must Move or There Will be War’

Amid ongoing tension about Iran’s nuclear program, representatives from Tehran and six global powers held talks in Istanbul on Saturday. Despite cautious optimism from diplomats, German commentators warn on Monday that the specter of war still haunts the region.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Qatar: Multimedia Plan for Arab and Western Mutual Understanding

Sheikha Mozah presents Loghati (‘My language’) project

(ANSAmed) — ROME — To preserve and promote Arab cultural heritage and lead to greater mutual understanding between it and the West is the purpose that characterises much of the activity of Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser, president of the Qatar Foundation, who at Rome City Hall this afternoon presented the ‘Loghati’ project, which will share the rich heritage of the Arab world using multimedia and multilingual formats. This is an electronic communication platform developed by the Scientific and Technological Park of Qatar (STPQ), which is part of the Foundation chaired by the second wife of the Emir of Qatar, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, who is on an official visit to Italy. “At such a delicate and complicated time in relations between the West and the Arab world — said Sheikha Mozah — the dissemination of knowledge and mutual understanding are much needed to break down mistrust and fears.” Loghati (in Arabic, my language), allows the construction of virtual libraries, including ancient and modern texts, where each document contains information that can be multi-dimensional exploited, corrected and instantaneously translated from Arabic and vice versa. Moreover Loghati can contain audio and video, thus creating a multimedia interface for knowledge of texts and documents of different cultures, previously inaccessible to millions of people.

The project may be an unprecedented cross-cultural exchange and can contribute to the emergence of new forms of collaboration between academics, researchers, and institutions. All this is to make a positive contribution to the development of relations between countries based on knowledge.

At the presentation of the project followed by the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding between the STPQ were a number of Italian partners including Giunti Editori, In Lucina Associati, the European Norman Study Centre and the Oriental University of Naples. The purpose of the agreement is to undertake a series of projects to demonstrate the influence of Arab culture on Western culture. “It takes intelligence — said the Sheikha on the sidelines of the ceremony — to seize new opportunities for collaboration and Italy has this intelligence.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Modern Turkish Designs Spread Across Globe

Zeynep Fadillioglu is one of a new breed of Turkish designers unafraid to embrace their country’s heritage.

When we hear the word “Ottoman” in Britain, we can’t help but think of luxurious furniture and lavish fabrics, with an exotic flavour. But in Turkey it doesn’t just conjure up a design aesthetic, but an entire period of history. While most leading cities have been the centre of a great cultural empire, Istanbul has been the heart of two. As Constantinople it was the capital of the Byzantine Empire, and as Istanbul it was the capital of the Ottoman Empire. This history has made the country rich with different textures, styles and interiors. Sumptuous palaces sit next to modern offices and condominiums. There are malls and all the usual international chains, but there is still little to rival the bustle of the hawkers in the Grand Bazaar, whose haggling can hardly have changed in 500 years. In other words you might think it was the perfect place for architects and interior designers to create their own striking idiom. Until recently they have been surprisingly slow on the uptake. This is all changing now. As Turkey’s economy steams ahead (growth was 6.6 per cent last year), its designers are too. Design shows and exhibitions abound, and striking new buildings are shooting up all over the city. In October, a literary festival launched on the banks of the Bosphorus, at the Ciragan Kempinski hotel, will become the latest affiliate of the Telegraph Hay brand. Modern Turkish culture is spreading itself globally.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UAE: Islam is Key to Peace, Convention Concludes

DUBAI — Concluding three days of lectures and activities, the second edition of the Dubai International Peace Convention affirmed that Islam is the key to peace much sought after these days.

Altogether 150,000 people of different nationalities and religions attended the 16 lectures delivered by 12 scholars and spiritual gurus during the event. The world congress, held under the patronage of His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE, is aimed to create a climate of intellectual cooperation and share the teachings of Islam in order to guide the world towards peace. Dr Hamad Al Shaibani, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Award for World Peace, said the convention has been a wonderful platform for leading thinkers in the Muslim world to come together. ‘They have had a massive impact in raising awareness of our main objective, and we are delighted to have brought together different races and religions under one roof to create an interactive environment that perpetuates our vision of peace.’ ‘Brotherhood in Islam’, the ‘status of women in Islam’, ‘Muhammad (PBUH) — the ambassador of peace’, ‘One world… One way… One God’, ‘action plan to achieve world peace’, the ‘role model for peace’, ‘how to build a peaceful family’, ‘the solutions for global crisis’, ‘peace in the light of the Holy Quran’, and ‘Peaceful coexistence… myth or reality’ were some of the issues spotlighted during the convention.

Some of the prominent figures who participated include Dr Zakir Naik, an internationally respected scholar in comparative religions, and Shaikh Yusuf Estes, prominent in the Islamic community in the United States; Shaikh Abdur Raheem Green from the UK; Shaikh Tawfique Chowdhury from Australia; Shaikh Muhammad Alshareef from Canada; Shaikh Hussein Yee from Malaysia; Advocate Mayan Mather from India; Said Rageah from Somalia; Dr Muhammad Salah and Abdul Bary Yahya, both from America.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



We Want to Invest in Italy, Emir Says

Sovereign meets Napolitano and Monti. Friendly ties says PM

(ANSAmed) — ROME, APRIL 16 — The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) is looking for ways and methods to invest in Italy: these are the words of Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani after meeting the Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti in Rome today.

“It has been an important visit which has consolidated the friendship between the two countries” commented Monti after a meeting with the Emir in which numerous deals were struck extending the countries’ bilateral economic cooperation.

The Emir was also received by the President of the Republic, Giorgio Napolitano. The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Giulio Terzi di Sant’Agata was also present as pointed out by a statement issued from the Presidency of the Republic.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


European Court Faults Russia Over Katyn Massacre

Russia has been reprimanded for its ‘inhuman’ handling of a 1940 massacre of thousands of Poles. The European Court of Human Rights said it was unable to issue a complete ruling, because Moscow failed to cooperate.

In the case brought by 15 relatives of people killed in the 1940 Katyn massacre, the Strasbourg court said Russia violated its commitments to the European Convention on Human Rights.

Moscow’s “response to most victims’ relatives’ attempts to find out the truth about what happened … amounted to inhuman treatment,” the court stated.

However, it said it could not rule on a further charge — that Russia had allegedly failed to properly investigate the 1940 massacre — because the Kremlin had not made vital documents available.

Russia, a successor state that emerged from the Soviet Union, had rebuffed the 15 plaintiffs in their efforts to get information from a probe into the massacre.

The Soviet secret police killed around 22,000 Poles in the Katyn forest near Smolensk and other places in April and May 1940. The massacre, in which Poland’s intelligentsia was virtually wiped out, is viewed as a national tragedy by Poles.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Taliban ‘Spring Offensive’ Dampens Optimism

Not for the first time on Sunday, official optimism on the future of Afghanistan came face-to-face with the remorseless nihilism of the Taliban suicide bomber.

Even as the attacks began, Afghan officials and their American allies were congratulating themselves on the progress made in establishing order in the country.

A statement issued by the interior ministry on Sunday morning praised the outcome of a mission over the previous three days to deter the annual “spring offensive” it knew would come.

Nearly 100 opposition fighters had been “taken out” in operations across the country, it said — 47 killed, 31 wounded and 21 captured. Quantities of arms had been seized.

It took less than two hours from the release of that statement for the reality of the “spring offensive” to overtake expectations, optimistic or otherwise.

The first indication of what was to come was a roadside bomb in Mahmud-i-Raqi, capital of the eastern province of Kapisa. With telling accuracy, it hit the second car of a police convoy which contained the city’s police chief, named as Jan Agha Faizi, killing him and three others.

The full assault — a combined attack on Kabul and three other major cities without parallel in the 11 years since the Nato invasion —began at about 1.30pm local time, when the sound of automatic gunfire and explosions rang out across the capital.

The initial target came as no surprise: the central and diplomatic triangle district of Wazir Akbar Khan, home to major embassies, including those of Britain and the US, the local United Nations headquarters, and a Nato base.

Insurgents stormed a half-finished tower block and made it their base for an aggressive operation that used rocket-propelled grenades and bombs to attack the symbols of Afghanistan’s backing in the West.

Within minutes, smoke was rising from the German embassy, while the streets were raked with gunfire, causing passers-by to dive for cover.

A house used as a residence for British embassy officials was the next target, hit by a rocket-propelled grenade, though the Foreign Office later said all British diplomats “had been accounted for”.

Then the US embassy and the Japanese embassy compound — which was hit by three rockets — came under fire. Smoke billowed from the windows of the nearby newly opened Kabul Star hotel as it was targeted.

Camp Eggers, headquarters of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), the Nato-led coalition army backing the Afghan government, came under rocket attack.

As the terror unfolded in Kabul’s most exclusive district, about a mile to the south west, the Afghan president Hamid Karzai had been holding a routine meeting to discuss the government budget with a group of MPs inside his presidential palace. Upon hearing the gunfire, his bodyguards put the palace into lockdown, moving him into what was described as a “secure area”.

Among the meetings he had to cancel was one with a delegation from the Hezb-i-Islami, the militant insurgents led by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, one of Afghanistan’s most feared warlords, which is discussing peace terms with the government.

Twenty years ago, in a previous round of Afghanistan’s long civil war, Mr Hekmatyar’s artillery pounded Kabul.

Meanwhile, security forces near the home of one of Mr Karzai’s two deputies, Mohammad Karim Khalili, managed to stop three would-be attackers who were heading there armed with suicide vests, guns and other explosives, a spokesman for the main intelligence agency, the National Directorate of Security (NDS), said. On the western side of town, rockets were fired at the Russian embassy and the parliament, prior to a full-blown assault.

In a development that gave some comfort to Mr Karzai’s Western allies, parliament’s guards, helped by some MPs who took to the rooftops with their own weaponry, managed to beat the attackers off, forcing them to take refuge in a building, where they came under sustained assault. “I shot up to 400 or 500 bullets from my Kalashnikov at the attackers,” Mohammad Nahim Lalai Hamidzai, an MP for Kandahar, told reporters. “They fired two rocket-propelled grenades at the parliament.”

Then on the Jalalabad Road, to the south east, another ISAF base, Camp Warehouse, came under mortar attack.

By this time, the Taliban was already crowing about its responsibility for the onslaught. Zabiullah Mujahid sent a text message to reporters saying “a lot of suicide bombers” were involved.

While Kabul has come under sustained and multi-pronged attack before, most recently last September, on Sunday the Taliban were able to launch raids on major targets elsewhere in the country.

In Pul-e-Alam, in Logar province, south of Kabul, suicide attacks and gun battles hit the provincial governor’s office, the police headquarters, and a US military base.

In Jalalabad, a major city in the east, three suicide bombers were shot dead at the gates of the military airport, and two more at the nearby Nato base. Others managed to cause an explosion inside the base. In Gardez, south of Kabul, bombers hit a police training facility, while last night a number of suspected suicide bombers were being surrounded in a building near the university.

In the northern city of Kundoz, 15 suspected militants were arrested over an alleged plot to launch attacks.

By last night, fighting was continuing in parts of Kabul, with militants still occupying the half-built tower block that had served as a base.

“They’re still resisting in two areas, one near parliament and the other close to the Kabul Star hotel,” Kabul police chief Gen Ayoub Salangi told Reuters.

The attacks come just a month before a Nato summit at which the US and its allies are supposed to put finishing touches on plans for transition to Afghan security control.

Western leaders will now have to consider whether the withdrawal of all international forces can realistically go ahead in 2014, as planned, without leaving the country at the mercy of Sunday’s attackers.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Himalayan Glaciers Are Not Melting, Study

(AGI) Paris — French researchers claim that glaciers in the Himalayan mountains are not being affected by global warming.

Unlike glaciers in the Alps, Himalayan glaciers are not melting, despite the effects of global warming. A team of French researchers came to this surprising conclusion after studying 3-D satellite pictures of the Himalayan mountains between 2000 and 2008. According to the study, whose results were published on Nature Geoscience, glaciers there are actually growing by 0.11mm a year. They studied a 5,615 sq. km area on the Karakorum mountain range, between the Yarkant river, in China, and the Indus river, in Pakistan. “The situation in the Karakorum seems to be different (from the situation elsewhere), which means that glaciers are stable here”, said Julie Gardelle of the University of Grenoble, without rejecting the global warming theory.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



India: Chandy’s Communal Card Will Kill Kerala’s Political Culture

by G Pramod Kumar

For students of international development, Kerala has been an exceptional case study for human development: unparalleled social and land reforms, human development indicators comparable to western nations, the first democratically elected communist government and spontaneous community movements. Plus the verdant nature, high-brow literature, art-house cinema and performing arts that brought laurels from all over the world. But, under Oomen Chandy, the present Congress chief minister leading a United Democratic Front (UDF), the state adds one more to the list of its exceptions: outrageous communal appeasement for political expediency.

The source of outrage is the recent cabinet reshuffle in which Oomen Chandy had to yield to the blackmail and threats of pullout by the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) for a fifth cabinet post. Chandy and the Congress have been resisting it for almost a year, ever since the UDF came to power, but finally gave up to save his government. Traditionally, the Muslim League, a formidable Congress ally in north Kerala, gets four ministers; but this time, the helplessness of the Congress in running a government with a thin majority has emboldened them to ask for more, even if it meant blatantly open brinkmanship. In fact, they not only have asked for five ministers, but also went ahead and announced their names and portfolios, a prerogative of the chief minister.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Jakarta: Hundreds of Christians Ask President for Justice on Places of Worship

“Peaceful” protest launched by the faithful of the Yasmin Church and Hkbp Philadelphia joined by human rights activists and parliamentarians. The faithful ask for enforcement of law on protection of religious freedom. Protests provoked by the seizure of places of worship by local officials and inertia of institutions.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — More than 200 Protestant Christians, belonging to two different communities for a long time victims of persecution, gathered yesterday in front of the Presidential Palace in Jakarta — the seat of the Head of State Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono — to demonstrate “peacefully” against the expropriation of places of worship and seek the application of laws on “religious freedom”. In particular, the faithful denounce the abuses and violations of dozens of Islamist groups, the manipulation of the law to their liking and the inertia of the state and institutions, including the same Yudhoyono, who have not taken steps or concrete measures to restore legality. A battle supported by many human rights activists and local NGOs, concerned by the continuing deterioration of the situation.

The protest march held yesterday (pictured) was attended by the faithful of the Gki Yasmin Church (YC), from the Bogor regency in West Java, and Christians from Hkbp Filadelfia, also in Bekasi regency in West Java. For three years the faithful of YC can not access the place of worship, sealed at the behest of local authorities and the Mayor Diani Budiarto, who has denounced alleged irregularities in the release of IBM, the necessary building permit to build in Indonesia. A similar situation to that of the faithful of Hkbp Filadelfia, who for years fought in vain against the officials of Bekasi.

The Christians who gathered in front of Merdeka Palace — the Presidential Palace, — were given the full support of the President of the World Council of Churches, Reverend SAE Nabadan, solidarity was also expressed by Eva Sundari, the Indonesian parliamentarian, who attended the event and Sites Musdah Mulia, prominent figures in the struggle to defend human rights.

However no significant official position was taken by President Yudhoyono, who months ago had stated that he could not “interfere” in the “internal affairs” of Bogor. A position criticized by activists, who claim the head of state does is afraid of “alienating” the Islamic fringe in the fear of losing votes and support.

The Yasmin Church, a Protestant church, is the victim of an apparent violation of the law and religious freedom perpetrated by the local mayor Diani Budiarto that, contravening the dictates of a constitutional court ruling in favor of Christians, has banned all religious celebrations on the site. The building was designed according to the criteria established by law and has the building permit (IMB) required for the construction of places of worship. Last October, the mayor deployed security forces against the faithful, who can no longer use the place of worship and can not even pray in public.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italian Marines’ Incarceration Extended by Two More Weeks

Anti-piracy servicemen accused of killing Indian fishermen

(ANSA) — New Delhi, April 16 — The detention in prison in southern India of two Italian anti-piracy marines accused of killing two Indian fishermen was extended by two more weeks by a magistrate on Monday.

Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone have been at the centre of a diplomatic row between the countries since being detained in February after an incident that took place while they were guarding an Italian merchant ship.

The pair are being held in a special section of a jail in the city of Thiruvananthapuram.

A separate court is considering Italy’s claim that it should have jurisdiction for the case, not India, as the incident took place aboard an Italian vessel in international waters.

The Italian government also believes that, regardless of who has jurisdiction, the marines should be exempt from prosecution in India as they were military personnel working on an anti-piracy mission.

Italy has said the marines fired warning shots from the merchant ship they were guarding, the Enrica Lexie, after coming under attack from pirates.

It said they followed the proper international procedures for dealing with pirate attacks, which are frequent in the Indian Ocean.

The Indian authorities, on the other hand, said the marines failed to show sufficient “restraint” by opening fire after mistaking the fishermen for pirates.

Indian ballistic experts said earlier this month that the bullets recovered from the bodies of fishermen are compatible with Beretta rifles confiscated from the Enrica Lexie.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Karzai: NATO Failings Led to Attacks by Taliban

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has accused NATO of failing to prevent the multiple attacks staged by the Taliban insurgents across Afghanistan on Sunday. NATO says the attacks will not affect its long-term exit planning.

The Taliban’s coordinated attacks that gripped Afghanistan on Sunday lay bare intelligence failures by both NATO and Afghan troops, Afgan President Hamid Karzai said Monday.

“The terrorists’ infiltration in Kabul and other provinces is an intelligence failure for us and especially for NATO and should be seriously investigated,” said Karzai in a statement.

But Karzai lauded what he called the “bravery and sacrifice of the security forces who quickly and timely reacted to contain the terrorists.” “Afghan security forces proved to the people that they can defend their country successfully,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Leading British Muslim Leader Faces War Crimes Charges in Bangladesh

by Andrew Gilligan

One of Britain’s most important Muslim leaders is to be charged with war crimes, investigators and officials have told The Sunday Telegraph

Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, director of Muslim spiritual care provision in the NHS, a trustee of the major British charity Muslim Aid and a central figure in setting up the Muslim Council of Britain, fiercely denies any involvement in a number of abductions and “disappearances” during Bangladesh’s independence struggle in the 1970s. He says the claims are “politically-motivated” and false. However, Mohammad Abdul Hannan Khan, the chief investigator for the country’s International Crimes Tribunal, said: “There is prima facie evidence of Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin being involved in a series of killings of intellectuals. We have made substantial progress in the case against him. There is no chance that he will not be indicted and prosecuted. We expect charges in June.” Mr Mueen-Uddin could face the death penalty if convicted. Bangladesh’s Law and Justice Minister, Shafique Ahmed, said: “He was an instrument of killing intellectuals. He will be charged, for sure.”

For 25 years after independence from Britain, the country now known as Bangladesh was part of Pakistan, even though the two halves were a thousand miles apart with India between them. In 1971, Bangla resentment at the “colonial” nature of Pakistani rule broke out into a full-scale revolt. Hundreds of thousands of civilians were massacred by Pakistani troops. Mr Mueen-Uddin, then a journalist on the Purbodesh newspaper in Dhaka, was a member of a fundamentalist party, Jamaat-e-Islami, which supported Pakistan in the war. In the closing days, as it became clear that Pakistan had lost, he is accused of being part of a collaborationist Bangla militia, the Al-Badr Brigade, which rounded up, tortured and killed prominent citizens to deprive the new state of its intellectual and cultural elite.

The widow of one such victim, Dolly Chaudhury, claims to have identified Mr Mueen-Uddin as one of three men who abducted her husband, Mufazzal Haider Chaudhury, a prominent scholar of Bengali literature, on the night of 14 December 1971. “I was able to identify one [of the abductors], Mueen-Uddin,” she said in video testimony, seen by The Sunday Telegraph, which will form part of the prosecution case. “He was wearing a scarf but my husband pulled it down as he was taken away. When he was a student, he often used to go to my brother in law’s house. My husband, my sister-in-law, my brother-in-law, we all recognised that man.” Professor Chaudhury was never seen again.

Also among the as yet untested testimony is the widow of another victim, who claims that Mr Mueen-Uddin was in the group that abducted her husband, Sirajuddin Hussain, another journalist, from their home on the night of 10 December 1971. “There was no doubt that he was the person involved in my husband’s abduction and killing,” said Noorjahan Seraji. One of the other members of the group, who was caught soon afterwards, allegedly gave Mr Mueen-Uddin’s name in his confession. Another reporter on Purbodesh, Ghulam Mostafa, also disappeared. The vanished journalist’s brother, Dulu, said he appealed to Mr Mueen-Uddin for help and was taken around the main Pakistani Army detention and torture centres by Mr Mueen-Uddin. Dulu Mostafa said that Mr Mueen-Uddin appeared to be well known at the detention centres, gained easy admission to the premises and was saluted by the Pakistani guards as he entered. Ghulam was never found.

Mr Mueen-Uddin’s then editor at the paper, Atiqur Rahman, said that Mr Mueen-Uddin had been the first journalist in the country to reveal the existence of the Al-Badr Brigade and had demonstrated intimate knowledge of its activities. After his colleagues disappeared, he said, Mr Mueen-Uddin had asked for his home address. Fearing that he too would be abducted, the editor gave a fake address. Mr Rahman’s name, complete with the fake address, appeared on a Al-Badr death list found just after the end of the war. “I gave that address only to Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, and when that list appeared it was obvious that he had given that address to Al Badr,” Mr Rahman said in statements given to the investigators. “I’m sure I gave the address to no-one else.” Mr Rahman then published a front-page story and picture about Mr Mueen-Uddin, who had by that stage left the city, naming him as involved in “disappearances.” This brought forward two further witnesses, Mushtaqur and Mahmudur Rahman, who claim they recognised the picture as somebody who had been part of an armed group looking for the BBC correspondent in Dhaka during the abductions. The group was unsuccessful because the BBC man had gone into hiding.

Toby Cadman, Mr Mueen-Uddin’s lawyer, said on Saturday: “No formal allegations have been put to Mr Mueen-Uddin and therefore it is not appropriate to issue any formal response. Any and all allegations that Mr Mueen-Uddin committed or participated in any criminal conduct during the Liberation War of 1971 that have been put in the past will continue to be strongly denied in their entirety. For the Chief Investigator to be making such public comment raises serious questions as to the integrity of the investigation. The Chief Investigator will be aware that the decision as to the bringing of charges is made by the Prosecutor and not an investigator. Therefore, the comments by the Chief Investigator are highly improper and serves as a further basis for raising the question as to whether a fair trial may be guaranteed before the International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh. The statement by the Bangladesh Minister for Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs is a clear declaration of guilt and in breach of the presumption of innocence.”

Since moving to the UK in the early 1970s, Mr Mueen-Uddin has taken British citizenship and built a successful career as a community activist and Muslim leader. In 1989 he was a key leader of protests against the Salman Rushdie book, The Satanic Verses. Around the same time he helped to found the extremist Islamic Forum of Europe, Jamaat-e-Islami’s European wing, which believes in creating a sharia state in Europe and in 2010 was accused by a Labour minister, Jim Fitzpatrick, of infiltrating the Labour Party. Tower Hamlets’ directly-elected mayor, Lutfur Rahman, was expelled from Labour for his close links with the IFE. Until 2010 Mr Mueen-Uddin was vice-chairman of the controversial East London Mosque, controlled by the IFE, in which capacity he greeted Prince Charles when the heir to the throne opened an extension to the mosque. He was also closely involved with the Muslim Council of Britain, which has been dominated by the IFE. He was chairman and remains a trustee of the IFE-linked charity, Muslim Aid, which has a budget of £20 million. He has also been closely involved in the Markfield Institute, the key institution of Islamist higher education in the UK.

The International Crimes Tribunal, a new body set up to try alleged “war criminals” from the 1971 war, has already begun trying some Bangladesh-based leaders of Jamaat-e-Islami.

Trials were originally supposed to start soon after the war but were cancelled by the military after a coup. The new tribunal was welcomed by most Bangladeshis and international human rights groups as finally bringing justice and closure for the massive abuses suffered by civilians in 1971. However, it is now subject to growing international criticism. Human Rights Watch said that the ICT’s proceedings “fall short of international standards” with a “failure to ensure due process” and “serious concerns about the impartiality of the bench.”

“The chairman of the tribunal was formerly one of the investigators,” said Abdur Razzaq, lead counsel for the defence. “As chairman, he will be pronouncing on an investigation report he himself produced.” The law minister, Mr Ahmed, denied this. Mr Razzaq described the tribunal as “vendetta politics” by Bangladesh’s ruling Awami League against its political opponents.

Any trial of Mr Mueen-Uddin would also be fraught with practical difficulties. There is no extradition treaty between Britain and Bangladesh and the UK does not extradite in death penalty cases. Many of the witnesses are elderly and some have died. However, Mr Hannan Khan said that Mr Mueen-Uddin was likely to be tried in absentia if he did not return.

“We have a duty to bring alleged perpetrators to justice,” he said. “They must know the fear, however long ago it was. What happened here forty years ago is on the conscience of the world.” “I have waited 40 years to see the trial of the war criminals,” said the widow, Noorjahan Seraji. “I have not spent a single night without suffering and I want justice.”

[JP note: See also Martin Bright: “The Foreign Office is not aware of any alleged war criminal from Bangladesh living in the UK. I wonder if anyone out there can help out here.” at http://www.spectator.co.uk/martinbright/6489248/the-foreign-office-responds.thtml ]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


British Businessman’s Death Spurs Probe Into Murder, Greed and China’s Leadership

A British businessman was murdered after he threatened to expose orders from a Chinese leader’s wife to move money abroad, sources close to a police investigation tell Reuters. Gu Kailai, the wife of Bo Xilai — who was hoping to expand his power in the Communist Party during a leadership transition this fall — asked Neil Heywood to help her move a large sum of money abroad.

But after Heywood, 41, saw the size of the transaction and demanded to keep a bigger portion of cash as part of the deal, Gu became outraged. Heywood responded by threatening to expose her actions, Reuters reports.

“Heywood told her that if she thought he was being too greedy, then he didn’t need to become involved and wouldn’t take a penny of the money, but he also said he could also expose it,” the first source told Reuters.

Heywood’s body was found Nov. 15, 2011, at the mountaintop Nanshan Holiday Hotel on the southern outskirts of Chongqing, according to people briefed on the investigation. The body was cremated without an autopsy being performed, and the hotel’s remote location adds to the mystery surrounding Heywood’s final hours.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



China Eases Currency Controls in Long-Awaited Move

China has doubled its currency’s trading band against the US dollar for the first time since 2007. From Monday, the yuan’s exchange rate with the dollar will be allowed to fluctuate by 1 percent, up from 0.5 percent.

China’s central bank will allow its currency to fluctuate twice as much against the US dollar in daily trading, starting on Monday.

The yuan’s trading band with the dollar will rise from 0.5 percent to 1 percent from Monday, which will allow the currency’s value against the US currency to trade a little more freely.

The long-anticipated move came a week before of the annual spring meeting of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington, where pressure is usually stepped up for China to loosen its currency controls.

Although the increase is small, it may indicate Beijing is willing to make concessions to the US and other western nations, who have long argued that China’s currency controls mean that their currency is so weak it gives China a competitive edge by making their exports cheaper abroad.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Global Nuclear Production Dropped After Fukushima, IAEA

(AGI) Vienna — The global quantity of electricity produced by nuclear plants dropped around 4% in 2011. The main reason has been of switching off of the Japanese reactors, following the disaster at the Fukushima plant and the subsequent German decision to dismantle its own oldest nuclear plants. The total production of electricity from nuclear plants in 2011 was 2518 TWh, 4.3 less compared to 2630 TWh generated in 2010, according to data provided by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). As a direct consequence of the March 2011 tsunami, 13 Japanese reactors were closed. Moreover, by the end of 2011, 31 of the 54 Japanese reactors were still switched off, due to inspections or replacements of equipments and have not been restarted yet. As a consequence, the production of nuclear energy in Japan dropped 44.3% in 2011, going down to 152.6 TWh, compared to 280.3 TWh in 2010.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Swiss Woman Kidnapped in Timbuktu: Confirmed

Switzerland on Monday confirmed that a female national had been kidnapped in Mali’s Timbuktu, the fabled city seized by Islamists after a coup in the west African nation. A statement by the federal department of foreign affairs (FDFA) in Bern said that authorities were in contact with the woman’s family and “were making every effort to ensure the kidnap victim is released unharmed,” but did not identify her.

Local reports said she was a Christian woman in her 40s named Beatrice who had lived in the ancient city for years and was active in the local community. Officials at the Swiss government’s Agency for Cooperation and Development office in Bamako and at the Swiss embassy in Dakar, which is also responsible for Mali, are in touch with local authorities, the FDFA said.

The government said it had advised its nationals to leave the country temporarily following the March 22nd coup and had been advising against travelling to Mali since December 2009 because of a higher risk of kidnappings.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


US, Haiti Kick Off Vaccination Campaigns

Haitian and U.S. officials are launching a nationwide vaccination campaign that seeks to curb or prevent the spread of infectious diseases in the impoverished Caribbean nation. U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius says the effort to vaccinate Haitians is critical because the country remains vulnerable to infectious diseases brought from outside.

The campaign seeks to vaccinate Haitians for diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles, polio and other diseases. Sebelius kicked off the campaign Monday after she toured a hospital in the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Asylum Requests Surge in Switzerland

Some 7,150 people sought asylum in Switzerland in the first three months of the year, up 63 percent from a year ago, according to data released Monday by the Federal Migration Office. Eritreans made the biggest number of requests with 1,151 applications, 336 more than in the previous quarter.

They were followed by Nigerians with 677, up 55 from the previous quarter and Tunisians with 664, 215 fewer than in the last three months of 2011. Despite ongoing unrest in Syria, asylum applications made by that country’s nationals rose by just 20 from the previous quarter to 296 during the first three months of 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


UK: London Mayoral Elections Gay Hustings: Ken Livingstone Urges Muslims to be Treated Fairly

Ken Livingstone has called for Londoners to be united after claiming that it is “the Muslims’ turn now” to be discriminated against. Mr Livingstone said he would like to see Muslims depicted in a “better balance”. Labour’s London mayoral candidate, who is competing to take back City Hall from Conservative Boris Johnson, also claimed that right-wing politicians “pander to bigotry”. He said: “In 1906 the front page of the Daily Mail’s headline was ‘Jews bring crime and disease to Britain’. “Then it was the blacks, then it was the Irish, then it was the lesbians and gays — there has always got to be an enemy. Right-wing politicians pander to bigotry. I remember the deputy leader of the Tory group at the GLC, when we launched our lesbian and gay policies, said to me ‘Every time I make a homophobic speech in Ruislip-Northwood I get an extra 1,000 votes’. It is the Muslims’ turn now. Don’t be divided. No Muslims ever came to me and said ‘I want homosexuality banned’. Muslims came to this city to flee oppressive culture. They came here so their children could have democracy, that they could achieve their best.” Mr Livingstone was referring to comments he made while visiting Finsbury Park Mosque on March 16. He is reported to have said he wants to make London a “beacon” that demonstrates the words of the Prophet Mohammed — particularly his last sermon, which preaches equality.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


A Brave Telling of the Koran’s Human Stories

Charles Moore reviews In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland (Little, Brown) .

Most of the attention given to this book so far has, rightly, been favourable. But it has skirted round the key point. Tom Holland is attempting to show that much of what Muslims believe about the Koran is incorrect. Since their belief is rigorously literal — they hold that the Koran is the uncreated word of God recited (the word Koran means “recitation”) directly through the mouth of Mohammed — any Muslim who accepted Holland’s evidence would have to reconsider many aspects of his faith. This painful process of textual inquiry into scripture has been well known to Christians since the 19th century, when the Bible came under similar scrutiny. It has caused anguish, but many have been able to reconcile their faith with the discoveries of scholarship. No such process has taken place in Islam. Indeed, the suppression of questioning has actually got worse. Until 1924, for example, seven different versions of the text were considered canonical, so areas of doubt were implicitly acknowledged. Now there is only one normative text, and it is inconsistent in many particulars, but Muslims dare not say so. Holland is being brave.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Best Evidence Yet That a Single Gene Can Affect IQ

A massive genetics study relying on fMRI brain scans and DNA samples from over 20,000 people has revealed what is claimed as the biggest effect yet of a single gene on intelligence — although the effect is small.

There is little dispute that genetics accounts for a large amount of the variation in people’s intelligence, but studies have consistently failed to find any single genes that have a substantial impact. Instead, researchers typically find that hundreds of genes contribute.

Following a brain study on an unprecedented scale, an international collaboration has now managed to tease out a single gene that does have a measurable effect on intelligence. But the effect — although measurable — is small: the gene alters IQ by just 1.29 points. According to some researchers, that essentially proves that intelligence relies on the action of a multitude of genes after all.

“It seems like the biggest single-gene impact we know of that affects IQ,” says Paul Thompson of the University of California, Los Angeles, who led the collaboration of 207 researchers. “But it’s not a massive effect on IQ overall,” he says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Blind Hydra Relies on Light to Kill Prey

THE blind hunter sees. It may not have eyes, but the hydra — a centimetre-long relative of the jellyfish — still senses light to detect and kill its prey. This finding is part of efforts to uncover the evolutionary origins of sight.

Two years ago, David Plachetzki of the University of California at Davis showed that Hydra magnipapillata has genes that are involved in light detection. These include the gene coding for opsin, a protein that is key to all animal vision. To find out how the hydra uses these genes, Plachetzki and his colleagues looked at which cells expressed them. This pointed to a complex of cells that is connected to the hydra’s hunting equipment.

The hydra kills its prey with stings that are propelled like harpoons. When Plachetzki’s team exposed tanks of hydra to periods of bright and dim light, the hydra ejected twice as many stings under dim conditions. This, the team says, shows that hydra use light levels to hunt (BMC Biology, DOI: 10.1186/1741-7007-10-17).

H. magnipapillata may have been one of the first creatures to develop sensitivity to light. Possible explanations for this sensitivity could be that the hydra hunts at dusk when food is more plentiful or by sensing changes in light intensity — releasing stings when the shadows of prey pass overhead.

Dan-Eric Nilsson, whose group studies the evolution of vision at Lund University in Sweden, says: “This light sensitivity must have evolved very early among the first primitive animals, and then become incorporated into many different functions, eyes being just one of them.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Salt Levels in Fast Food Depend on Where You Buy it

An order of Chicken McNuggets in Europe might be slightly healthier than one in the United States, in terms of the salt content, a new study suggests.

In general, salt levels were higher in the United States and Canada than in the United Kingdom and France.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120415

Financial Crisis
» Everything is Going to be Alright?
» Greece: Unemployment Hits New Record High of 21.8%
» Greece: As Quiet as a Eurocrat in Athens
» Italy: Monti Shifts to Corruption, The ‘Hidden Tax”
» New Banker Bailout to be Funded by Giant Tax Hikes
» The Church of Malthus
 
USA
» America Elected an Ignoramus
» Interview With Deneen Borelli — Author of “Blacklash”
» Who Owns the West?
» Why America is Devolving Towards Absolute Government Control
 
Europe and the EU
» Amanda Knox: The Publishing — and P.R. — War is on
» Britain for Sale: How Long Before a Foreign Power Turns Out Britain’s Lights?
» British Peer Lord Nazir Ahmed Suspended After ‘Offering £10m Bounty on Barack Obama and George Bush’
» British Muslim Leader Faces War Crimes Charges in Bangladesh Over Murders During Country’s Independence Struggle
» EU: Audit Court: Corruption Key Problem for Candidate States
» France: Police Raid Flat and Arrest Suspected Serial Killer After Spate of Paris Murders
» Italy: Milan House Museum Basks Visitors in Renaissance Luxury
» Italy: Discrimination Against Roma Persists in Italy, Say Amnesty
» Italy: Over One Million in EU Funds Embezzled in Calabria
» Italy: Moving ‘Ruby’ Trial Unconstitutional, Court Says
» Italy: Fincantieri Said to Want to Buy Ship Maker STX OSV
» Italy: Temperatures Drop to a Low of 9 in Rome and Florence
» The British University Head That Seeks to Force Islamic Values on All British Students
» UK: Human Rights Laws Are a Charter for Criminals, Say 75% of Britons
» UK: Muslim Woman Let ‘Secret’ Baby Die Then Dumped Her Body for Fear of Dishonouring Her Family
» World Remembers Sinking of the Titanic
 
North Africa
» Algerian Opens Election Period in Bid to Ease Discontent
» Egypt: Hubby Watching Porn Online Finds Film Starring His Wife
» Intimate Scenes to be Banned From Egyptian Public TV
» Saudi Wahhabism Expands Into Libya
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Pacifists Headed to Israel Stopped in European Airports
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Explosions & Shots in Kabul Embassy District
» Bangladesh: Ex Imam Convert to Catholicism Almost Killed
» India: Hindu Radicals Attack Christian Pastors During Easter as Police Stand Idly by
» Nepal: Maoist Government Gains Control of Iconic Pashupatinath Hindu Temple
» Taliban Militants Free 400 Prisoners Including ‘Dangerous’ Insurgents in Dramatic Attack on Pakistan Jail
» Taliban Launch Assaults Across Afghanistan
 
Far East
» A Revolt, the Quiet Japanese Way
» Japan — Great Britain: Noda and Cameron Meet, Talk Defence
» North Korea Celebrates First President’s 100th Birthday
» North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket… But it Blows Up 90 SECONDS After Take-Off (So What Went Wrong?)
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Reports: Omar Hammami Executed
» South African President Zuma to Wed 4th Wife
 
Immigration
» Belgian Xenophobic Website Reflects Anti-Immigrant Attitudes in Europe
» Revealed: How HALF of All Social Housing in Parts of England Goes to People Born Abroad
 
Culture Wars
» California and the Subversive Teaching Radicals
» UK: And After Double Maths it Will Be… Paganism: Schools Told to Put Witchcraft and Druids on Re Syllabus
» US Children Born Out of Wedlock on the Rise
» Video: Cultural Marxism: Understanding the Origins of Political Correctness

Financial Crisis


Everything is Going to be Alright?

Is the U.S. economy going to be okay? Well, if the only source you listened to was the mainstream media, you would be left with the distinct impression that the U.S. economy is heading toward a full recovery and that everything is going to be alright. Unfortunately, that is not the case at all. The United States is rapidly becoming poorer as a nation and less competitive in the global marketplace. At the same time, consumer debt levels are rising, corporate debt levels are rising, state and local government debt levels are rising and the U.S. government is indulging in a debt binge unlike anything the world has ever seen. Considering the insane amount of money the U.S. government has been pumping into the economy, we should have seen a much more robust recovery by now. Instead, the employment statistics have barely moved and government dependence is at an all-time high. That is really sad, because this is as good as “the recovery” is going to get. The next major economic downturn is just around the bend, and in future years millions of us will desperately yearn for the “good old days” of 2012.

Below, I have compiled a list of things that I have entitled “Everything Is Going To Be Alright?”

It is composed in the form of a song, but it really isn’t meant to be sung. It is probably actually more of an economic horror poem than it is a song. What I have tried to do is to point out the absurdity of what we are all being told by our politicians and by the media. Hopefully you will enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Unemployment Hits New Record High of 21.8%

Almost doubled since 2010

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — Greece’s unemployment rate rose to a new record of 21.8% in January from a revised 21.2% in December, Greek statistics service ELSTAT said on Thursday, as daily Kathimerini reports. This means Greece’s unemployment rate has roughly doubled since 2010, when the impact of the crisis began to be felt and Athens turned to the European Union and the International Monetary Fund for emergency loans. Budget cuts imposed by the EU and the IMF as a condition to save the debt-laden country from a chaotic default have caused a wave of corporate closures and bankruptcies. Starting this month, Greek unemployment figures are adjusted for seasonal factors. The average jobless rate in the 17 countries sharing the euro rose slightly in January to 10.7%, from 10.6% in December.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: As Quiet as a Eurocrat in Athens

Le Temps Geneva

Their mission: to bring the Greeks onto the path of budgetary virtue. Their method: to shake up established practice and insist on sacrifices. The risk: they may be targeted by anyone with a gripe against the EU.

Richard Werly

On one side of the room, a window gives onto the ruins of the Acropolis and the scaffolding assembled by the team of archaeologists with a brief to watch over this crucible of European civilisation.

On the other, the two screens Yannis Siatras uses to monitor the stock market, one of which is intermittently displaying the front cover published by German magazine Focus in February 2010. It shows Vénus de Milo giving the finger and is accompanied by a headline that announces, “Cheats in the EU family”: a highly symbolic image that is associated with EU diktats and contempt.

“Show that! And then try to explain that the Union is on our side”, complains Yannis, a former financial editor, who is tempted to run for a seat at the next general election in May.

Silence as a first line of defence

We had already been warned by Kostas Pappas, a spokesman for the permanent representation of Greece in Brussels, “Beware of cliche’s that poison the atmosphere”, so it was no surprise to hear the same view expressed at the the European Commission delegation in Athens, which is located just behind the parliament building. On the other side of the street, the Evzones, soldiers in the traditional partisans uniform of white tights and pom-pommed hobnailed boots, were changing the guard, watched by handful of tourists.

One of them, a Greek American, was incensed by the display of the blue and gold-starred flag of the EU. “They have no place in the country of Socrates,” he says. “They are immoral servants of banks.”

Panos Carvounis is no longer bothered by this type of accusation. The genteel 50-year-old head of the European Commission Representation in Greece is well used to criticism. “I live at home. I go to the cinema without any fuss, while Greek politicians who have had bad press are afraid to leave their homes. I am often questioned, but never vilified”, he says.

In contrast, other members of the contingent of Eurocrats, who have been posted in Athens since the beginning of the crisis in the spring of 2010, have made silence their first line of defence.

Some 15 experts are deployed in the Greek capital as part of the Commission’s tasks force to help the country take advantage of EU funds [Greece has only managed to tap less than a third of the funds made available to it as part of the EU’s 2007-2013 budget]. A further 30 work for the EU delegation, and also serve as a secretariat for the troika, the tripartite agency (Commission, International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank) with a brief to implement the agreement that was finally accepted by Greek leaders in mid-March.

This latter group are charged with supervising the second €130 billion European bailout that will finance Athens until the end of 2014: a sum that has been made available in addition to the first €110 billion lent by the 27-member EU in 2010, and the €107 billion of debt that the country’s private creditors accepted to write off within the framework of a bond swap which will be completed by 18 April…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti Shifts to Corruption, The ‘Hidden Tax”

Rome, 12 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Prime minister Mario Monti is shifting his focus from overhauling Italy’s economy to tackling corruption, a problem highlighted by the recent resignation of one of the country’s best-known political leaders amid a party- financing scandal.

Monti’s government is readying a package of anti-corruption measures, including broadening the criminal definition of corruption to include cases in the private sector and tightening procedures to prevent failed prosecutions due to the statute of limitations, said a person with knowledge of the proposals, who declined to be identified because an official announcement hasn’t been made yet.

Officials from the nation’s three biggest parties met last night to draft a joint bill that would make the use of public funding for political parties more transparent. Justice Minister Paola Severino said April 7 the government is “ready to intervene” on party financing unless Parliament takes action.

The Council of Europe’s Group of States Against Corruption, known as GRECO, called on Italy yesterday to amend its criminal code in areas such as party financing and corruption penalties. That came after Umberto Bossi resigned as head of the Northern League April 5, caught up in the biggest wave of corruption scandals since the “Bribesville” cases in the 1990s led to the demise of Italy’s dominant political parties.

Fighting fraud “is a priority for the Monti government,” Democratic Party Deputy Donatella Ferranti said in an interview yesterday. “It weighs on the economy, on the recovery, but also on the credibility of our country abroad.”

Attracting Investment

The Democrats, the People of Liberty and the centrist Third Way are the three main parties in a broad coalition set up when Monti, 69, took over as unelected prime minister in November.

Monti said March 17 that Chancellor Angela Merkel told him increased efforts to fight corruption would lure more German investment to Italy. “It’s essential for the government to attract foreign investment,” he said.

Corruption in Italy amounts to a “hidden tax” of 1,000 euros ($1,310) to 1,500 euros per person each year, Ferranti said. Italy scored the worst of all euro-area countries except Greece in Transparency International’s global corruption ranking last year. Corruption accounts for 1 percent of the European Union’s gross domestic product, which would amount to 16 billion euros for Italy, the European Commission said in a June 6 report. That compares to damages of 90 million euros won by Italy’s state audit court in corruption rulings last year, according to a Feb. 16 report.

Berlusconi

While the media has focused mostly on Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s legal battles, including a case with corruption charges, allegations have been leveled against officials from all of the country’s main parties this year.

Ten of the 80 legislators in Lombardy’s regional assembly are being probed, several for alleged kickbacks, including Speaker Davide Boni. Berlusconi has maintained his innocence of all charges in cases against him. Boni said March 20 he’s “totally extraneous” to any alleged wrongdoing.

Bossi’s son Renzo resigned from the regional legislature April 10 amid a criminal investigation that led to allegations that Northern League funds were siphoned off to the Bossi family. Neither Umberto Bossi nor Renzo Bossi is under investigation and both have denied using party funds for personal expenses.

There are “critical shortcomings in the party funding system of Italy which must be addressed as a matter of priority,” GRECO said yesterday. Italian parties spent 570 million euros from 1994 to 2008 out of 2.25 billion euros of public financing, the GRECO report said.

Influence Peddling

While Italy signed the Criminal Law Convention on Corruption in 1999, Parliament hasn’t fully ratified it. GRECO has recommended that Italy classify private-sector corruption and influence peddling as crimes, and lengthen the statute of limitations for corruption offenses.

One of Monti’s first tasks when he took office was to clean house at state-controlled defense company Finmeccanica SpA (FNC), whose chairman and other officials were involved in corruption probes. Chairman Pier Francesco Guarguaglini quit in December amid a probe involving a company unit run by his wife. Guarguaglini and his wife Marina Grossi have repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. Finmeccanica isn’t under probe.

“Illegality, corruption and graft are widespread and their size is much larger than what comes to the surface,” Luigi Giampaolino, chairman of the state audit court, said Feb. 16.

Italy came in 69th in the Corruption Perceptions Index ranking, Berlin-based Transparency International said Dec. 1, placing the country level with Ghana and lower than Saudi Arabia. Seventeen percent of Italians said they were asked to pay a kickback in the previous 12 months, a Eurobarometer poll in 2009 showed, almost double the European average.

The government plans to present an amendment on April 17 to address the GRECO recommendations, the person familiar said.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



New Banker Bailout to be Funded by Giant Tax Hikes

In the video below, Alex breaks down how billionaires like Warren Buffett are the biggest beneficiaries of the “rule” they are now forcing through Congress. The net effect? Stealing the expanded tax revenue via banker bailouts and shutting down the middle class to eliminate competition for the big boys.

The same criminal mega banks that pulled off the banker bailout heist are set to run an even bigger scam. Billionaire scammer Warren Buffett was the biggest beneficiary of taxpayer money stolen in the bailout now he wants more. Please get this report out to everyone via Facebook, twitter, and every other media system. Together we can expose this fraud for what it is a mafia driven crony capitalism takeover! This is hidden in front of our faces; get this report out to talk radio as well.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Church of Malthus

Hating humanity is their creed, corporate-fascists its patriarchs, pseudo-scientists its priest-class, brain-addled cultists its practitioners.

Paul Gilding describes himself as an “independent writer, advisor and advocate for action on climate change.” He is not a scientist, nor does he appear to participate in any sort of productive industry. He is a modern day Malthusian evangelist — preaching the limits of population growth as hysterically as Thomas Malthus did over 200 years ago, warning of imminent societal collapse. Gilding’s contemporaries include John P. Holdren, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, who in 1977 ludicrously concluded that the United States would collapse when its population reached “280 million in 2040.”

America’s population stands well over 300 million today, and the only collapse it faces is due to a maniacal government attempting to carry out global imperial conquest through trillion dollar decade-spanning wars, and mega-trillion dollar banker bailouts paid to the order of institutionalized degenerate gamblers.

Clearly, whatever “science” men like Gilding and Holdren are basing their system of beliefs on is divorced from the science that gives us technology and progress. It is analytical, theoretical, and compiled by men who have little experiential knowledge of how the world actually functions. They are priests and evangelists perched in ivory towers and behind podiums shouting out their patently false conclusions to the crowds before them. Their resumes are devoid of accomplishments in applied science and technology, and instead filled with ridiculous predictions and “academia” that have humiliatingly and repeatedly been proven false.

Worst of all, their work is carried out on behalf of a “Green Vatican” of sorts — not based in Rome, Italy, but on Wall Street and in the financier capital of London — who in reality are the greatest purveyors of environmental catastrophe. Like many cults and organized religions before them, they shift the burden of reconciling “sin” onto its growing flock of followers instead of taking responsibility for its own actions, resultant from perpetual greed.

[Return to headlines]

USA


America Elected an Ignoramus

I do not write unpleasant things about Barack Hussein Obama because he is a Democrat, a far-left liberal ideologue, a confirmed liar, or the sock-puppet of whatever cabal that chose him long ago to be the President. I write unpleasant things because he is all of these things, but also because he is the most stupid man to have ever held the office of President.

[…]

Here’s just a quick look at some of them:

Hans Bader, a scholar with the Competitive Enterprise Institute, addressed recent examples of Obama’s ignorance when he mocked Republicans as members of the Flat Earth Society in Columbus’ day for their skepticism of his green energy policies, among which was a hearty endorsement of algae—pond scum, but Columbus’ contemporaries knew the Earth was round, but doubted he could reach Asia via the Atlantic Ocean. Bader noted that Obama “falsely attributed to Muslims the invention of printing and even falsely claimed that Morocco was the first country to recognize the United States as a new nation.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Interview With Deneen Borelli — Author of “Blacklash”

In a recent interview with Accuracy in Media, author and political activist Deneen Borelli called Al Sharpton an “ambulance chaser,” citing the Tawana Brawley case. Borelli is the author of the new book Blacklash: How Obama and the Left are Driving Americans to the Government Plantation. In the book, Borelli exposes the Left’s attempt to silence black conservatives who are battling against the Obama administration’s goal of expanding the government and increasing the number of people dependent on the welfare state.

Borelli considers the book as a call to action to empower Americans to help stop the cycle of government dependency, which deprives citizens of their rights to freedom and prosperity. Not only is she an author, but she’s a Fellow at Project 21, a network of black conservatives, which is an initiative of the National Center for Public Policy Research, based in Washington, D.C.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Who Owns the West?

It’s a fair question. The federal government claims ownership of most of the western states. Why?

In eleven western states, the federal government claims ownership of more than 50% of the land. Utah intends to get its land back. Utah’s HR148, recently signed into law by the Governor, tells the federal government that federal land in Utah, other than specified national parks, monuments, and wilderness areas, will be taken by eminent domain by the state of Utah if it has not been transferred to the state by the end of 2014.

Democrats and environmental organizations say this Law is an exercise in futility, a waste of time. Republicans and producers believe that Utah was granted statehood on an “equal footing” with the original states. “Equal footing” means that the federal government should own no land in the state of Utah, since none of the original states contained land owned by the federal government. Republicans and business leaders contend that this is exactly what the term means. Democrats and environmentalists disagree.

[…]

The Constitution provides no authority for the federal government to own more than half of Utah and 10 other western states.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why America is Devolving Towards Absolute Government Control

With America Headed Towards Socialism, Most Care Not Enough to Resist.

The relentless encroachment of socialism upon America’s economic, cultural and governmental landscape is like a bad dream to most red-blooded Americans. When society changes it can seem like the ineluctable drift of evolution or chance. But in the case of America’s ongoing continued expansion of government powers, spiking taxes, and shrinking military, it’s all part of a planned elitist push into socialism. And one need not believe in secret conspiracies when contemplating this shift. In fact, for those paying attention, it was all outlined long ago by the Fabian Socialist society, and other groups such as the Frankfurt School, as explained below.

[…]

Congressional Record January 10, 1963

On January 10, 1963, Florida US Representative Albert Sydney Herlong, Jr gave a speech outlining what he believed to be the 45 methods communists were using to take over America. Ponder the staggering number of these goals already achieved, much to our mortal damage.

11. Promote the U.N. as the only hope for mankind.

15. Capture one or both of the political parties in the United States.

16. Use technical decisions of the courts to weaken basic American institutions by claiming their activities violate civil rights.

17. Control schools. Use them to transmit socialist & Marxist propaganda. Soften the curriculum. Infiltrate teachers’ associations. Put the party line in textbooks.

[…]

Frankfurt School

The Frankfurt School were a group of German intellectual Marxists who established the Institute of Social Research at Frankfurt University, modeled after the Marx-Engels Institute in Moscow. This became known as the “Frankfurt School.” After Hitler came to power, these Marxist professors fled to the West to preserve their lives. Setting up shop in Columbia University, they decided to launch a mission to convert America to Marxism via a soft war. According to one source they did certain things to aid this:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Amanda Knox: The Publishing — and P.R. — War is on

Amanda Knox will publish her account of being accused — and cleared — of murdering her roommate Meredith Kercher. Her ex-boyfriend has a book deal too. But the victim’s father, who still believes the pair murdered his daughter, is fighting back with his own memoir.

The trial in Perugia is over, but the battle for the truth is only just beginning. Amanda Knox has already signed a $2.5 million book deal with publishing house Harper Collins. With the help of ghost writers, the former American exchange student in Perugia, Italy will write a memoir to be published in 2013, offering her story of being accused of sexually assaulting and murdering her British flatmate, Meredith Kercher.

Knox and her boyfriend were convicted and jailed in 2007, but cleared in 2010.

But John Kercher, the father of the slained student, will have his say first. On April 26, Kercher will publish a book about his daughter, focusing on her life rather than her horrendous death. In the 304-page-long book, he tells the story of their travels around the world — as well as how he coped with the murder.

A freelance journalist, John Kercher remains convinced that Amanda Knox is “unmistakably guilty” of his daughter’s death, despite an Italian court clearing the American woman and her Italian boyfriend of sexual assault and murder charges. Kercher says Knox’s “publicity stunt” is making it “much harder” for his family to grieve.

On top of that, Rafaelle Sollecito, Amanda Knox’s former boyfriend, has also signed a book deal to tell his version of the story. The Italian signed a contract with Gallery Books to publish Presumed Guilty: My Journey to Hell and Back with Amanda Knox. The publishing house advertises the book as “the story of an involuntary protagonist,” victim of a hasty trial despite the lack of evidence. The book is written with the help of British journalist Andrew Gumbel, author of a book on the 1995 Oklahoma City bombings…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Britain for Sale: How Long Before a Foreign Power Turns Out Britain’s Lights?

On Saturday in the Mail, our City Editor Alex Brummer revealed the price we’re all paying in higher bills for having sold off half our companies to foreign owners. Here, in the second extract from his devastating new book, he warns that with so much of our vital utility companies in foreign hands, we are now at the mercy of conglomerates that could bring Britain Plc to a shuddering halt.

Everyone feels it’s their right to have water when they turn on a tap — just as we all assume a flick of a switch will produce light.

These are public services we take for granted. We also expect our airports to function properly and care homes to treat the elderly with respect.

True, most are now owned by private companies, but we tend to assume the public interest always comes first — such as plugging leaks and renewing water pipes, rather than providing fat profits for shareholders.

But what happens when most of Britain’s essential public services are no longer run by the British? It’s a crucial question that politicians dodge, as one company after another is sold off to foreign masters.

Roughly half of all our essential services — from water to bridges and ports — now have overseas owners. And in many cases, there’s disturbing evidence to suggest the public is losing out — and will continue to do so.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



British Peer Lord Nazir Ahmed Suspended After ‘Offering £10m Bounty on Barack Obama and George Bush’

A controversial British peer has been suspended from the Labour Party amid reports that he offered a £10 million bounty for the capture of President Barack Obama and his predecessor President George W Bush.

Lord Nazir Ahmed, 53, who in 1998 became the first Muslim life peer, was reported to have made the comments at a conference in Haripur in Pakistan.

A Labour Party spokesman said: “We have suspended Lord Ahmed pending investigation. If these comments are accurate we utterly condemn these remarks which are totally unacceptable.”

According to Pakistan’s Express Tribune newspaper Lord Ahmed offered the bounty in response to a US action a week ago.

The US issued a $10 million reward for the capture of Pakistani militant leader Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, founder of the Lashkar-e-Taiba group, who it suspects of orchestrating the 2008 Mumbai attacks in which 166 people died as terrorists stormed hotels and a train station.

The British peer reportedly said: “‘If the US can announce a reward of $10 million for the (capture) of Hafiz Saeed, I can announce a bounty of £10 million (for the capture of) President Obama and his predecessor, George Bush.”

Lord Ahmed reportedly said he would arrange the bounty at any cost, even if he had to sell his own personal assets including his house.

He was said to have made the comments at a reception arranged in his honour by the business community of Haripur on Friday.

A former Pakistani foreign minister and a provincial education minister were said to have been present at the reception…

[Return to headlines]



British Muslim Leader Faces War Crimes Charges in Bangladesh Over Murders During Country’s Independence Struggle

One of Britain’s top Muslim activists is facing war crimes charges in Bangladesh.

Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, the director of Muslim spiritual care provision in the NHS and a trustee of the charity Muslim Aid, is accused of involvement in the abduction and murder of ‘intellectuals’ during Bangladesh’s struggle for independence in the 1970s.

Mr Mueen-Uddin has denied any involvement in the crimes he has been allegedly linked with — but faces the death penalty if convicted.

Mr Mueen-Uddin moved to Britain from Bangladesh in the early 1970s and has since become a British citizen and forged a successful career as a community activist and Muslim leader.

In 1989 he was a key figure in the protests against Salman Rushdie controversial book, The Satanic Verses.

And he was photographed with Prince Charles when the heir visited a Islamic centre in Leicester in 2003.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



EU: Audit Court: Corruption Key Problem for Candidate States

Can undermine accession process, important to set priorities

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, APRIL 11 — “Corruption is the main problem for a number of candidate countries [for integration into the EU]” and “could seriously undermine the entire process,” according to Karel Pinxten, a member of the EU Audit Court, who has been speaking today at the Foreign Affairs Commission at the European Parliament.

Speaking of funds allocated by the EU to prepare candidate countries prior to their integration, Pinxten underlined the economic efforts being made by member states during the current financial crisis, with the figure reaching almost one billion euros in 2011, another reason for which “it is important to use every euro in the best way possible,” Pinxten said. “The time factor is key. Preparation for EU entry is a marathon, not a sprint. Croatia has shown this, almost ten years on from its request to join,” in 2003. According to Pinxten, past experience suggests that “it is important to identify intelligent objectives, which means specific, significant and measurable priorities, with defined time frames”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Police Raid Flat and Arrest Suspected Serial Killer After Spate of Paris Murders

A suspected serial killer was in custody in Paris last night following the murders of four people in almost as many months with the same pistol.

Armed detectives swooped on a flat in the Essonne area, just south of the capital, yesterday and arrested a 33-year-old man.

The suspect, who is known to be an amateur gun user and to have psychological problems, was not named.

A second man was also thought to have been arrested in central Paris in connection with the murders.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: Milan House Museum Basks Visitors in Renaissance Luxury

Bagatti Valsecchi residence a treat for history, art lovers

(ANSA) — Milan, April 10 — When the Hapsburg viceroy Maximilian was forced to abandon rule over Lombardy and Veneto in 1859, and retreated from Milan to his castle in Trieste, the Milanese barons Fausto and Giuseppe Bagatti Valsecchi were teenagers. As the highborn brothers matured, they bore witness to the consolidation of the Kingdom of Italy under Savoy rule, and by the time they neared middle age, one of the great cultural challenges of the time was to forge an Italian identity. The freshly minted nation did not speak a common language: what is now considered Italian was Florentine dialect. The kingdom’s first king, Victor Emanuel II, spoke almost entirely Piedmontese and French. In keeping with the spirit of new patriotism, the Bagatti Valsecchi brothers turned to Lombard roots in the High Renaissance when they renovated their family palazzo in heart of Milan. Assiduous collectors of Renaissance objects, decor and art, they sought to create a seamless environment that harkened back to Lombardy’s artistic golden age of the 15th and 16th centuries — the era of Ludovico il Moro, Leonardo da Vinci and Ambrogio Bevilacqua. “Compared to the wide-ranging eclecticism that had been in vogue just a few decades earlier…this exclusive predilection was part of the broader context of post-unification Italy, which relied on the evocation of that glorious period for the construction of a new national identity,” wrote Lucia Pini, director of the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum in the catalogue for the 2010 exhibit “Unexpected Guests”. “The close link between container and content — that is, between the house and objects — was a defining feature of the brothers’ operation from the start,” she continued. “The house was…meant to provide them with a convincing and flawless setting. “We did not want to make a museum or a collection, but rather the reconstruction of a refined home of the mid-1500’s, where one could find objects from the 15th and 16th century of genres of all types: pictures, tapestries, carpets, furniture, weapons, pottery, bronzes, glass, jewelry, shoes, household utensils of every kind collected by careful study and returned to their original use,” Giuseppe Bagatti Valsecchi once explained. Renaissance paintings like Christ the Redeemer by Giampetrino and Madonna with Child by Ambrogio Bevilacqua flank 15th-century chests and engraved leather trunks. Flemish tapestries, cabinets of various shapes, tables and chairs with inlaid wood-carving, golden pill boxes, 15th and 16th century Venetian glass, ivory sundials and ancient musical instruments are spread throughout the lavishly decorated rooms.

Cutting-edge conveniences of the late 19th century, like water taps, showers and electrical lamps are camouflaged in neo-Renaissance form. The entire collection and its tailored setting remained private, part of the home of the brothers’ heirs until 1975. At that time, Pasino — one of Giuseppe’s sons — donated the entire collection to the Bagatti Valsecchi Foundation. It is now hosted in perpetuity in the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum on the main floor of the original palazzo in Milan’s Via Santa Spirito.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Discrimination Against Roma Persists in Italy, Say Amnesty

International day celebrates culture and raises awareness

(ANSA) — Rome, April 6 — Amnesty International said on Friday in preparation for the International Roma and Sinti Day that Roma, sometimes called Gypsies, continue to face “persecution and human rights abuses” in Italy.

The non-governmental organization criticized the discriminatory climate against Roma, specifically the 2008 Nomad Emergency decree that gave government representatives in the regions of Lombardy, Lazio and Campania the authority to waive human-rights legislation and allowed forced evictions of Roma communities.

The decree was declared unlawful by the country’s highest administrative court in 2011.

Discrimination against Roma is one of Italy’s biggest human-rights problems, Amnesty International said in the country’s section of its 2010 annual report.

The Italian government has consistently denied applying discriminatory practices regarding Roma. Celebrations for the International Roma Day focusing on raising awareness of the issues facing Romani people will kick off April 9 and include events throughout Italy. Amnesty will release a CD featuring 21 songs by Romani musicians from around Europe called Listen to Roma Rights.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Over One Million in EU Funds Embezzled in Calabria

Money used for private homes and gifts, say police

(ANSA) — Vibo Valentia, April 12 — Over one million euros in EU funding earmarked for the development of tourism accomodation in the region of Calabria was spent on private homes, said police on Thursday. Sixty-three people, including public officials, allegedly pocketed the EU money for personal use and as gifts to family members, including wedding presents, said police.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Moving ‘Ruby’ Trial Unconstitutional, Court Says

‘Obligated’ to try Berlusconi in Milan

(ANSA) — Milan, April 12 — The Constitutional Court said Thursday it would have been unconstitutional to move a trial in which former premier Silvio Berlusconi is accused of paying an underage Moroccan-born runaway and belly dancer known as Ruby for sex.

In a statement explaning its decision in February to keep Berlusconi’s hearings in Milan, the court said it was “constitutionally obligated” to do so. The decision went to the Constitutional Court after a court in Milan rejected a defense plea to move it to a special tribunal for ministers in Rome.

In addition to the charge of paying for sex with a minor, Berlusconi is charged with abusing his office by allegedly pressuring police to get Ruby out of custody after a friend claimed she stole money from her.

Berlusconi and Ruby, whose real name is Karima El Mahroug, deny having sex and he says he phoned police to avoid a diplomatic incident, having been told she was the niece of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

Therefore, lawyers and Berlusconi’s political supporters argued, the case should be tried by a special ministerial court and not by the Milan court.

Backed by a parliamentary majority, in September the government won the second of two parliamentary votes on asking the Constitutional Court if Milan judges should have jurisdiction.

In the Senate, six months after a House vote, 151 Senators voted in favour of putting the matter to the Constitutional Court and 129 voted against.

The vote on the issue on April 5 in the House was closer, with 314 ayes and 302 nays, a margin of 12.

She admits attending parties where he gave her gifts.

The trial is one of three involving the ex-premier, who has claimed for years he is the victim of judicial persecution.

Paying for sex with a minor carries a jail term of three years and abuse of office 12 years.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fincantieri Said to Want to Buy Ship Maker STX OSV

Rome, 11 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Fincantieri SpA, the Italian state- controlled shipbuilder, is among final bidders for a stake in STX OSV, the world’s biggest maker of offshore support vessels, said two people with knowledge of the matter.

An investment fund also submitted an offer, one person said, declining to identify the fund. South Korea’s STX Group, which is seeking to sell its 51 percent stake in Singapore- listed STX OSV, may reach a deal to divest the holding next month, the person said, asking not to be identified because the process is confidential.

STX Group’s stake is worth S$1.02 billion, or $809 million, based on yesterday’s closing price, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Singapore’s takeover guidelines require any buyer of more than 30 percent of a publicly traded company to make an offer for the rest of the stock. STX OSV has a market value of S$2 billion.

STX OSV, headquartered in Alesund, Norway, may benefit as depleting resources push oil companies to develop new offshore oil fields. Deep-water explorers are projected to spend a record $232 billion on new equipment in the next five years, according to Canterbury, U.K.-based researcher Douglas-Westwood.

Fincantieri, which builds cruise ships, ferries and luxury yachts, is owned by Fintecna, a company controlled by Italy’s finance ministry. A spokeswoman at Fincantieri declined to comment on the company’s interest in STX OSV.

Asset Sales

STX Group, owner of the world’s fourth-largest shipbuilder, said in October it plans to raise more than 1.3 trillion won, or $1.1 billion, early this year by selling overseas assets and bonds to repay maturing debt. In January, the company said it hired JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Standard Chartered Plc to arrange the sale of its STX OSV stake.

STX OSV won orders worth 11.1 billion kroner , or $1.9 billion, last year, including 6.03 billion kroner in the fourth quarter. Its order book stood at 16.7 billion kroner at the end of December with deliveries stretching into 2016.

The offshore-vessel builder was bought by STX Group through the takeover of Aker Yards ASA, completed in February 2009. It sold a stake in an initial public offering in November 2010. Och-Ziff Capital Management Group owns 20 percent of STX OSV, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

STX OSV’s products include vessels that are used to move or supply oil rigs. The company has yards in Europe, Asia and Brazil. It is building a second facility in the South American nation as Petroleo Brasileiro drills new wells off the country’s coastline.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Temperatures Drop to a Low of 9 in Rome and Florence

(AGI) Rome — During the night temperatures dropped to a low of 9 in Rome, Bologna and Florence, 10 in Venice and Milan. In Palermo the lowest did not drop under 14 degrees Celsius and in Siracusa it reached a low of 17.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



The British University Head That Seeks to Force Islamic Values on All British Students

Professor Malcolm Gillies, the Vice-Chancellor of London Metropolitan University, is considering banning alcohol from the University’s premises as it causes offence to Islamic students.

This is despite only a fifth of the University’s students being of the Islamic faith.

The problem with such an alcohol ban sponsored by a tax-payer funded University, is that goes contrary to the British Enlightenment’s tradition of rational choice, and responsibility. These principles should be at the heart of all Western and British educational institutions.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Human Rights Laws Are a Charter for Criminals, Say 75% of Britons

Nearly three quarters of Britons think human rights have become a ‘charter for criminals’, a poll has revealed.

It showed a strong majority of 72 per cent hold negative views about the role of human rights laws.

Only one in six said human rights had not become a charter for criminals and the undeserving.

The YouGov poll, published today, will heap pressure on ministers to secure major reforms to the European Court of Human Rights.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Woman Let ‘Secret’ Baby Die Then Dumped Her Body for Fear of Dishonouring Her Family

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

A mother who gave birth to a baby girl in ‘secret’ following an affair, let her newborn die before burying its body in the ground.

Fatima Ali, from Bury, Greater Manchester, feared she would bring shame upon her devout Muslim family for having the child out of wedlock.

And after giving birth to the infant — alone her bedroom, she cut the umbilical chord and left it to die.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



World Remembers Sinking of the Titanic

The world has been marking the 100th anniversary of the most famous disaster in maritime history, the sinking of the Titanic. More than 1,500 people lost their lives in the tragedy. Services took place on both sides of the Atlantic on Sunday to remember the sinking of the “indestructible” cruise liner Titanic 100 years ago to the day.

Passengers held a minute’s silence on board the deck of MS Balmoral, which has been retracing the route of the voyage across the North Atlantic. Floral wreaths were thrown into the water at the site where the ship went down. In Belfast, where the Titanic was built, a memorial garden with all the victims’ names was unveiled during a commemorative service. Thousands had attended a memorial concert held a day earlier.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algerian Opens Election Period in Bid to Ease Discontent

The campaign for Algeria’s parliamentary elections has begun, with voting set to take place on May 10. The poll is seen as a test for reforms aimed at preventing an Arab Spring-style uprising in the ex-French colony. Campaigning began in Algeria on Sunday for elections that are being viewed as a litmus test for the ruling elite’s ability to avert a popular uprising similar to those in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia.

The poll would be “a decisive gamble which it is incumbent on us to win, because we have no other choice but to succeed,” President Abdelaziz Bouteflika said in an advance message to mark Algeria’s Day of Knowledge on Monday. Deadly rioting in January 2011 coincided with an uprising in neighboring Tunisia that toppled Zine el Abidine Ben Ali from his role as president.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Hubby Watching Porn Online Finds Film Starring His Wife

An Egyptian man who went online to watch a porno film for the first time got the shock of his life when he found that the woman in the film was his own wife.

The man, identified as Ramadan, instantly collapsed in disbelief on the floor at an internet shop before coming round and rushing home to face his unfaithful wife.

The woman first denied his allegations and started to swear at him, prompting her husband to face her with the film.

Unable to deny it any more, she confessed to have betrayed him with her pre-marriage boy friend, telling him she had never loved him although they had four children during their 16-year marriage.

“I found 11 films showing my wife in indecent scenes with her lover….it was the first time I watched a porno film and I did this just out of curiosity,” Ramadan told Egyptian newspapers at his house in the northeastern province of Dakhalia.

“She first denied it and accused me of being insane before I faced her with the films…she then confessed to be still in love with her boyfriend, saying he is as young as her and that I am an old man.”

Ramadan said he had been happy during his marriage life until he logged on to that website. Newspapers did not say whether he decided to divorce her.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Intimate Scenes to be Banned From Egyptian Public TV

(AGI) Cairo — A group of Islamic supervisors of the Egyptian Public Broadcaster will be in charge of removing ‘immoral ‘ footage from films the network has in its archives. The ban will apply to scenes featuring hugging, kissing and belly dancing. As reported by the daily Kuwait al-Anba, which quotes sources from inside the Network, such a decision could bring about either the removal of important scenes from movies that are an integral part of Egypt’s cinema or their complete ban from any TV programming. Such movies have been aired several times in the past already. The daily believes that the setting up of a supervising authority on cinema and TV content is a clear indication of the ground which the Islamic parties have been gaining in post- Mubarak Egypt. According to the daily’s sources, censorship will be applied to the last 50 years of filmmaking.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Saudi Wahhabism Expands Into Libya

Since the ouster of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi in October 2011 and in the chaos that has gripped Libya since, fundamentalist Libyans have been pushing for a strict interpretation of Islamic law. Under the umbrella of lawlessness, gunmen calling themselves Salafis broke into the Saif al-Nasr Mosque in Tripoli on November 8, 2011, smashed open the wooden sarcophagus and removed the remains of el-Nasr, a scholar who died 155 years ago, as well as that of a former imam, Hammad Zwai. The gunmen moved the bodies to a Muslim cemetery and, with the help of graffiti left on the walls, explained their disapproval of the Sufi Muslim tradition of burying scholars and teachers in mosques to honor them.

The estimated 200 to 400 members of the local Salafi movement in the small town of Zuwara near the Tunisian border have demolished shrines belonging to adherents of the Ibadi sect, long considered heretics by orthodox Sunni Muslims. In the town’s cemetery, large blocks of stone surround what was once a mausoleum. The large, conical-shaped structure that once adorned it now lies collapsed in the debris.

In January 2012, extremists bulldozed through a wall of an old cemetery in the eastern city of Benghazi, destroyed its tombs, and carried off 29 bodies of respected sages and scholars. They also demolished a nearby Sufi school.

A group of Salafis angered by the burning of the Koran at a NATO military base in Afghanistan entered the Commonwealth War Cemetery in Benghazi on February 24, 2012, and shattered headstones of British and allied servicemen who fought in North African desert campaigns against the Nazis during World War II.

Salafis are intolerant of other schools of Islam and have physically attacked Muslim minorities in other parts of the Arab world, including Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Many Muslims frequent the shrines of saints, believing the holy men have powers of intercession with the divine. Salafis, however, believe these are pagan rites that must be obliterated from Islam, in line with the teachings of the founder of the Salafi movement, Muhammad Ibn ‘Abd el-Wahab (1703-1792) whose philosophy has been the official doctrine of Saudi Arabia since the end of the eighteenth century. Its adherents prefer to call themselves Salafis.

The Wahhabi teachings disapprove of the veneration of historical sites associated with early Islam on the grounds that only God should be worshipped and that veneration of sites associated with mortals leads to idolatry. Many buildings associated with early Islam, including mausoleums and other artifacts, have been destroyed in Saudi Arabia by Wahhabis from the early nineteenth century through the present day.

Indeed, this version of fundamentalist Islam is not typical of Libyan Islam. Moderate Libyan and North African Islam has receded in the face of Wahhabi Islam coming from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf countries. Under Gaddafi, the regime succeeded mostly in containing the Salafi push. But in areas remote from the center (Benghazi), the Salafis, together with al-Qaeda elements that apply a strict Wahhabi Islam, succeeded not only to survive the persecutions of the Gaddafi regime, but also succeeded in proselytizing their school of thought among the Libyans who were the backbone of the fighters in Afghanistan.

Throughout Libya, Gaddafi’s fall has emboldened Salafis, who were persecuted and imprisoned under the now deceased leader. They have increased their public presence, taken over mosques, and even raised the flag of al-Qaeda over the courthouse in Benghazi where the revolution began eleven months ago. Gaddafi’s disappearance and the link between the Qatari regime and the fighting militias particularly exposed the connection with Abdel Hakim Belhaj, the head of the Tripoli Military Council and former Guantanamo Bay inmate, and has created a situation where the military commanders of Libya are part and parcel of the Salafi-Wahhabi school of Islam. This explains their attitude towards the prevalent Sufi Islam in North Africa.

Moreover, for thirty years, massive amounts of oil money have been used to drown the Middle East and North Africa in Wahhabi ideas. The purpose of this support for the Wahhabi school of thought is basically political, in that the Saudi system of government depends on an alliance between the ruling family and the Wahhabi sheikhs. Hence, spreading the Wahhabi ideology reinforces the political system in that country…

           — Hat tip: JCPA [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Pacifists Headed to Israel Stopped in European Airports

(AGI) Rome — Hundreds of pro-Palestinian pacifists headed in Israel to take part in the Welcome to Palestine 2012 stopped in Europe. They were denied boarding on flights taking off from several European airports. Upon the request of Israeli authorities, the airline companies cancelled their plane tickets. Seven activists have been blocked at Rome’s Fiumicino airport, about one hundred in Geneva, and a dozen more in Paris. Some seats have been cancelled also on a flight taking off from Manchester airport.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Explosions & Shots in Kabul Embassy District

(AGI) Kabul — Eyewitnesses report at least seven explosions and a series of shootings in the embassy district of Kabul. The attacks took place near a supermarket frequented by foreigners.

The US embassy sounded its warning siren to tell all staff to move away from the windows. The shots seemed to come from different directions, which suggests a coordinated attack.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Bangladesh: Ex Imam Convert to Catholicism Almost Killed

Muslim leader first becomes Presbyterian abroad. After meeting a Catholic woman, he marries her and converts to her religion. Back in Bangladesh, he is totally rejected by his community. Despite the violence and social banishment, his faith remains strong: “I believe in Christ. I welcomed him” for “he is my saviour”.

Dhaka (AsiaNews) — “I believe in Christ. I welcomed him” for “he is my saviour,” said Vincent (not his real name for security reasons), a former Bangladeshi imam who is now Catholic and for this reason has endured persecution for a long time in his native community.

His journey towards conversion began abroad, far from Bangladesh. It led him first to baptism in the Presbyterian Church. After that, he fell in love with a Catholic woman, married her and then converted to her faith. Once they were back in Bangladesh, Vincent and his wife were welcomed by threats and violence. Members of his community beat him almost to death.

Islam in the state religion in Bangladesh but the constitution does not recognise Sharia and guarantees freedom of worship. This makes it one of the most open Muslim states, where conversions can occur in an atmosphere of general tolerance.

However, Islam’s social and cultural ascendancy is such that in many communities all sorts of pressure is put on people. In some cases, notaries refuse to sign papers testifying to conversions. In other cases, like that of the former imam, people resort to physical and psychological violence.

After almost two months in hospital, Vincent is back home. But the same Muslims who followed him and held him in high esteem when he was their imam now cannot accept his new “status”.

Beating is also not enough. Other forms of violence can be used. Both husband and wife have been ostracised, forced to move from home to home. Vincent eventually lost his job and now has to do odd jobs to survive.

Today he is a troubled man. Yet, his community’s banishment has not pushed him away from Jesus. He continues to attend Mass now more than ever, and repeat, “I believe in Christ. In him, I was reborn. He is my Saviour.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



India: Hindu Radicals Attack Christian Pastors During Easter as Police Stand Idly by

Two incidents are reported in Karnataka, one in Andhra Pradesh. In both states, members of Hindu ultranationalist groups have insulted, beaten and proffered death threats against believers and clergymen. Law enforcement officers filed cases against persons unknown even though the victims knew their attackers. For the president of the Global Council of Indian Christians, the Christian minority lives in a “climate of terror”.

Mumbai (AsiaNews) — India’s Christian minority is living in a “climate of terror,” this according to Sajan George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) who spoke about the violence visited upon some Christian communities over the Easter break.

In Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, Hindu ultranationalist groups have attacked, beaten and made death threats against the pastors and members of three Pentecostal churches. Although each incident is distinct, they all have one thing in common, namely the “utter failure” of the police to act. For all intents and purpose, they are accomplices of Hindutva extremists.

The first incident occurred on 5 April in Mangalore (Karnataka) when a group of Hindus hurled stones at a congregation that had gathered for Maundy Thursday prayers at St Sebastian Church in the city’s Bendore area. A 46-year-old woman, Claret Pinto, suffered head injuries and was rushed to Colaco Hospital. Police later filed a report against persons unknown.

On Easter Sunday in Chamrajnagar (Karnataka), police went to the home of Rev Rajesh, 27, a pastor in the Indian Pentecostal Church of God (IPC) who had just finished a prayer service. They asked him under what authority he conducted the service at his home. Then, they insulted and eventually ordered him to vacate his home.

Later that day, Rev Rajesh and five other pastors went to the local police station to file a complaint about the incident. As they were briefing the attending officer, about 100 activists from the Bajrang Dal stormed the station and attacked the clergymen and a parishioner. The latter, named Babu, was wounded to the head and needed 24 sutures. Police present at the scene stood idly by.

Also on Easter Sunday, Hindu ultranationalists from the Rashtriya Sawayamsevak Sangh (RSS) broke into the home of Rev Ratnababu, a pastor with the Christu Asinadu Prathana Mandir Church.

As some gagged and bound his son Madhu, others attacked the clergyman, throwing chilli powder into his eyes to blind him. They then physically assaulted him and his wife. When some neighbours began coming to the house in response to her screams, the attackers fled. Madhu was rushed to hospital.

Police filed a report against persons unknown even though the young man could identify the attackers.

Rev Ratnababu has been serving his Pentecostal community for 15 years. This attack by Hindu ultranationalists was not the first of its kind. In October 2011, there were three attempts to torch his church and numerous death threats against him. In the past six months, RSS activists were also able to get the police to arrest him, twice.

According to Sajan George, anti-Christian incidents are occurring on a regular basis. This and the lack of justice are a “serious threat” to the country’s secular backbone.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Nepal: Maoist Government Gains Control of Iconic Pashupatinath Hindu Temple

After almost 1000 years, management of one of the holiest Hindu temples goes to the civil authority. Priests and vendors salaried by ministry. The measure is to prevent corruption among the temple authorities.

Kathmandu (AsiaNews) — The management of the Pashupatinath temple has passed to civil authority, after almost 1000 years. As of April 8 priests (bhattas) and shopkeepers (bhandaris) are employees of the Ministry of Culture. The salary for the highest office is about 3 thousand Euros per month. The government must also collect the million dollar of offerings left by pilgrims. The measure aims to prevent corruption among the staff and any waste of the believers’ donations.

Narottam Baidhaya, treasurer of the Pashupatinath Area Development Trust (PADT), says that the temple collects an average of 45 thousand Euros per month in contributions to which are added vessels of gold and silver. In addition each believer is charged a puja, or special fee for services, and upkeep of the sacred place. The expenditure for salaries and maintenance of the premises amounts to about 25 thousand Euros per month. The official points out that the revenue triples during major Hindu festivals: Teej, Balachaturdashi and Mahashivaratri.

Since its founding in the eleventh century, the temple has been self-managed and has always refused the interference of civil authority. To date, Pashupatinath was administered by five bhattas, including the Mul Bhatta (high priest) and 101 bhandaris. According to tradition, they have full authority over the collection of offerings. However, the temple authorities have never stated the exact amount of donations.

In recent months, the Supreme Court urged the government to regulate the receipts and expenditures of the temple, following a number of allegations of corruption against bhattas and bhandaris. On 21 March the Maoist government announced the transfer of the economic management of the Unesco site to a the civil authority.

The government decision sparked protests from the PADT and Hindu activists, who consider the act as a misappropriation by the executive led by secular Maoists. Already in 2008, the then Maoist Prime Minister Prachanda, had attempted to interfere with the activities of the temple by prohibiting the appointment of Indian priests under the new pro-Chinese policy in the country. To test the sincerity of the religious PADT allowed a television crew to film the process of collection and submission of bids.

Gopal Kirati, Minister of Culture emphasizes that the PADT has grown disproportionately and become difficult to control. He explains that in this moment of crisis, “there is need for transparency. Every Hindu should be proud of this decision.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Taliban Militants Free 400 Prisoners Including ‘Dangerous’ Insurgents in Dramatic Attack on Pakistan Jail

Taliban fighters armed with rocket-propelled grenades stormed a prison in north west Pakistan and freed 400 prisoners, it emerged today.

The raid by more than 100 fighters was a dramatic display of the strength of the insurgency gripping the nuclear-armed country.

Police said at least 20 of the inmates set loose were ‘very dangerous’.

Authorities fear the escaped prisoners may now rejoin the fight, giving momentum and a propaganda boost to a movement that has killed thousands of Pakistani officials and ordinary citizens since 2007.

The attackers battled their way into the prison before dawn in the city of Bannu close to the Afghan border and near Peshawar.

Bannu prison superintendent Zahid Khan said they used explosives and hand grenades to knock down the main gates and two walls.

‘They were carrying modern and heavy weapons,’ said Mr Khan. ‘They fired rockets.’

Once inside the building, the attackers headed straight to the area of the prison where death-row prisoners were being kept, he said.

Police officer Shafique Khan said they fought with guards for around two hours, setting part of the prison on fire before freeing the 380 inmates, including at least 20 ‘very dangerous Taliban militants’.

One escaped prisoner, Adnan Rashid, was on death row for his involvement in an assassination attempt against former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, said Zahid Khan.

The prison in Bannu housed 944 inmates.

A Taliban spokesman, Asimullah Mehsud, claimed the movement’s fighters freed 1,200 of their comrades. The group is known to make exaggerated claims.

Pakistan’s military has launched a series of operations against the Pakistani Taliban group in the northwest, where it is strongest and has forged alliances with al-Qaida and other transnational militant movements based there along the Afghan border.

The movement is closely linked to the Afghan Taliban, which is battling U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Soldiers and police have killed or arrested hundreds of militants, but the insurgency has proved resilient.

Insurgents have carried out suicide bombings and other attacks across the country in retaliation, raising doubts in some quarters over whether the county can survive.

Prison breakouts like the one Sunday have been rare.

Bannu city is the main gateway to North Waziristan, the most militant-infested region along the border.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Taliban Launch Assaults Across Afghanistan

Suicide bombers have struck in Kabul and other sites across Afghanistan. The attacks show that militants still remain a potent force capable of hitting at the heart of the capital. The Taliban on Sunday launched a number of near-simultaneous attacks on at least seven sites in the Afghan capital, Kabul, as well as elsewhere in the country. In Kabul, the militants mainly attacked an area close to the embassies of Germany, the United States, Britain and Iran, as well as offices of the United Nations and other international organizations.

The French, Turkish and Chinese embassies are not far from the site. Bombs and gunfire were heard in the diplomatic enclave. Militants also took over buildings and tried to enter parliament.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


A Revolt, the Quiet Japanese Way

New revelations seeped out about the control Japan’s nuclear industry had over its regulators. In early 2006, five years before the apparently preventable meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, the Nuclear Safety Commission (NSC), an “independent” agency, began studying the enlargement of disaster-mitigation zones around nuclear power plants—from Japan’s standard 8-10 km to the International Atomic Energy Agency’s standard of a 5-km “top priority zone” and a 30-km “priority zone.”

But the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), which is under the Ministry of Economy, Trade & Industry (METI), demanded the study be shelved, claiming in emails that were just released that the expansion “could cause social unrest and increase popular anxiety.”

It worked. But if the expansion of the zones had been implemented, it could have prevented the chaos of the evacuations from the areas around the Fukushima plant—and the deaths that occurred during it.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Japan — Great Britain: Noda and Cameron Meet, Talk Defence

The two leaders met on Tuesday and Wednesday in Tokyo. Defence was at the centre of their talks. Great Britain will be only the second country after the United States to cooperate with Japan on weapons development. Cameron calls on Japan to agree to an EU-Japan free trade agreement.

Tokyo (AsiaNews) — Defence was at the centre of talks between Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and his British counterpart, David Cameron, on Tuesday and Wednesday. Initially scheduled for last October, it was postponed because Cameron had to attend a European summit in Brussels.

Talks were important because they were centred on bilateral defence cooperation even though Article 9 of Japan’s constitution says, “Aspiring sincerely to an international peace based on justice and order, the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation”.

Japan has a long-standing ban on arms export and weapons development and production with other countries; however, last December its government decided to relax the ban on joint weapons development and production. This would be the first time Japan developed weapons with a country other than the United States.

Since his country is a member of the European Union, the British prime minister could also speak on important issues of common interest, including defence.

After he arrived in Tokyo on Tuesday, Cameron went first to the Imperial Palace for an audience with Emperor Akihito who recently underwent major surgery.

After their meeting, Noda and Cameron reiterated the importance of cooperation between Japan and Britain, including their position on how to deal with North Korea and its planned rocket launch, which many countries view as a missile test.

Before leaving Britain, Cameron told reporters that Great Britain is keen to become “Japan’s partner of choice” alongside the United States for defence industry collaboration.

“There are many opportunities for defence cooperation (between Britain and Japan) — for instance, in the area of helicopters,” Cameron said. “I hope to discuss these issues with Prime Minister Noda so that we can pave the way for our defence ministers to agree more formal cooperation when they next meet”.

“I believe stronger cooperation on defence will provide benefits for both countries in terms of jobs and investment as well as reducing the cost of defence equipment upon which we both rely,” the prime minister added.

Britain will be only the second country after the United States to collaborate with Japan in this sector.

Speaking about the Fukushima nuclear accident triggered by last year’s earthquake and tsunami, the British leader said, “I greatly admire and respect the way the Japanese have overcome the enormous challenges of recovery.” British companies, he added, can lend their “significant expertise” in nuclear decommissioning as Japan tackles the triple challenge of cleaning up after the earthquake, tsunami and the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant.

Here Cameron was referring to a meeting on the nuclear challenge that Britain’s chief scientific adviser John Beddington will host during the prime minister’s visit to Japan, bringing together British companies with their Japanese counterparts and government officials.

According to The Japan Times, Cameron has been pushed for a free-trade area between the European Union and Japan.

“I really hope that we can formally open negotiations later this year,” Cameron explained. “But in order to win the argument in the European Union, Japan needs to demonstrate its readiness and commitment to tackling nontariff barriers that keep European companies from doing business in Japan.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



North Korea Celebrates First President’s 100th Birthday

A military parade marking the centenary of Kim Il-Sung, the founding president of North Korea, was held in the capital, Pyongyang, on Sunday. Television images broadcast by North Korean television showed thousands of soldiers carrying red flags and marching into Kim Il-Sung Square in the capital. Kim Il-Sung’s grandson, Kim Jong-Un, delivered his first ever public speech during the parade.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket… But it Blows Up 90 SECONDS After Take-Off (So What Went Wrong?)

North Korea’s rocket scientists have been forced to hang their heads in collective shame following the spectacular failure of their latest long-range missile which blew up moments after launch.

Military leaders had hoped to show off their nation’s technological prowess by blasting a satellite into orbit in what the West had called a covert test of missile technology and a flagrant violation of international resolutions.

But in deeply embarrassing episode for the communist country and its new leader Kim Jong-Un, the Unha-3, or ‘Milky Way’, rocket exploded 90 seconds after blast off and came crashing down into the Yellow Sea.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Reports: Omar Hammami Executed

Mogadishu (RBC) — Today, unconfirmed reports that a Daphne native who joined an Al-Qaeda linked terror group in Somalia may be dead.

Omar Hammami, also known as Abu Mansoor Al-Amriki joined Al-Shabaab in 1999 and eventually became one of the group’s top commanders.

The rumor is that he was executed by other commanders over a dispute about the terrorist group’s future.

The reports have been unconfirmed by NBC News and by Al-Shabaab, which has its own press office.

In the last few weeks, Hammami said he thought his life was in danger — but Al-Shabaab said they posed no threat to him.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



South African President Zuma to Wed 4th Wife

(AGI) Johannesburg — Next weekend, the South African president Jacob Zuma, known polygamist, will marry a 4th wife. The wedding with Bongi Ngema will be celebrated with a private traditional ceremony in Nkandla. Zuma, 70, has three wife and some 20 children. In 1998 he divorced Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, a South African candidate to the presidency of the African League, whereas another wife, Kate, committed suicide in 2000.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Belgian Xenophobic Website Reflects Anti-Immigrant Attitudes in Europe

Vlaams Belang, a Belgian far-right party, has recently launched a website urging citizens to report crimes committed by illegal immigrants in a bid to mirror a similar Dutch website set up by a far-right party in Netherlands, Press TV reports.

According to European activists, the site is the latest example of growing anti-immigrant sentiment across Europe, which is no longer limited to extremist parties.

Vlaams Belang claims illegal immigration is being encouraged through services such as counseling and legal assistance, adding that illegal immigrants abuse social security.

This comes while European activists say illegal immigrants are denied their basic rights and cannot have access to social security.

Meanwhile analysts cite economic crisis as a major reason behind anti-immigrant sentiment in Europe at a time when the average EU unemployment rate is at an all-time high, that is over 10 percent and European countries struggle with huge debt loads.

They also argue that Europe cannot afford to foster this negative attitude towards immigrants because its population is declining and it is in need of immigrants from other nations.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Revealed: How HALF of All Social Housing in Parts of England Goes to People Born Abroad

British people who have paid their taxes should get priority in the social housing queue over new migrants, David Cameron’s poverty tsar has said.

Frank Field, the senior Labour MP, has called for a shake-up of the way housing is handed out as it emerged that nearly half of all social housing in parts of the country were given to immigrants.

Nearly five million families are languishing on waiting lists for subsidised housing in England.

But in parts of London, which has the most expensive rents and property prices in the country, nearly half the social housing is allocated to foreigners.

Some boroughs did not record nationality details of social tenants which made it nearly impossible to properly scrutinise who is at the top of the queue.

Mr Field described the trend as a ‘scandal’ that ‘must stop’.

‘For years we have been told that British people on the waiting list for social housing are getting a fair deal,’ Mr Field said.

‘Yet, when the situation in London is examined, we find that, in reality, nobody has any idea how many new lets are going to foreign nationals and how many to British citizens.’

‘This scandal must stop. I have a bill before parliament that will ensure that those citizens who have made most contribution to society, who have paid their taxes and whose children have not caused trouble, for example, will have first choice of any housing available.

‘This would be a major change in our welfare state whereby benefits have to be earned rather than automatically allocated on need.’

The numbers of social housing tenants who were foreign have increased in the last four years to 8.6% in 2010-11, according to Department for Communities and Local Government figures.

But in London, where the waiting list has soared by 60% to 362,000 in the last decade because of rising house prices, a far greater proportion of housing is handed out to new migrants.

In Haringey, 43% of new tenants in social housing are foreign while in Ealing the figure is 45%.

Some councils failed to release information based on nationality but on average at least 11% of social housing lets in London are given to foreign nationals.

Mr Field, a former Social Security Secretary, demanded that the Government should also carry out an inquiry into ‘who gets the available social housing and when’.

In 2010-11, 8.6% of all new social housing tenants were foreign nationals, the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) figures showed.

Ministers have tried to stop far right parties from exploiting concerns about the impact immigration has had on housing.

They have pointed to a study by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) which in 2009 said migrants arriving in the UK over the previous five years made up less than 2% of the total of those in social housing.

But MigrationWatch said boroughs with large immigrant populations had been the least cooperative in providing information on who was being allocated social housing.

Sir Andrew Green, Chairman of Migration Watch said, ‘The present situation is a scandal. The records are in chaos. British people who have lived in the area for many years are given little or no priority.’

‘What is clear is that the proportion of new lets going to foreign nationals in London is far higher than has previously been admitted.’

He added that only British citizens — including those who were foreign born but had taken up citizenship — should be considered for social housing.

He added: ‘Foreign nationals would still get housing allowance but not social housing; there is no reason why they should be entitled to subsidised housing provided by British taxpayers while British citizens spend years in the queue.’

David Cameron recently unveiled plans to expand the ‘right to buy’ scheme for council tenants.

The flagship policy of Margaret Thatcher helped millions of poor families realise their dreams of owning their own home.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


California and the Subversive Teaching Radicals

If the red shoe fits… The masks are dropping altogether in the Universities and the schools that teach our future, our children. Zombie last week attended a lecture: “Teaching as a Subversive Activity — Revisited.” The title is self-explanatory unfortunately. You should read Zombie’s entire post — it is enlightening and terrifying to say the least.

The normalcy of radicalism, as Zombie puts it, is the order of the day in universities across America, not just California. California is just very blatant about it. They have basically become a communist state and hope to swing the nation that way as well.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: And After Double Maths it Will Be… Paganism: Schools Told to Put Witchcraft and Druids on Re Syllabus

Paganism has been included in an official school religious education syllabus for the first time.

Cornwall Council has told its schools that pagan beliefs, which include witchcraft, druidism and the worship of ancient gods such as Thor, should be taught alongside Christianity, Islam and Judaism.

The requirements are spelled out in an agreed syllabus drawn up by Cornwall’s RE advisory group.

It says that from the age of five, children should begin learning about standing stones, such as Stonehenge. At the age of 11, pupils can begin exploring ‘modern paganism and its importance for many in Cornwall’.

The syllabus adds that areas of study should include ‘the importance of pre-Christian sites for modern pagans’.

And an accompanying guide says that pupils should ‘understand the basic beliefs’ of paganism and suggests children could discuss the difficulties a practising pagan pupil might face in school.

But the council’s initiative has dismayed some Christian campaigners, who are alarmed that a religion once regarded as a fringe eccentricity is increasingly gaining official recognition.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Children Born Out of Wedlock on the Rise

(AGI) Atlanta — During the last decade 1 in 4 children was born out of wedlock, the Centers for Disease Control report. With previous US government reports pointing to 40pc of children born of unmarried mothers, the report clarifies that the figure signals an increase in children born with unmarried couples.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Video: Cultural Marxism: Understanding the Origins of Political Correctness

In light of some of our posts this morning that deal with this nasty American infection called political correctness, it’s worthwhile to understand the roots of political correctness and its purpose is in America. To do that I have two videos for you, the first being a more full explanation of the origins of political correctness, how it came to be and why, its implementation and how it came to America. I know it sounds dry, but it really isn’t. In fact it is very enlightening.

The second video is Bill Whittle on the very same topic, tying it into present day narratives driven by the MSM. Whittle sums up what you get in the first video as well, but I highly recommend watching both videos to get a more full understanding of it.

It opens up a whole new world of understanding as to why our culture is all out of whack.

Comment by aPLWBinAK:

A student at Texas A&M won a competition seeking the most appropiate definition of a contemporary term with this submission: “Political Correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120414

Financial Crisis
» Chinese Growth Slows Down to Lowest Pace in Three Years
» Greece: Athens Hotels See Revenue Fall (-19.1%)
» Greece: Easter Feast 10% Cheaper This Year, Say Traders
» Slovenia: Government Support Slides After Cuts
 
USA
» Coke, Pepsi and Kraft Stop Helping Enact Vote Fraud Laws
» Defamation Suit Dropped Against Larry Sinclair, Other Defendants
» Ferragamo Reopens New York Flagship Store
» Islam & Rick Warren
» Jolted by a Rare Truism of Muslims in America
» New York Exhibit Puts Spotlight on Ancient Middle Eastern Power Clashes
» Power Grab for Natural Gas — New Executive Order
» The Ring of Fire is Roaring to Life and There Will be Earthquakes of Historic Importance on the West Coast of the United States
 
Europe and the EU
» As Final Preparations Are Made for Trial of Anders Behring Breivik, Norway Families Fear it Could Become a Circus
» Germany: US Comedian Tells Tales From the Mosque
» Greece: 57 Bags of Third Reich Marks Found
» Italy: New Probe Against Puglia Governor
» Italy: Police Remove ‘Centurions’ From Colosseum, Fight Ensues
» Italy: Medical Student Examinees Cause Traffic Snarls
» Italy: Industry Ministry Official Arrested for ‘Attemped Bribe’
» Italy: Urban Planning Councilor Arrested for Corruption
» Italy: Fake Blind Woman Nabbed in Viterbo
» Italy: Rimini Jeweler ‘Didn’t Declare Income Since 2005’
» Italy Must Become a “Predictable” Country — Prime Minister Mario Monti Speaks
» Italy: Tax Police Carry Out Search Warrant at LNP’s ‘SINPA’ HQ
» Italy: San Raffaele: Milan Prosecutors, Indictment of 7 Accused
» Italy: Lega Nord Young Members Protest Outside Ex-Treasurer Home
» Lega Nord’s Maroni: “Clean-Up Not Over, No Score-Settling”
» Norwegian Mass Killer Anders Breivik to Argue ‘Self-Defense’ When Trial Begins Monday
» Spain: 500:000 Signatures for Law to Restore the Corrida
» Swedish Town Rocked by Second Child Exorcism
» Turkish President Calls Wilders Islamophobe
» UK: ‘Insane’ Husband Who Stabbed Wife 120 Times in Frenzied Killing Walks Free From Court Less Than a Year Later
» UK: Bully Road Rage Van Driver Who Rammed Into Terrified Horse Rider Simply Because She Asked Him to Slow Down is Jailed
» UK: How Liberal Conservatives Repeatedly Misrepresent Mainstream Conservatives
» UK: Muslim Taxi Driver Dumps Family Out of His Cab After Spotting an Unopened Bottle of Wine Saying it Was Against His Religion
» UK: Some Secrets Must be Kept — And No One Needs to Apologise for That
 
Balkans
» Macedonia: Killing of Five People Sparks Ethnic Tensions
 
North Africa
» Ten Candidates, Including Front-Runners, Barred From Egyptian Presidential Race
» Was the Arab Spring Really a Facebook Revolution?
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Airlines Cancel Israel Flights for Over 60 Percent of Pro-Palestinian Fly-in Protesters
 
Middle East
» Beirut Hotel at Florence Festival, Spy Story Banned in Lebanon
» Iran Holds ‘Constructive’ Nuclear Talks With Britain and Other World Powers as They Return to Negotiating Table
» U.N. Security Council Agrees to Send Ceasefire Monitors to Syria
» UAE: Scholars Share Message of Peace
 
South Asia
» Pakistani Schoolbooks Full of Contempt and Bigotry Against Christians, Hindus and Sikhs
» Pakistan: Lahore: Christians and Hindus Against “Religious Fascism” And Forced Conversions to Islam
 
Far East
» China: Forced Expropriation and Home Demolitions Continue Communist Party Abuses
» Demand for Rhino Horns Threatens Species
 
Latin America
» Brazil: The Death Cult Brazilians Who Killed and Ate Two Women ‘To Purify Their Souls’
 
Culture Wars
» Got Quickie Aborsh: Comedienne Sarah Silverman Supports Pro Choice Debate Tweeting Abortion Photos
» UK: Islam Has Made London a More Conservative Place Than it Was 50 Years Ago
 
General
» 4.4 Bln Clicks for Xvideos Porn Site, 30% of Traffic
» How Earthly Life Could Populate Space by Panspermia
» Islamutopia: A Very Short History of Political Islam
» Women and Children First? Not Since the Titanic

Financial Crisis


Chinese Growth Slows Down to Lowest Pace in Three Years

GDP grew by 8.1 per cent in first quarter of 2012. Exports and domestic demand remain low. Government raises bank reserve ratio stoking inflation. World Bank sees a slower Chinese economy.

Beijing (AsiaNews) — China’s economy grew by 8.1 per cent in the first three months of 2012, its slowest pace in nearly three years, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said, because of the “complex” global situation and the “enormous” pressure on exports growth.

Growth still exceeds this year’s government target of 7.5 per cent, as China’s economy remains one of the best in Asia and the world. However, the slower pace is a sign of falling domestic and foreign demand, especially in Europe and the United States, which are still in the middle of a deep economic crisis. The net effect is plant closures, higher unemployment and rising social tensions.

China’s central bank in February cut the amount of cash banks must hold in reserve for the second time in three months to increase lending and boost domestic consumption.

For analysts, lending should further increase. In March, it rose sharply, with banks issuing 1.01 trillion yuan in new loans (US$ 160 billion), up from 710 billion yuan (US$ 110 billion) in February. Greater lending however raises the threat of higher inflation.

Consumer prices in March rose by 3.6 per cent from a year earlier, lower than the government’s target of 4 per cent for the year. However, the figures are not very reliable. A few months ago, the government had reported a higher rate of inflation at 4.2 per cent, more so for basic items and food prices, which increased by up to 30-40 per cent.

For its part, the World Bank recently forecast that the Chinese economy could slow down even further.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Greece: Athens Hotels See Revenue Fall (-19.1%)

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 13 — The average revenue per room per night at three-, four- and five-star hotels in Athens dropped by 19.1% in February compared with the same month last year, coming to just 36.50 euros, according to a survey conducted for the Athens-Attica Hotel Association ans published by daily Kathimerini. In comparison, Istanbul hotels enjoyed an average revenue of 71 euros per room, almost twice that of their Athenian counterparts. The occupancy rate in the Greek capital dropped by 16%, amounting to just 41.3%. Athens hotels had the lowest room prices among 10 European cities that the survey covered, with the average rate coming to 88.30 euros per night after a 3.7% decline from February 2011.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Easter Feast 10% Cheaper This Year, Say Traders

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 13 — The Easter feast will cost Greek families 10.5% less this year compared to 2011, as daily Kathimerini reports quoting figures from the National Confederation of Greek Commerce (ESEE). ESEE has collected prices from open-air markets, super markets and the central meat market in Athens, which suggest that prices of both meat and vegetables have dropped slightly since last year. Despite the lower prices, traders expect their turnover to drop this Easter as a result of the recession. They expect overall Easter purchases to reach roughly 4.5 billion euros, down from 5 billion last year.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Slovenia: Government Support Slides After Cuts

(ANSAmed) — LJUBLJANA, APRIL 11 — The number of Slovenians supporting the new centre-right government under Prime Minister Janez Jansa has dropped by almost half in a single month, after the announcement of a budget law aiming to cut the deficit with sharp reductions in public spending, including a cut in state employees’ salaries. According to a poll carried out a few days ago, only 26.9% of those interviewed say that they support Jansa’s government, compared with the 44.6% a month ago. The sharp drop in support is due to — according to the press — the austerity measures and the cuts totaling over 800 million euros in public spending called for by the budget law due to be voted on over the coming days. The government intends to bring the deficit from the 6.1% recorded in 2011 to 3.5%, to achieve a level of below 3% in 2013 in order to comply with the EU Stability Pact.

Salary cuts within the public sector are expected to be between 7 and 10%, and there will be a drop in unemployment benefits and maternity ones, lay-offs of staff with term contracts and cuts to political costs and funding for culture.

These measures are supported by 20% of those interviewed, while 40% say they partially back them.

Tomorrow a large demonstration will be held by public sector workers unions opposing the salary cuts.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Coke, Pepsi and Kraft Stop Helping Enact Vote Fraud Laws

Last summer the hard-left social progressive community activist organization, ColorOfChange.org (whose management is comprised of a hodgepodge of Saul Alinsky-type community activists and organizers) decided to go after ALEC for pushing anti-vote fraud legislation which ColorOfChange says suppresses minority voting (which suggests by their rhetoric that minority voting—for whatever reason—increases only when minorities are allowed to cheat—or they’re lying with malevolent intent). ALEC is a behind-the-scenes conservative group of legislators and corporate leaders working together to push for legislation to reduce voter fraud by requiring voters to have State-issued photo IDs, and require States to physically verify identity of the voter is who he or she claims to be. ALEC has been the catalyst to have Voter ID laws passed in seven new States this year, and has introduced Voter ID laws in 27 other States.

As they push corporate sponsors to distance themselves from ALEC, ColorOfChange, which is attempting to force the government to give minority Black voters in American the majority political voice through threats and intimidation. As their slogan says, they are attempting to change the color of democracy in America. They justify the intimidation of corporate America because, they say, “major companies that rely on business from Black folks shouldn’t be involved in suppressing our vote.”

On the ColorOfChange website, they insist that “for years, the right wing has been trying to stop Black people…from voting…and now some of America’s biggest companies are helping them do it. Supporters of discriminatory voter ID laws claim they want to reduce voter fraud (individuals voting illegally or voting twice). But such fraud almost never actually occurs, and never amounts large enough to to affect the results of elections.”

The three corporations ColorOfChange singled out with allegations of racism to force them to agree to stop sending checks to ALEC—even though none of those corporations were funding the vote fraud initiative. It’s all about draining ALEC’s financial resources enough to force them to have to make up the money they are losing from Coca Cola, Kraft Foods and Pepsico with funds that might otherwise be used to lobby for Voter ID legislation in the 27 States currently debating this type of legislation.

In point of fact, none of the statements made by ColorOfChange in the former paragraph are true.

[…]

In 2008, according to CBS News, 12 States raised serious red flags about more than 10 thousand fraudulent voter registrations in each of the States that had been submitted by ACORN. Project Vote workers were re-registering people who told them they had already registered to vote “…maybe 10 to 15 times.” Charles Barkley, a Pizza Hut worker in Cleveland said the Project Vote workers told him he was paid for each registration he turned in and Barkley could register as many times as he wanted. Barkley said he registered 15 times. Testifying under oath before the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, 21-year old Lateala Goins also admitted to registering several times. She had no idea how many times she signed her name to a voter registration card. Goins justified her crime by saying that, although she registered over and over again, she only wrote down her name. She never put down an address. The Cuyahoga County “winner” in 2008 was Freddie Johnson with 72 fraudulent voter registrations (that they were able to find)—and 72 Democrat absentee ballots cast. According to the State of Ohio, Barkley, who said he registered 15 times filled out 41 fraudulent voter registration cards. So, between Barkley and Johnson, they voted for Obama 115 times.

[…]

I found the answer on the last line of the form (which would exist for another 10 days before the FEC 2008 Election Results document got a face lift. On the last line of the form it said: “Number of votes counted: 132,618,580.” Whoa, Trigger—Hi-yo, Silver. What’s wrong with those numbers? There appeared to have been 35,626,580 more votes counted than registered voters voting.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Defamation Suit Dropped Against Larry Sinclair, Other Defendants

In 2008, when Sinclair first made his allegations about Obama’s past homosexual activity known to the public, the Hillary Clinton campaign made contact with Sinclair during the primary seeking further details. WMR was told that a scenario of mutually-assured destruction was laid down by the Obama campaign to Clinton campaign senior staffers: if the Clinton people brought up the gay issue with Obama, they would respond with past lesbian accusations against Mrs. Clinton.

This year, the fact that Sinclair has managed to defeat one of Washington’s most powerful and politically-connected law firms, Patton Boggs, by arguing his case pro se, means that the Romney campaign may have seen the festering allegations against Obama as a weak point to be exploited. The dismissal of the original complaint and appeals against Sinclair et al obviously has the White House hoping the “gay issue” with Obama will simply “go away.”

[Return to headlines]



Ferragamo Reopens New York Flagship Store

Revamped space covers 2,000 square meters and two floors

(ANSA) — New York, April 13 — After three months of renovations, Salvatore Ferragamo’s Fifth Avenue flagship store reopened on Thursday.

The expanded store stretches across 2,000 square meters and two floors, making it Ferragamo’s biggest worldwide. Interior designers revamped the space with walnut wood, dark oak, polished steel and minimalist display shelves. Ferragamo is available in 36 stores throughout the US and recently opened a mono-brand boutique in San Diego, California.

“The location will be a base-line for the rest of our locations, used to inspire future renovations,” Vincent Ottomanelli, US regional director of Ferragamo, told ANSA.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Islam & Rick Warren

Islam — a PEACEFUL religion? A courageous young English lady walked amongst verbally abusive Muslim demonstrators in her former hometown, Luton, England. The lack of respect shown towards her by many of the picoting Muslims, and the insults hurled at British Authority (police and judicial law) is shocking to witness (see clip below).

But in the light of these overtly aggressive Muslim sentiments of non-peace towards non-muslims one wonders why the naivety of Evangelical Pastor Rick Warren of Saddleback, the 8th largest Church in USA and other Christian leaders continues as they seek peace with Muslims who won’t settle for peace outside of conversion to Islam? Why would Rick Warren think the behaviour of British Muslims any different to American Muslims? Yet, Warren continues to suppose the religious view of Islam can somehow be separated from its very fabric, Sharia Law, an ingrained essence that combines Islam’s political constitution, legal, economic, military, dietary, social and cultural system of life?

Perhaps Western culture is able to untangle religious legalism from daily living but Sharia Law doesn’t allow that privilege which only comes with a freedom Islam won’t permit its followers. Instead Sharia Law demands its people dress in a certain manner (women must wear legally instated religious covering), there are certain protocols attached to eating (not only in food choice but how it must be served), certain laws of taxation towards those who aren’t Muslim, property rights against women and children, and so go the dictates of Sharia. (SEE BOOK: Slavery Terrorism & Islam: The Historical Roots and Contemporary Threat by Peter Hammond)

Rick Warren, along with hundreds of Christians, confuse Islam and Sharia’s intolerance with the fantasy notion that Muslims will unite with non-muslims for the “common ground” and reconciliation and work together in social programs for global peace. Rick Warren’s delusion, and that of Christian leaders who are leading the sheep astray, is imbedded in their not recognising that Muslims will not cooperate with non-muslims in any agenda that doesn’t promote conversion to Islam, because Muslims believe the world’s problem is that the whole world isn’t submitted to Sharia Law and aren’t Muslims! Despite this Islamic mandate Rick Warren pressed on regardless saying at the 2009 Islam Conference:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Jolted by a Rare Truism of Muslims in America

Barack Obama himself never has had the guts to say it. Indeed, while it is famously difficult to prove a negative, it seems apparent few people in all of politics and media have had the guts to say it. Did John McCain ever say it? Did Rick Santorum or Bill O’Reilly? So let us plant a little flag for, mark with a yellow highlighter, the thing Rep. Raul Labrador said Sunday on “Meet the Press”: that “it wouldn’t matter” if President Obama were a Muslim. And if it seems rather much to be handing out medals for such a modest statement of principle, well … the principle has been under fire for so long that even a modest statement feels momentous.

In recent years, public figures have made news for refuting (like McCain) or failing to refute (like Santorum) the canard that Obama is a follower of Islam. But outside of Colin Powell, who did so a few years back on “Meet the Press,” it is difficult to think of many — or any — who have dared to confront the notion implicit in the lie. Namely, that being a Muslim is incompatible with being an American.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



New York Exhibit Puts Spotlight on Ancient Middle Eastern Power Clashes

[.]

“Clash of civilization” part of the exhibit, tells a great story of a countless moment in history, deliberated through plenty of stunning items left from that time. As it turns out, that clash was less disruptive than once thought. The script illustrates that after the Prophet Muhammad established Islam in the seventh century, Muslims began expanding out from Mecca and Medina. The religion therefore, rapidly swept across the broader region and reaches diverse ethnic and religious communities. “Within religions, hugely different communities are bumping into each other. Karaite Jews and Rabbinical Jews, Samaritans,” Evans told NPR. The Christian sects included Syriac, Orthodox, Coptic and Church of the East. Constantinople’s Orthodox Christian rulers had tried to stamp out rifts. The newly converted Muslims were more tolerant of other faiths. These varied religious communities flourished under Muslim rule. “Christians served the new polity quite well. And the Christian churches and the Jewish community were given more rights,” Evans further explains.

[…]

The exhibit opens with a display of a splendid Byzantine Bible, written in gold on pages tinted royal purple. In the last gallery, a Quran, written 300 years later, in gold on pages dyed dark indigo. Evans aims to preserve this rich cultural heritage and share it with larger audience. “They want to be sharing in a way that they feel they are adequately respected,” she says. “I think what we are not going to have is ‘look at the interesting exotic people at the edge of nowhere.’ That’s not the way to look at them.” Evans hopes to convey a message of a shared civilization rather than a clash at the Met’s exhibit.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Power Grab for Natural Gas — New Executive Order

White House: We must interfere and impose federal power and control over the states. We cannot let cheap natural gas interfere with our plan for expensive alternative sources of energy.

It was Friday the 13. If you are superstitious, then the new Executive Order issued yesterday, “Supporting Safe and Responsible Development of Unconventional Domestic Natural Gas Resources” must give you pause.

The order states, “While natural gas production is carried out by private firms, and States are the primary regulators of onshore oil and gas activities, the Federal Government has an important role to play by regulating oil and gas activities on public and Indian trust lands, encouraging greater use of natural gas in transportation, supporting research and development aimed at improving the safety of natural gas development and transportation activities, and setting sensible, cost-effective public health and environmental standards to implement Federal law and augment State safeguards.”

Because natural gas produced 25 percent of our energy in 2011, the federal government must control this source of energy in order to deliver on the promise of making gasoline prices rise to $10 per gallon, bankrupt the coal industry, and cause energy prices to skyrocket.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Ring of Fire is Roaring to Life and There Will be Earthquakes of Historic Importance on the West Coast of the United States

Does it seem to you like there has been an unusual amount of seismic activity around the world lately? Well, it isn’t just your imagination. The Ring of Fire is roaring to life and that is really bad news for the west coast of the United States. Approximately 90 percent of all earthquakes and approximately 75 percent of all volcanic eruptions occur along the Ring of Fire. Considering the fact that the entire west coast of the United States lies along the Ring of Fire, we should be very concerned that the Ring of Fire is becoming more active. On Wednesday, the most powerful strike-slip earthquake ever recorded happened along the Ring of Fire. If that earthquake had happened in a major U.S. city along the west coast, the city would have been entirely destroyed. Scientists tell us that there is nearly a 100% certainty that the “Big One” will hit California at some point. In recent years we have seen Japan, Chile, Indonesia and New Zealand all get hit by historic earthquakes. It is inevitable that there will be earthquakes of historic importance on the west coast of the United States as well. So far we have been very fortunate, but that good fortune will not last indefinitely.

In a previous article, I showed that earthquakes are becoming more frequent around the globe. In 2001, there were 137 earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 or greater and in 2011 there were 205. The charts and data that I presented in that previous article show a clear upward trend in large global earthquakes over the past decade, and that is why what happened this week is so alarming.

On Wednesday, a magnitude 8.6 earthquake struck off the coast of Indonesia and that was rapidly followed by a magnitude 8.2 earthquake off the coast of Indonesia. Fortunately those gigantic earthquakes did not produce a devastating tsunami, but that doesn’t mean that those earthquakes were not immensely powerful.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


As Final Preparations Are Made for Trial of Anders Behring Breivik, Norway Families Fear it Could Become a Circus

The man accused of mass murder in Norway last year has called a bizarre array of expert witnesses and threatens to use his trial to spread his poisonous ideas.

For months now, the Bjorkavag family of Alesund have been dreading the start of a trial that few Norwegians really want.

There is no doubt who was responsible for killing their son, Sverre Bjorkavag, and 76 others last July, most of them young people barely out of childhood. Almost every detail of that terrible day, 22/7 as Norwegians now call it, has been endlessly pored over and retold; the car bomb in central Oslo, the slaughter of young people at their summer camp on Utoya island, and the incompetence of the police and security services, before, during and afterwards.

Yet on Monday in Oslo’s main criminal court, and for the next ten weeks, Anders Behring Breivik will glory in the chance to justify his killing spree, while his every flourish, gesture and smirk will be followed by the media in Norway and in the world in forensic detail.

“We are worried that it will be a circus,” said Sverre’s father Bjarte, a civil servant who lives with his wife Torild Flate, a primary school teacher. Their 28-year old son is buried in the family graveyard within view of their home, which overlooks a fjord with snow-covered mountains behind. They do not think the forthcoming trial will help the grieving process. In fact they cannot wait to get it behind them.

“There is no need to know why he did it,” said Mr Bjorkavag. “We know that already — madness. What we do want to get out of this trial is justice.”

The last time The Sunday Telegraph spoke to the Bjorkavag family was just a week after the killings, when their grief was still raw, and the shock of what had happened was still etched on Mr Bjorkavag’s face. They told how on the day of the attack, shortly after a newsflash first alerted to them to reports of gunfire on Utoya, they received a text message from Sverre. “Shooting here, we are running, hiding on the lakeshore,” it read. Then, 20 minutes later, there was one more text — the last communication they ever had with their son. “Jeg elsker dere”, it said in Norwegian — “I love you all”.

Now, just like eight months ago, it is noticeable that they still cannot bring themselves to mention Breivik by name. As Mr Bjorkavag puts it: “We have no feeling towards that person. He is a man who destroyed so many lives, as well as his own.”

For the Bjorkavag family, and dozens of other families across Norway who lost sons and daughters, the quest for justice in the weeks ahead is likely to open as many wounds as it heals. Instead of just laying bare Breivik’s crimes, the trial appears likely to give the self-styled “Knight Templar” the opportunity he craves to justify his atrocities as necessary to “save” Europe from Islam. In Breivik’s twisted mind, he was a hero, killing traitors from the Norwegian Labour party who had opened his homeland to immigration, and firing the first shots in a war against Islamic invasion.

To help him explain all this, Breivik has called a bizarre series of expert witnesses, many of them from the fringes of Norway’s political life — old Nazis, a notorious Islamist who met Osama bin Laden, an anarchist, a gay rights activist who has warned of intolerant Islam, and extreme left-wingers. He has also called a series of more mainstream writers, academics and politicians, many of whom have written about multiculturalism in Norway.

Hanne Nabintu Herland, a best-selling Norwegian author, thinks she was called as a witness because some of her books have been critical of Norway’s stifling culture of political correctness.

“I don’t really know what they want me to speak about in the trial,” she said, adding that she did not want to attend but had to in law.

“This lunatic said he was defending European values and then killed a load of defenceless people.” At least one other witness, an anti-racism campaigner, has said he will refuse to show up, even if that means he has to go to jail.

There was speculation that some of the British writers and Far-Right figures who Breivik claimed inspiration from would be called to the trial, but so far that has not happened, probably because the court cannot compel them to attend.

Ms Herland believes that neither the massacre, nor the trial, have been dealt with competently, mainly because safe little Norway has been unable to cope with the terrible reality of what Breivik did.

“I think Norway has been traumatised in a serious way by what has happened,” she said. “We will be for years.”

The trial will be the biggest in Norwegian legal history, costing an estimated 97 million krone (£10.5 million). Places are reserved for 200 journalists in the bright, modern courtroom in the centre of Oslo, less than five minutes walk away from where Breivik’s car bomb went off.

The accused will get his chance to explain his actions, although whether his testimony from the dock is broadcast to the world will depend on a ruling by Norway’s Supreme Court expected on Monday. Some Norwegians believe that broadcasting him will expose his ideas as laughable: others fear that extremists and the mentally ill may be inspired by his rants for years to come if it ends up on YouTube.

Breivik will not be able to speak to witnesses from the dock, but he will be allowed to question them via his lawyers.

Adding to the sense of unreality surrounding the trial before it has even begun, Breivik’s lawyer, Geir Lippestad, a father of eight and himself a member of the Norwegian Labour Party, told Time magazine: “I feel I have lost my soul in this case. I hope I get it back afterwards,”

[…]

Most Norwegians are thoroughly sick of hearing his name. “They should just lock him up and forget him,” said one man in a café as he pored over a newspaper with a photograph of Breivik on the front page. There have even been a few calls for his execution, almost unheard of before in liberal Norway.

Many of the survivors of Utoya island are deeply worried that the trial could give Breivik an opportunity to grandstand.

Eric Kursetgjerde, 18, a high school student who survived the shooting spree, said: “What concerns me the most is that Right-wing extremists, many in Germany and France, see him as some kind of hero. Sometimes you see expressions of support for him on blogs and on Facebook, not usually people who support him 100 per cent but there are those who think he had a point.”

In pre-trial hearings, the defendant has actually looked far from heroic, according to one lawyer who has observed him. “When you see him in court you realise he is not a tough guy at all,” said Brynjar Nielsen Meling.

“He fiddles with his clothes, his eyes dart around. He has no charisma and he looks anxious all the time. He looks like the weakest boy in class. I wonder if he will be able to manage the pressure of a ten week trial.”

The prospect of attending the trial is a forbidding one for the Bjorkavag family, but they have decided that they must, probably on May 10 when their son’s murder will be dealt with. Each fatality is being dealt with one by one.

They are angry about his witness list — “just to get him publicity,” said Mrs Flate — and have no doubt that Breivik should go to hospital, not prison. “We would hope that he can be helped, and perhaps one day understand what he has done and have to live with it,” she said. “You can tell that he doesn’t now. His eyes are cold.”

[…]

One of the most controversial aspects of the massacre, that they refuse to discuss, is the performance of the police. When The Sunday Telegraph last met the family, Norway was united in grief, and nobody thought of apportioning blame to anyone except one man.

Now it is clear that there were a series of avoidable disasters: there was no helicopter to fly armed police to the island when the shooting started; nearly all Oslo’s police were unavailable because they were on holiday on July 22; a police telephone operator failed to accept Breivik’s “surrender”; and for three hours after Breivik’s car bomb narrowly missed killing government ministers in central Oslo, the prime minister had no security . The city was apparently considered so safe that it was normal for him to have no secret service protection on duty.

The head of the intelligence service, which was fixated on the Islamic threat and virtually ignored Right-wingers, has been forced to resign…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Germany: US Comedian Tells Tales From the Mosque

An American comedian who spent 30 days visiting Mosques across the US is bringing his stand-up show about the trip to Germany. Aman Ali spoke to The Local.

Aman Ali, a New Yorker of Indian heritage, said stopping at a different Mosque on each day of 2010’s holy month of Ramadan had given him a broad outlook on how Muslims were living in America. His current tour — he has just performed in Copenhagen and is heading for Germany next week — was showing him interesting things about the differences between Muslim life on either side of the Atlantic. “The big difference is that the American culture is one of immigration, it is very easy to immigrate and integrate,” he told The Local ahead of bringing his show “30 Mosques in 30 Days” to Germany. “In Europe national identity is different. You go to parts of Europe and identity is more defined, like in Germany, Denmark, Sweden or Norway. Although, I was in the UK recently, and people are very open — and the favourite national dish is chicken tikka masala.”

[…]

[JP note: I wonder if Aman Ali will be using the Hawaiian jihadi joke in his shows.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Greece: 57 Bags of Third Reich Marks Found

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 10 — The Finance Ministry is setting up a committee to decide what the state should do with the 57 bags of German currency from the time of the 1941-44 occupation during World War II that it has in the Treasury. In the context of seeking any relevant documents regarding the requirement of war damages from Germany, the ministry — as daily Kathimerini reports — has decided to create a six-member committee to propose what should happen with the 14,334,000 Deutsche marks left over from the occupation and now held by the Bank of Greece. The committee’s task concerns “the inspection of the 57 bags and the submission of a proposal as to whether there remain any reasons for their further retention, their possible use for other purposes or their destruction, given that their value today can only be historic,” the decision by Finance Minister Filippos Sachinidis reads. Sources say that the Bank of Greece had informed the ministry of the German money about a year ago, but given that it is only of historic value, the ministry had then decided against taking any action. However, as a result of the war reparations debate that is currently raging, Sachinidis has now decided to see what can be done with it.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: New Probe Against Puglia Governor

Six others involved in hospital funds transfer investigation

(ANSA) — Bari, April 13 — Further investigations have been opened against Italian left-wing politician and Puglia Governor Nichi Vendola, along with six others, for alleged irregularities in the transfer of regional funding to a local hospital between 2002-2009. On Wednesday, Vendola called an emergency press conference to announce that he was being probed for alleged abuse of office regarding the appointment of a local chief of surgeons, Paolo Sardelli, at Bari’s San Paolo hospital in 2010. Vendola said that the “resentment-fed” accusations were based on testimony against him from Lea Cosentino, the former head of Bari’s health board whom Vendola fired in 2010 after she was placed under house arrest during a graft investigation. The latest allegations of fraud, forgery and embezzlement involve the unfinished transfer of 45 million euros from the Region of Puglia to Bari’s Miulli hospital, said investigators.

The probes also include Senator Alberto Tedesco, ex-local health councilor Tommaso Fiore, the bishop of Altamura-Gravina-Acquaviva delle Fonti Monsignor Mario Paciello and the Muilli hospital director Father Mimmo Laddaga.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Remove ‘Centurions’ From Colosseum, Fight Ensues

Protester threatens to set self alight

(ANSA) — Rome, April 12 — Costumed centurions got into a scuffle with police Thursday after officers removed two of the fake warriors who had scaled the Colosseum in protest against being banned from working there. Two men climbed up to the second tier of the 2,000-year-old structure asking the city to “let us work at the Colosseum, give us certain rules and let us stay here”.

As police carried them away, fellow costumed supporters intervened to free them, leading to pushing and swinging on both sides, witnesses said.

Paramedics took one of the centurions to hospital after he fell during the confrontation, police said.

The city’s costumed gladiators and centurions staged a similar sit-in at the site at the weekend after Rome city council last month launched a task force to keep the men dressed in leather tunics and armour from asking money from tourists for posing for pictures.

The centurions and gladiators are still allowed to work elsewhere in Rome such as along the road leading up to the Colosseum, the Trevi Fountain or in the Renaissance Piazza Navona where they are a mainstay.

While the performers say they only ask for small donations, police say they can take home as much as 200 euros per day, income for which they allegedly never pay taxes.

Over the years, the city has gone back and forth on enforcing its policy against the fake warriors.

In 2003, 25 performers protested for months and scaled the Colosseum when the city refused to authorize work permits in the area.

The spat ended when the council decided they could return to the ancient site, agreeing that their trade was “akin to that of traditional traveling minstrels”.

The current protest at the Colosseum was still ongoing Thursday as one costumed demonstrator threatened to set himself on fire. Police are stationed at the entrance to prevent any further infiltration.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Medical Student Examinees Cause Traffic Snarls

Rome’s Aurelia thoroughfare immersed in chaos

(ANSA) — Rome, April 11 — Over 8,000 aspiring medical students caused traffic jams and commuter woes Wednesday morning as they arrived in Rome for admission exams being held in a hotel near one of the capital’s main thoroughfares, via Aurelia.

Commuters travelling to the city for work were affected by the chaos, which continued to create problems throughout the day despite efforts by traffic police.

Applicants from around the country waited hours in traffic snarls, while many abandoned their vehicles and walked kilometers to sit for tests that could secure entry into the prestigious Catholic University’s medical faculty.

Only 3% of the hopefuls will be admitted based on the multiple-choice exam of 120 questions that lasted two hours.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Industry Ministry Official Arrested for ‘Attemped Bribe’

Bruno Colantonio allegedly demanded 20,000 euros

(ANSA) — Rome, April 12 — An official at the industry ministry was arrested Thursday on suspicion of demanding a bribe to spare a businessman a fine.

The official, Bruno Colantonio, was taken into custody after the unnamed businessman claimed he asked him for 20,000 euros ($26,400), police said.

A probe has been opened to see whether Colantonio, who risks 4-12 years in jail, allegedly committed other such acts.

The official will be given an immediate trial, which police said was “very rare” in cases of alleged extortion.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Urban Planning Councilor Arrested for Corruption

Another probe involving Northern League

(ANSA) — Milan, April 13 — Ex-Northern League councilor for civil protection in the northern town of Piacenza and current councilor for urban planning in the town of Cortemaggiore, Davide Allegri, was arrested Friday morning for alleged corruption and misappropriation of funds.

The Northern League party has been rocked by scandal starting with former treasurer Francesco Belsito, who is under investigation for allegedly channelling public funds to the family of ex-leader Umberto Bossi, who stepped down at the beginning of April.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fake Blind Woman Nabbed in Viterbo

Cheat ‘has to repay 110,000 euros claimed since 1979’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 13 — Italia police on Friday unmasked a woman who had falsely been claiming benefits for blindness since 1979 worth some 110,000 euros.

The woman, 71, was arrested in Viterbo north of Rome after police filmed her going about her business without assistance.

A rash of similar cases has come to light in the last few months.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Rimini Jeweler ‘Didn’t Declare Income Since 2005’

Fake luxury watches found in shop

(ANSA) — Rimini, April 11 — A jeweler in Rimini was cited for fraud Wednesday after police discovered he hadn’t declared any income since 2005.

Police also found counterfeit Rolex and Cartier watches in the city-centre shop run by the man, 68, who had no till for issuing receipts or invoices.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Must Become a “Predictable” Country — Prime Minister Mario Monti Speaks

Following the volatile reign of Silvio Berlusconi, the longtime European “technocrat” and economics professor Mario Monti has achieved surprising consensus both inside and outside of Italy. But can he make it last if he doesn’t stick around?

Mario Calabresi

Italy must become a predictable country. That is the concept Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti identifies as the key for the country’s economic recovery and long-term credibility.

More than four months after his arrival as head of “technical” government, and fresh from a whirlwind tour of Asia, Monti sat down for an extensive interview with La Stampa at the official prime minister’s residency, Palazzo Chigi. Usually, being predictable is not considered a compliment. But Monti’s trademark is normality — it’s part of why he was chosen to replace the embattled and often controversial Silvio Berlusconi. Italy must become a normal country, the former professor explains, in order to attract investors and achieve growth. Monti’s desk in Rome is overflowing with print outs of reports and competitiveness ratings of his troubled country. His mission is nothing short of changing Italy’s image across the world.

LA STAMPA: You are just back from Asia, after earlier trips to the United States and the major European capitals. What was the reaction in these places to the changes taking place in Italy?

MARIO MONTI: I was particularly struck seeing how the Chinese president, and the Indian and Pakistani prime ministers were so well informed about our actions to contain the deficit and about how quickly we approved the first series of reforms. There is a clear feeling that Italy can make a difference on the financial health of the euro zone.

In this new and evolving world, what is Italy missing in order to be competitive and to attract foreign investments?

I would say that we miss a methodical and long-term attention to the country’s image. Not in a superficial way, but in order to make the major investing countries and their companies understand how Italy works, and to make them think about our economic policy as predictable and stable. It is important that the international economic and political elite sees Italy as an understandable and predictable reality, which — despite its complexity — is similar to them.

In concrete terms, what do we have to do?

We need to create a favorable environment for investment. Then, progress has to be achieved in security and the fight against crime. There is also the reduction of the bureaucracy, a more efficient justice system, the lack of infrastructures and the crucial point of having predictable rules. If we could achieve this… we would give a signal of confidence abroad. This would mean that Italy is really changing, beyond just the short term of this peculiar (technical) government.

You are pointing out how the rest of the world is asking Italy to be predictable, but at the same time you are mentioning that this is a short-term government. You know that there is a huge question mark over what will happen one year from now. Who can guarantee that this virtuous behavior won’t end?

No one can guarantee it. But I’m confident that it won’t happen. If these parties have been able to agree, and to find common ground even without the benefit of being at the center of the attention, then in a new phase of political governments, when they have the responsibility to govern with their own leaders, the goal to achieve a positive outcome will be even stronger.

You speak about the importance of cultural changes for the country…

In this phase we have seen how Italians react when they are told, in a straightforward way, that it is necessary to do some things that have some real consequences. Every time that I think about the changes in society and politics, I am ever more convinced that the virtuous behavior won’t stop. It will be beautiful to see all of this from the outside.

Why must Italy have such a challenging goal?…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Tax Police Carry Out Search Warrant at LNP’s ‘SINPA’ HQ

(AGI) Milan — Tax police have seized documents at the registered offices of LNP party SINPA trade union offshoot. The search warrant was carried out in conjunction with enquiries into the misappropriation of public party funding by several high ranking members of the LNP party, among whom SINPA founder and Deputy Senate Speaker Rosi Mauro.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: San Raffaele: Milan Prosecutors, Indictment of 7 Accused

(AGI) Milan — Milan prosecutors have requested the indictment of seven people in the San Raffaele case. These include businessmen Pierangelo Dacco’, the former managing director of San Raffaele Mario Valsecchi, and businessmen Pierino and Gianluca Zammarchi, father and son, accused variously of conspiracy and reckless bankruptcy in the investigation into the hospital group. The preliminary hearing will open on 26 April before the preliminary hearings magistrate Maria Cristina Mannocci.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega Nord Young Members Protest Outside Ex-Treasurer Home

(AGI) Genoa — A group of young Lega Nord members staged a protest outside the house of the party’s former treasurer in Genoa. “Shame, shame”, “Clean-up” are some of the slogans chanted this afternoon by some twenty young members of the Lega Nord in region Liguria who staged a protest outside the house of former party treasurer Francesco Belsito. A small demonstration was held in the late afternoon in Genoa’s Sampierdarena neighbourhood to protest against the party’s financial misdealing which is at the centre of an ongoing probe. Demonstrators eventually marched to the city centre staging an about 15-minute protest outside Belsito’s house.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Lega Nord’s Maroni: “Clean-Up Not Over, No Score-Settling”

(AGI)Sondrio- Lega Nord is not done expelling its corrupt members said Roberto Maroni: “we’ll keep going as long as is necessary”. Maroni spoke to journalists upon his arrival at a rally in Sondrio and discussed the possible disciplinary sanctions against Lega Nord members involved in the scandal over electoral reimbursements. “But since we are law-abiding citizens we don’t want any ‘settling scores’, bloodshed or witch-hunts” Maroni stated. “We’re examining accounts to ascertain liabilities,” he explained, “and we’ll act as quickly as possible to complete this clean-up.” .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Mass Killer Anders Breivik to Argue ‘Self-Defense’ When Trial Begins Monday

NORWEGIAN mass killer Anders Behring Breivik plans to argue that his July 2011 shooting spree — in which he killed 77 people, most of them teenagers — was carried out in self-defense when his trial begins Monday.

The 33-year-old, who has a strong desire to be judged as sane, according to one of his lawyers, is looking forward to detailing why he carried out his bloody spree in downtown Oslo and at a political youth camp on nearby Utoya Island, Dagbladet newspaper reported.

“He wants to explain everything with why he did what he did,” lawyer Tord Jordet said. “It’s a pretty long and complicated explanation, with lots of historical elements, experiences from his own life and political persuasions. It is not easy to explain in a concise manner.”

He said the notion that the attack was carried out in “preventative self-defense” was important to Mr Breivik.

…”If he can explain himself freely, he will begin to say why he has done as he has done. The most important thing for him is what he calls ethnic deconstruction and that he believes he has acted in preventive self-defense,” Mr Jordet said.

Mr Jordet’s colleague Geir Lippestad said he wanted to forewarn Norwegians about the shocking defense Mr Breivik will mount.

“We as defenders have heard it many times,” he said, “but it will be different for those who have not heard him before. It was therefore important to say something about what is to come.

“Technically, we have no choice other than to note his arguments about why he did what he did. We of course understand that will not succeed, but we are obliged to present his arguments.”

He added, “I think we’re going to hear many very provocative statements from him.”

Mr Lippestad warned earlier in the week that, “He will not only defend [his actions] but will also lament, I think, not going further.”

He also said Mr Breivik was “pleased with the conclusion” of a new report that declared he was legally sane and criminally responsible for the twin attacks…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Spain: 500:000 Signatures for Law to Restore the Corrida

(ANSAmed) Madrid — The party in favour of the Spanish Corrida has struck back by presenting a popular initiative in order to safeguard all bullfights within the country after the practice was abolished in Catalonia from January 1 2012. The Central Electoral Council approved over half a million signatures today necessary to initiate the parliamentary procedure towards the Congress of Deputies of the people’s law project, according to statements made to the media by the President of the Federation of bullfight associations of Catalonia and promoter of the initiative, Luis Maria Gilbert.

The Federation hopes the parliamentary procedure conclude itself before the summer holidays, in order to bring back the corrida to the Plaza de Toro de la Monumental in Barcelona already by September. He is counting on the support of the parliamentary project by the People’s Party (PP) and the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) who together make up 300 of the 350 seats in parliament. At the same time Gilbert has also called on the Constitutional Court to take a decision on the appeal presented by the bullfight associations of Catalonia regarding the law which prohibits bullfighting in the region and approved by the Catalan parliament in July 2010 following the popular initiative brought forward by the animal rights lobby group Prou! (Enough!).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swedish Town Rocked by Second Child Exorcism

Another teenage girl in Borås, western Sweden, has been subjected to physical abuse such as kicks, beatings and electric shocks, as her parents tried to exorcise her from evil spirits.

“I can confirm that the investigation is under way and we are hoping to complete it before the summer as there is a risk the statute of limitations will come into effect otherwise,” said prosecutor Daniel Larsson to daily Dagens Nyheter (DN).

According to the paper, the girl, who was ten at the time, had been too frightened to let anyone know what was going on at the time.

However, when the parents approached the Swedish social services with an application for a grant in order to take their daughter back to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to have her properly exorcized, she was taken into protective custody by the state.

It wasn’t until last year, when the girl was thirteen that she finally plucked up the courage to tell her foster parents about the torture-like treatment she had been forced to endure.

According to DN, the girl spoke about being kicked and beaten badly with electrical cables. At one point her parents held her down and tried to stick live wires in her mouth to release the evil spirits through electrical shocks.

At one point she was beaten so badly that the parents were forced to bring her to the hospital where they made her say she had been assaulted by other school children, when in fact it had been her father striking her.

After hearing her story, the foster parents reported the girl’s biological parents to the authorities.

This is not the first case of child exorcism reported in the Borås area. The verdict against another set of parents as well as two priests in a local congregation — all accused of a similar crime — will be given on Monday.

Both set of parents are originally from the Congo-Kinshasa area.

According to Dagens Nyheter they are also connected to the controversial religious community in Borås called The River, where the two priests in the previous exorcism case were active.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Turkish President Calls Wilders Islamophobe

Turkish President Abdullah Gül has called Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders an islamophobe. In an interview with Dutch mass-circulation daily De Telegraaf, President Gül said Mr Wilders represents an extreme voice, which feeds radicals.”

He continued, saying because of Wilders “a negative us-against-them climate is developing in the whole of Europe, which is laying the foundation for ethnic religious discrimination.” Nevertheless, the president said he would shake the hand of the leader of the anti-Islam party if he met him.

President Gül is in the Netherlands on a three-day trip in the coming week to mark 400 years of relations between Turkey and the Netherlands at the invitation of the Dutch government.

A number of months ago, Mr Wilders said President Gül was not welcome in the Netherlands as far as he was concerned. In 2010, Turkey decided not to receive a parliamentary delegation which included Wilders. At the time, a Turkish spokesperson said that Wilders was “such a fascist that besides in Turkey, he would not be welcome in other European capitals.”

In response, Geert Wilders has indicated that President Gül’s comments do not bother him. “Turkish humour: Christian-teaser, Kurd-basher, Hamas-friend and Islamist Gül complaining about tolerance.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Insane’ Husband Who Stabbed Wife 120 Times in Frenzied Killing Walks Free From Court Less Than a Year Later

A killer declared insane after stabbing his wife to death less than a year ago walked free after a court heard he has recovered.

Farrukh Malik knifed Sarwat, his partner of 37 years, more than 120 times during the frenzied attack at their north London home after suffering ‘depressive psychosis’ following the death of his mother.

But the 66-year-old accountant, who is now living with his brother in Slough, Berkshire, was set free after a judge ruled he had no power to detain him because of medical reports which state he is no longer a danger.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Bully Road Rage Van Driver Who Rammed Into Terrified Horse Rider Simply Because She Asked Him to Slow Down is Jailed

A white van driver who rammed his vehicle into a horse and rider has been jailed.

A judge branded Nadeem Hussain a bully and said he had used his vehicle as a weapon.

Hussain was driving along a country lane when Charlotte Watmough signalled for him to slow down. Instead, the father of five skidded to a halt and got out of his vehicle.

Words were exchanged before Hussain got back into his van and drove forwards a few feet, past the horse and rider.

He then slammed it into reverse and drove into Miss Watmough’s mount, Merlin, pushing him into a wall.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: How Liberal Conservatives Repeatedly Misrepresent Mainstream Conservatives

by Tim Montgomerie

I don’t know quite what he meant by it but Tory MP and climate change minister Greg Barker is quoted in today’s Telegraph warning the party against adopting UKIP’s “swivel-eyed rhetoric”. Perhaps he meant some of the rude speeches made by Nigel Farage? Anyhow, I agree with Iain Dale that it’s not a sensible way of winning back Tory-to-UKIP defectors. I made clear in my Times piece last Wednesday that I’m no fan of UKIP but because “kindness effects more than severity” I prefer Aesop’s sun to wind in winning UKIP’s voters back to the Conservative fold.

[…]

One of the great weaknesses of the Liberal Conservative project is that it worries too much about the opinion of the commentariat and not enough about opinion beyond the ‘beltway’ ofthe Westminster village. The No2AV campaign — universally derided by the pundits — triumphed and proved yet again that market research and not Big Society-style hunches should lead Tory strategy. This precoocupation with elite opinion led Project Cameron to focus too much on the gender and ethnicity of candidates and not enough on their regional identity and social class. Too much about climate change and not enough about electricity bills. Too much about civil liberties and not enough about public safety. In recent years Mainstream or Right-wing Tories (Michael Gove on schooling, IDS on social justice, John Redwood on practical environmentalism, Bill Cash on third world debt, Mark Pritchard on animal welfare etc etc) have done much of the modernising. When the Liberal Conservatives stop misrepresenting all of these things (attacking, for example, the caricatured Tea Party Tories) the real argument about winning the next election could take off.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Taxi Driver Dumps Family Out of His Cab After Spotting an Unopened Bottle of Wine Saying it Was Against His Religion

A Muslim cab driver has been fired after he threw out a family carrying an unopened bottle of wine because he said ‘it’s against my religion.’

Adrian Cartwright, 46, had hired the taxi to take his family out for dinner at an Indian restaurant near Oldham, Greater Manchester.

But before they could make the five-minute journey the driver, in his 20s, spotted the bottle of white wine and promptly refused to take them.

The family was turfed out onto the pavement and he drove off.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Some Secrets Must be Kept — And No One Needs to Apologise for That

by Charles Moore

‘Human rights’ are undermining the whole concept of national security.

[…]

“Human rights” have changed all that. The European Court of Human Rights, to which Britain has subjected itself, is based on universalist principles and is a supranational authority. In that environment, judges become, in effect, the paid opponents of national governments. Individual rights are seen as trumping the rights not only of states, but of everyone else. Our national security represents the aggregated right of 60 million people to live in safety. But that means almost nothing to the ECHR. The Council of Europe, which invented the court, says it should be “an arbitrator between the States and their citizens”. In a system with such a remit, run by judges from 47 countries, who will bother to uphold the national security of any one state? I hope someone says this when the Council meets for its conference in Brighton next week.

Under the ECHR, the moral underpinning of justice weakens. In a powerful new book, Facing Up to Human Rights, the lawyer and former MP Fred Silvester points out that many of those who most readily claim their human rights are people who have behaved reprehensibly. While legal rights exist for bad people as well as good ones, there is also the old common-law principle of equity that “the person claiming justice must come with clean hands”. When our intelligence services are forced to settle in advance rather than betray their secrets to a court, they are pressing public money into some of the dirtiest hands in the world.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Macedonia: Killing of Five People Sparks Ethnic Tensions

Skopje, 13 April ( (AKI) — The killing of four Macedonian young adults and a middle-aged man north of the capital Skopje, has sparked ethnic tensions in a small Balkan country, and police has appealed for calm, local media reported on Friday.

The bodies of four youths, aged between 18 and 20 years, were found Wednesday night near a lake north of Skopje, where they went fishing, the police said. Another fisherman, aged 45, was found dead some hundred meters away. All victims had bullet wounds, the police said.

The brother of the dead fisherman told the police the man didn’t know the youths, but was most likely killed because he witnessed their murder. The police was looking for the perpetrators and appealed to local population to help in the investigation.

Skopje media speculated that the killings were a possible revenge for a recent killing of two ethnic Albanian youths in western town of Gostivar. A Macedonian policeman killed two young ethnic Albanians there, after they allegedly attacked him and his minor daughter.

In the meantime, people in the Skopje section of Radisani, the home of four youths, have set up barricades, protesting the killings and demanding a swift investigation and punishment of perpetrators.

The police appealed for patience and calm and called on media to refrain from speculations, which could further inflame ethnic tensions.

Ethnic Albanians make about 25 per cent of Macedonia’s two million population and quarrels between the two ethnic groups have been on the rise. Ethnic Albanians rebelled in 2001, demanding more rights and regional autonomy, but the conflict was brought under control through international mediation.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Ten Candidates, Including Front-Runners, Barred From Egyptian Presidential Race

Egypt’s election commission on Saturday disqualified 10 presidential hopefuls, including the three front-runners, from running in a surprise decision that threatened to upend the already tumultuous race.

Farouk Sultan, the head of the Supreme Presidential Election Commission, told The Associated Press that those barred from the race included Hosni Mubarak’s former spy chief Omar Suleiman; the chief strategist for the Muslim Brotherhood, Khairat el-Shater; and hard-line lawyer-turned-preacher Hazem Salah Abu Ismail. He did not give a reason.

The announcement came as a shock to many Egyptians as three of the 10 excluded were considered among the front-runners. They now have 48 hours to appeal the decision, according to election rules. The final list of candidates will be announced on April 26.

[Return to headlines]



Was the Arab Spring Really a Facebook Revolution?

WHEN emotive pictures of violence in Tunisia and its neighbouring countries were posted online, they spread rapidly and helped to catalyse months of revolutions throughout 2011. The western world was quick to celebrate the success of new media, and the idea of the Arab Spring as a “Facebook Revolution” spread as fast as the tweets. One Egyptian couple even named their baby Facebook.

Was social media a vital component that stirred long-brewing resentment into action, or did it merely speed inevitable revolutions on their way? A year on, as researchers continue to sift the evidence, the debate continues.

Kathleen Carley of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, carried out the latest analysis with intelligent software she developed to comb though media articles from the archive LexisNexis. Carley’s team looked for articles and social media posts about the Arab Spring in 18 countries over a period of 10 months.

The program identified terms that occurred together in the same article, such as “Egypt” and “Twitter”, and rapidly built a picture of the most important by looking at the relationship between them in all 400,000 articles it analysed. When the team carried out a statistical analysis on these results, only terms related to human rights and international relations came up as significant causes of the revolutions. While social media correlated with uprisings in some countries, the link wasn’t universal.

The conclusion? While Facebook, Twitter and YouTube certainly played a role in the way the Arab Spring unfolded, their influence was far less critical than many had suggested. “Social media was not causal. It told people to go here, to do this, but the reason was social influence, not social networking,” says Carley, who presented her results at the AAAS meeting in Vancouver, Canada, in February. “Social influencers tend to act across all media, regardless.”

Some believe that is an obvious conclusion. “Social media wasn’t a catalyst. The events it describes were the catalyst,” says computer scientist Huan Liu of Arizona State University in Tuscon. Filippo Menczer of Indiana University in Bloomington agrees. “We have a history of thousands of uprisings without social media,” he says.

Philip Howard of the University of Washington in Seattle, who has published an analysis that found a strong link between social media and the Arab Spring isn’t so sure. “In each of those other revolutions, there is some sort of media that is new and not controlled by the state. Even newspapers at one point caught dictators off guard.”

And Egypt and Tunisia, he points out, had been having problems for many years before shocking photos and stories of abuse by government agencies went viral. “The individual risk assessments (before people go out) to face rubber bullets and tear gas are informed by digital stories,” he says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Airlines Cancel Israel Flights for Over 60 Percent of Pro-Palestinian Fly-in Protesters

Activists threatening to sue airlines, including Lufthansa, Air France and Easyjet, for ‘bowing to Israeli pressure’; PM’s Office releases sarcastic ‘thank you’ letter to be given to activists on arrival.

More than 60 percent of the 1,500 pro-Palestinian activists due to arrive in Israel on Sunday to take part in a fly-in protest have received notifications from airlines that their flights were canceled, the spokesman for the “Welcome to Palestine” protest told Haaretz on Saturday.

The activists were planning to arrive in Israel to participate in a protest against West Bank settlement construction that was scheduled to take place on Sunday. Last July, a similar “fly-in” took place, with more than 300 international activists arriving in Israel. Of those activists, 120 were detained.

Among the airlines that notified the activists of flight cancelations were Lufthansa, Air France and Easyjet, Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh, a Bethlehem-based spokesman for the protest said, adding that the activists are threatening to take legal action against the airlines.

“Israel passed lists of hundreds of activists to companies, along with a letter in which it claimed that they were coming to carry out a provocation and disturb the peace, and this is just not true. It is very unfortunate that these companies bowed to Israeli pressure,” said Qumsiyeh, who added that he has no doubt that some of the activists and Palestinian organizations — including his own — will pursue legal action against the companies.

According to the spokesman, hundreds of activists will manage to board flights to Israel’s Ben-Gurion airport, and declare their intention to travel on to the West Bank upon their arrival.

Dozens of Israeli activisits are due to await the arrival of the fly-in protesters at the airport. In a notice published on Saturday, Israeli activists said they will await for the fly-in protesters with “welcome signs” and “open arms.”

Dozens of pro-Palestinian activists were prevented from boarding Israel-bound flights on Friday, due to the fact that their names appeared on the blacklist distributed by the Israeli government to a number of European airlines.

Police are planning to intercept participants in the “Welcome to Palestine” actions at the airport and prevent their entry into the country. Hundreds of police officers are expected to be stationed at the airport ahead of their arrival, most of them unarmed and clothed in civilian dress.

‘Thank you for choosing Israel’

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister’s Office published on Saturday the text of a sarcastic letter that will be handed out to the pro-Palestinian activists upon their arrival. The letter “thanks” activists for “choosing” to make Israel the object of their “humanitarian concerns.”

“We know there were many other worthy choices,” it says, and goes on to list a number of other such “choices”: Syria, Iran and the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

“You could have chosen to protest the Syrian regime’s daily savagery against its own people, which has claimed thousands of lives,” the letter says.

“You could have chosen to protest the Iranian regime’s brutal crackdown on dissent and support of terrorism throughout the world.”

“You could have chosen to protest Hamas rule in Gaza, where terror organizations commit a double war crime by firing rockets at civilians and hiding behind civilians”, says the letter.

The letter states that activists chose “to protest against Israel, the Middle East’s sole democracy, where women are equal, the press criticizes the government, human rights organizations can operate freely, religious freedom is protected for all and minorities do not live in fear.”

The text concludes by suggesting that the activists “solve first the real problems of the region, and then come back and share with us your experience,” before wishing them “a nice flight.”

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Beirut Hotel at Florence Festival, Spy Story Banned in Lebanon

Director Arbid: ‘we live in fear’

(ANSAmed) — FLORENCE, APRIL 13 — “Censorship is the only thing that works perfectly in Lebanon. It is a country where everyone is living in fear: citizens and institutions included”.

There is no beating about the bush with Danielle Arbid, the young Lebanese director who will present hert filme Beirut Hotel at Florence’s Middle East Now review. The film, banned by the Lebanese authorities, is a speculation on the murder of former Premier Rafiq Hariri. A cross between a love story and a spy film, Beirut Hotel tells of a highly complex and fleetingly brief love affair — lasting ten days in all — between Zoha, a singer in a restaurant in the Lebanese capital, and Mathieu, a Paris-based lawyer on his way to Syria, whose business is somehow linked to the Hariri affair.

In reality, it is a film about fear, told by a young director who left Lebanon behind when aged 17 as the civil war develops.

“My third full-length film is a film about the fear of being left behind (Zoha’s fear), the fear of falling in love (Mathieu’s fear) and the fear of those living permanently in Beirut”.

It is a fear that can be sprung on all at any moment. The Lebanese authorities do not like the film because “it endangers national security”. It can be lethal to touch in the Hariri question, “even if the subject is given thorough treatment in the newspapers”. Ms Arbid describes a country in which artists, “are not free, despite what people carry on believing outside the country”. To shoot the film, she explains, a script has to be presented to and approved by the security forces. “And woe betide you if you introduce any changes while shooting”. Which is what happened in the case of Beirut Hotel. “I submitted a provisional screenplay and started filming. Then, of course, as things progressed, the film took on the shape it wanted”. The conclusion: the film gets banned in Lebanon and is shown at last summer’s Lucerne Festival and in Dubai in December, while it is broadcast by Arte in France. In the meantime, Ms Arbid has opened an appeal process against the Lebanese State. There is no law in Lebanon that obliges film directors to present the script of their film before they can start filming.

“They are the ones acting outside the law. And now I would like to prove this. I am the only person to have had the courage to do such a thing”. Also her second film, “A Lost Man” (2007), was subjected to censorship. “They wanted 17 scenes cut because they were too sensual.

In that case I put up no opposition”. But this time she feels like rebelling. Everything is allowed in Lebanon, she says.

“Everyone does everything. But there is a great deal of hypocrisy”.

Once around here they used to say that “Egypt did the writing, Lebanon the editing and Irag read the result”. But it isn’t like that any more. “I think the Lebanese authorities look down on artists.

Lebanon cannot hold itself up as a model of freedom for other Arab countries”. This is her view at present, “I will never return to live in Lebanon. Not in this Lebanon, at any rate”.

This disaffection is not shared by her Lebanese audience. “Beirut Hotel did not go down well in Lebanon. Of course not; it shows a side of their society that they don’t want to see”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran Holds ‘Constructive’ Nuclear Talks With Britain and Other World Powers as They Return to Negotiating Table

Iran resumed discussion over its controversial nuclear programme today after a break more than a year — and an EU spokesman has described early talks as ‘positive’.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s chief negotiator Saeed Jalili met with six world powers, The US, UK, France, China, Russia and Germany, in Istanbul, Turkey this morning — 15 months after the last attempted at talks failed.

There’s huge pressure to reach agreement with Iran over it’s nuclear plans with US President Barack Obama calling the discussions ‘the last chance’ for diplomacy to work.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.N. Security Council Agrees to Send Ceasefire Monitors to Syria

The United Nations Security Council on Saturday unanimously authorized the deployment of ceasefire monitors to Syria. Russia and China joined the other 13 council members and voted in favor of the Western-Arab draft resolution. The first 30 unarmed military monitors are expected to leave within days.

The vote had been expected Friday but was held up by Russian objections to much of the text. The Russian ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, said Saturday that “substantive changes had been made to make it more balanced.”

[Return to headlines]



UAE: Scholars Share Message of Peace

Some attendees disappointed that main speaker for occasion did not show up. People urged to adhere to natural way of life

Dubai Thousands of people converged at the Dubai World Trade Centre in anticipation to hear Shaikh Abdul Rahman Sudais, Grand Imam of Masjid Al Haram, Makkah, who was scheduled to give a a sermon Friday. However, the Grand Imam was conspicuous by his absence both on Thursday and Friday, leaving many people disappointed. The organisers failed to give any explanation. “I was looking forward to see the shaikh and I came all the way from Ras Al Khaimah just to hear him speak. I was disappointed because the organisers had promised that he will be here today [Friday],” said Ahmad Abdullah. Meanwhile, scholars said that Islam is the only solution to the problems of humanity and lasting peace can be attained by following the teachings of the Quran and Prophet Mohammad (PBUH), at the Dubai International Peace Convention (DIPC).

[…]

[JP note: No surprises there then — when in non-Muslim countries, non-Muslims should abide by Muslim customs, mores, and laws appears to be the message.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Pakistani Schoolbooks Full of Contempt and Bigotry Against Christians, Hindus and Sikhs

Pakistani curricula and textbooks promote extremism and violate minorities’ rights. An NCJP study notes distortions and requests a revision of the educational system, the first source of marginalization. Although minorities are guaranteed the possibility to deepen their own religion.

Lahore (AsiaNews) — School textbooks that promote religious fanaticism, discriminate against minorities and trigger religious conflicts: Pakistani schools are — once again — the object of attention and study of Catholic NCJP activists who, in a detailed report, have examined the basic elements of discrimination of sectarian origins. In the report titled “ Fanatic Literacy or Education,” the National Commission for Justice and Peace Commission of the Catholic Church invites a rethink of school curricula, so that even Christians, Hindus, Sikhs and those belonging to minorities in Pakistan can deepen the study of their religion. Currently they are obliged to learn the basics of Islam, as practiced in some areas of the country, including Punjab.

The report shows that thousands of non-Muslim students are “forced” to study Islam and elements of the Muslim religion, for fear of discrimination. Among these, the decision taken by the Parliament of Punjab — one of the provinces of Pakistan — and approved “unanimously” that makes the study of the Koran mandatory. And non-Muslims “are not offered a viable alternative.” At the same time, even in subjects like social sciences and linguistics about 20% of the content is linked to Islam. Again: the non-Muslim students are given the extra bonus of 20 points, reserved to those who deepen Islamic studies.

AsiaNews has long stressed the importance of education as a factor of redemption and growth for Pakistan, and even devoted a thorough dossier to schooling and education (see, Education can stop the Taliban in Pakistan). Peter Jacob, NCJP executive secretary, explains that “education and educational policy in Pakistan” are among the sectors in which sectarian nature of discrimination and violations of basic human rights clearly emerge. In addition there is a chronic “lack of initiatives” and complications caused by “widespread corruption and inefficiency.”

In the study prepared by Christian activists they recall article 20 of the Constitution, which guarantees religious freedom, and article 22 that states that “ no person attending any educational institution shall be required to receive religious instruction, or take part in any religious ceremony, or attend religious worship, if such instruction, ceremony or worship relates to a religion other than his own”. However, the school and education system in general seem to “forget” these two fundamental laws of the Charter of the State, while diligently applying Article 31, under which “shall be binding upon the study of Islam and the Koran” so that — add Christian activists — there are no substantial differences between public institutions and the madrassas, or Islamic schools.

Finally, the report says that religions other than Islam are viewed “with contempt and prejudice.” Faced with a situation that is becoming increasingly critical, Justice and Peace calls for a substantial change in the educational policy and the opportunity for Hindus, Christians, Sikhs and students of other religions to deepen the knowledge of their own faith or, alternatively, have access to ethics and civic education.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Lahore: Christians and Hindus Against “Religious Fascism” And Forced Conversions to Islam

Young Christian and Hindu women are being abducted, forcibly converted and married off against their will. Young Christian men and boys are being forcibly circumcised. Young Hindu men are jailed for befriending young Muslim women. In the past five years, between 400 and 500 Christians have been forced to convert to Islam.

Lahore (AsiaNews) — “Several young Hindu women have been kidnapped from their homes in the dark of night, and dragged off to be forcibly converted to Islam. Usually, this conversion is accompanied by a signing of the nikahnama or marriage contract, which strengthens the kidnappers side of the story,” said Dilip Kumar, a Hindu activist. The kidnappers want complete freedom to convert, but “We can’t just sit back and watch what our community is going through,” he added.

Yesterday, together with dozens of Hindus and Christians and representatives of human rights NGOs, Kumar took part in a demonstration against the forced conversion of young men and women and the government’s slow response to what has been called “religious fascism”.

“It is a shame that Christian and Hindu girls are kidnapped and forced to convert, in most cases they are latter sold in sex slavery / prostitution,” said Fr John Mall. “This is becoming a hideous business and the authorities have kept a blind eye on the whole matter.” He was referring in particular to the case of Rinkle Kumari, a young woman who was abducted, converted and forced to marry a Muslim.

“Appearing before the court, Rinkle said: ‘Kill me but don’t send me back to prison or to the person who converted me.’ What did the Supreme Court? Instead of allowing her to meet her family, she was sent to jail for three weeks to think about converting to Islam. Had she said that she had converted, the court would have sent her to her husband.”

“In the last five years, there have been up to 400 to 500 conversions of Christians,” said Peter Jacob, national director of the National Commission for Justice and Peace. “And something equally horrifying: I know of forcible circumcision of young men in Punjab and one in Baluchistan. Where are we going, one asks?”

“Two months ago, a Muslim girl became friends with three Hindu boys. The Muslim family got the boys arrested and the Hindu families killed. This is barbarianism,” activist Diyal Singh said.

In yesterday’s rally, demonstrators also shouted slogans against Lahore’s police chief, who recently appeared before a court in connection with the demolition of the Catholic-owned Gosh-e-Aman building.

One of the parties to a lawsuit against the police official is a Christian woman, Zenobia Richard, who accuses him of desecrating Bibles, a statue of Our Lady and rosaries.

The court ordered him to submit a report of the incident within three weeks.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Far East


China: Forced Expropriation and Home Demolitions Continue Communist Party Abuses

Police attack residents in the village of Wugou who want justice after their land is seized. A married couple in their seventies are thrown out of their home because it was “the order of the party.” The regime’s violence is crushing ordinary Chinese.

Beijing (AsiaNews) — More than 1,400 people demonstrated on the streets of Mudan City in Heilongjiang Province, protesting against the illegal expropriation by Communist officials of village land for commercial purposes. In Nanning, local authorities demolish the home of an elderly couple without compensation or prior notice.

In Mudan, residents from Wugou village marched through the city’s streets last Monday waving banners that read, “Safeguard the interests of the people, punish corruption and return our farmland”.

They accuse village officials of illegally expropriating about 750 mu (about 0.5 sq km) of orchard to build commercial properties. They were met by police, which cordoned off the streets, dispersed the protestors, injuring a number of them, and took into custody about 20.

Yesterday, hired thugs, government officials and police burst unannounced into the home of Wei Yaorong and Yu Linlian, respectively 79 and 78. After they were forcibly removed from their home, they had to be taken to hospital.

When their son asked the demolition crew to present government documents that might have authorised the action, the heads of the Liangqing District and the district’s legal affairs office told him simply that it was the order of the Liangqing Party and the Liangqing district government.

Across the country, local Communist officials continue to take land and property away from ordinary people, this despite appeals to the central government,

In China, economic development is driven by a desire for rapid industrialisation. This tends to increase the value of farmland if it is located in areas favourable to manufacturing.

Often, local residents are opposed to such change. When they do stand up, local authorities turn to physical violence with no respect for the law.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Demand for Rhino Horns Threatens Species

Experts say Vietnam’s surging demand is threatening to wipe out the world’s remaining rhinoceros populations, which recovered from the brink of extinction after the 1970s thanks to conservation campaigns. Illegal killings in Africa hit the highest recorded level in 2011 and are expected to worsen this year.

This week South Africa called for renewed cooperation with Vietnam after a “shocking number” of rhinos have already been reported dead this year.

China has long valued rhino horn for its purported — though unproven — medicinal properties, but U.S. officials and international wildlife experts now say Vietnam’s recent intense craving, blamed partly on a widespread rumor that rhino horn cures cancer, is putting unprecedented pressure on the world’s estimated 28,000 remaining animals, mainly in South Africa.

“It’s a very dire situation,” U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe said by telephone. “We have very little cushion for these populations in the wild.”

Although data on the global rhino horn trade is scarce, poaching in Africa has soared in the past two years, with American officials saying China and Vietnam are driving the trade that has no “significant” end market in the United States.

Wildlife advocates say that over the last decade, rhino horn has become a must-have luxury item for some Vietnamese nouveau riche, alongside Gucci bags and expensive Maybach cars.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazil: The Death Cult Brazilians Who Killed and Ate Two Women ‘To Purify Their Souls’

A karate expert and two women have been arrested on suspicion of killing at least two women, before eating their flesh to ‘purify the soul’, police revealed today.

The Brazilian trio, who were seized in Pernambuco in the northeastern part of the country, were said by police to be part of a sect which believes in the ‘purification of the world’.

Jorge da Silveira, 51, a graduate and karate expert, along with Isabel Pires, 51, and Bruna da Silva, 25, planned ot kill three women each year, according to Brazilian police.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Got Quickie Aborsh: Comedienne Sarah Silverman Supports Pro Choice Debate Tweeting Abortion Photos

Comedienne Sarah Silverman joined America’s current War on Women yesterday after she tweeted a hoax before-and-after abortion photo.

Reigniting the women’s rights movement via Twitter, the 41-year-old wrote: ‘Got a quickie aborsh in case R v W gets overturned.’

The controversial comment captioned two photos of Miss Silverman made to look like she was pregnant before getting an abortion — and quickly divided opinion.

While she caused a wave of support from hundreds of people voicing liberal pro-choice beliefs, she also drew criticism for her ‘insensitivity’ for a subject that is ‘no laughing matter’.

           — Hat tip: Van Grungy [Return to headlines]



UK: Islam Has Made London a More Conservative Place Than it Was 50 Years Ago

by Ed West

One of the most common mistakes people make about cultural and politics is suggesting that history is inevitably heading in one direction. We hear it most commonly in the argument made that “we can’t turn the clock back” to the 1950s, as if anyone is planning to ban garlic bread or continental lager. (I don’t see why achieving 1950s levels of crime would be either undesirable or impossible).

History does not work like that, and in a strange way London today is even more conservative than it was in the 1950s — thanks to liberals.

This week London Metropolitan University’s vice-chancellor suggested that parts of the campus be made alcohol-free because some Muslim students believe it is “evil” and “immoral”. This paper reports:

Prof Malcolm Gillies of London Metropolitan University said he wants to create alcohol free areas on campus out of “cultural sensitivity”. About a fifth of students at the university come from Muslim families — many of them young women from traditional homes. For many of them, the drinking culture among students marred rather than heightened their student experience, he said.

In principle there’s nothing wrong with this. If one university wants to make itself more attractive to teetotal students, then heavy-drinking students (ie 99 per cent of them) can go to the many colleges where cheap beer flows abundantly. That’s the free market. Muslims aside, many people would prefer a less boozy environment. But I can’t help but feel that this new puritanism is not what the young people who once shouted “disembowel Enoch Powell” in opposition to immigration restrictions had in mind.

The new conservatism of London has already had profound effects, as demographic changes gather pace. Stonewall’s bus adverts, for example, would be better concentrated in Tower Hamlets, where there were 47 anti-gay attacks in 2008, rather than being wasted on the rest of us. Young gay men in the provinces no longer need to run away to London, one of the most religiously conservative places in England now (and not just among Muslims — African Christians too).

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


4.4 Bln Clicks for Xvideos Porn Site, 30% of Traffic

(AGI) London — Xvideos, the world’s largest pornographic website, is clicked 4.4 billion times each month and has 350 million unique visitors. Only Google and Facebook manage to do better, according to a study by ExtremeTech, a website specialized in the monitoring of internet, claiming that 30% of the web’s global traffic is exclusively connected to sex.

Suffice it to see the success of Laura Maggi’s photo galleries on the web, the sexy barmaid from Brescia, who has been monopolizing the users’ attention for weeks.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



How Earthly Life Could Populate Space by Panspermia

For years, scientists have imagined that microbial life may have ridden to Earth on the back of a comet or meteorite, planting the seed for the diversity of life we know today. But could so-called panspermia have gone the other way? Could Earth have given other worlds life?

It’s an old idea, but Tetsuya Hara of Kyoto Sangyo University in Japan and colleagues now have new calculations suggesting it’s possible. “The only planet which we know has life is Earth,” they write in a paper posted to the arXiv physics preprint site. “Therefore, Earth would be a likely source to seed other planets with life.”

Microbes could be knocked out of the atmosphere into space by high-speed ions after a solar storm, but without protection, the microbes would be irradiated to death by those same charged particles.

Perhaps a safer way for seed to spread would be for whole rocks to travel other worlds. Previous research has showed that, theoretically, a massive meteorite impact could blast up and scatter tonnes of rock across the solar system.

In their recent paper, Hara and colleagues considered one of the biggest meteorite hits known in Earth’s history: the Chicxulub impact 65 million years ago, usually blamed for killing off the dinosaurs. The 10-kilometre-wide asteroid weighed well over a trillion tonnes, and could have excavated as much mass from the surface of the Earth.

The team calculated how much of that stuff could have ended up on the bodies in the solar system thought most likely to be hospitable to life: Saturn’s moon Enceladus and Jupiter’s moon Europa, both of which are thought to have subsurface oceans of liquid water.

Under certain conditions, as many as 300 million individual rocks could have ended up on Europa, and 500 on Enceladus, they calculated. Even more could have ended up on the moon and Mars.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Islamutopia: A Very Short History of Political Islam

by Arshin Adib-Moghaddam

This article is an introduction to a special series of posts commissioned by LSE IDEAS exploring Islamism and the Arab Spring. The series also includes articles on Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, with a concluding post on the geostrategic implications of the Islamist moment following the Arab Spring. These articles will be published on the site over the coming weeks.

Whenever contemporary Islamists ponder their own genealogy, there are two pivotal figures that invariably come up to invigorate their imaginings. These two reference points of contemporary political Islam are Sayyid Jamal al-din al-Afghani (or Asadabadi)(1838-1897) , and his disciple Mohammad Abduh (1849-1905). Afghani and Abduh lived through a tumultuous period for the ummah whose decline as an organised political entity they tried to prevent in theory and in praxis. They were battling against the inevitable, however, and did not live long enough to witness the abolishment of the caliphate in Turkey in 1924. Now with the Arab revolts yielding a new spring for the Islamists, parallels to these pioneers of the Islamic revival are being dusted down. Are we at the dawn of a new Islamic era in West Asia and North Africa (WANA)? With the Muslim Brotherhood fielding a candidate in the forthcoming presidential elections in Egypt, the electoral victory of Ennahda in Tunisia, the emergence of “neo-Ottoman” politics in Turkey, “neo-Shia” authoritarianism in Iraq and the continued influence of the Islamic republic in Iran the headlines almost write themselves. There is no doubt that there is something ‘Islamic’ about what is happening. But what is it exactly?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Women and Children First? Not Since the Titanic

The chivalrous code “women and children first” appears to have sunk with the Titanic 100 years ago. Long believed to be the golden standard of conduct in a shipwreck, the noble edict is in fact “a myth that has been nourished by the Titanic disaster,” economist Mikael Elinder of Uppsala University, Sweden, told Discovery News. Elinder and colleague Oscar Erixson analyzed a database of 18 peace-time shipwrecks over the period 1852-2011 in a new study into survival advantages at sea disasters.

Looking at the fate of over 15,000 people of more than 30 nationalities, the researchers found that more women and children die than men in maritime disasters, while captains and crew have a greater chance of survival than any passengers.

Being a woman was an advantage on only two ships: on the Birkenhead in 1852 and on the Titanic in 1912. Indeed, it was the sinking of the troopship HMS Birkenhead off the coast of South Africa in 1852 that inspired the tradition of “women and children first.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120413

Financial Crisis
» Greece: Easter: Poorest Migration in Years Begins
» Italy’s Budget Adjustment ‘Less Urgent’ Says OECD
» Monti Clears the Air With Spanish Premier
» Obama and Redistribution of Your Wealth
» The Keynesian Spending Spree is Over
» The North-South Mortgage Divide: Negative Equity Map of UK Shows Clear Disparity
» UK: The £54bn Pensions ‘Ticking Time Bomb’ That Could Drive Up Council Tax
 
USA
» Allen West Exposes Red Influence in Congress
» Americans Oppose Anti-Islam Nominee to USCIRF
» FBI Led to Anonymous Hacker After He Posts Picture of Girlfriend’s Breasts Online
» Google Founders Tighten Grip on Firm and Record Profits
» How Racially Divided is the United States Today?
» Judicial Cowardice — A Stench Rolling Across America
» Massachusetts “Educational Center” Uses Violent Electroshock on Teenager
» Mosque Growth Study Good News for Americans
» Obama Admirer to Teach ‘Understanding Obama’ Class at Harvard Law School
» Repeat After Me: The Identity Thief is a Socialist
» Strike Two for Marlin Manager Ozzie Guillen
» The Heart of the Problem is in the Heart
» You Feel Me, My Fellow Americans?
 
Europe and the EU
» Children Stolen by the State Needlessly, Causing Utter Misery in One of Britain’s Most Disturbing Scandals
» Conversion to Islam Growing Dramatically in Austria
» Danish Court Puts Four Men on Trial on Terror Charges
» Denmark: Mohammed Cartoons Have Lasting Effect
» France: Abdennour Bidar: Mohammed Merah, A Monster Created by Islam’s Illness
» German Civil Servant Says ‘He Did Nothing for 14 Years’
» Greece: Ex Defense Minister Tsochatzopoulos Arrested
» Greece: Bakoyannis Immunity to be Lifted, Asks Supreme Court
» Italy: Scandal-Hit Northern League Expels Senate Deputy Speaker
» Italy: Ruby: Ghedini: Berlusconi Payments Not Connected to Trial
» Sweden: Welcome to Ikea-Land: Furniture Giant Begins Urban Planning Project
» The New German Problem
» The Nation as a Family
» UK: 25 Firemen Who Scrambled to Rescue a Seagull From a 3ft-Deep Pond Refused to Wade in Because of Regulations — Leaving it to Joe Public to Save the Bird
» UK: British Muslims Have Given David Cameron an Object Lesson in Democracy
» UK: Great-Grandmother, 94, Suffers Horrific Injuries After Falling Out of Hospital Bed Because ‘Elf and Safety Rules Ban Side-Bars
» UK: London Metropolitan University Mulls Alcohol Ban for ‘Conservative Muslim Students’
» UK: Mehdi Hasan: A Beacon for Islam [Reader Comments Only]
» UK: New £1m Mosque to Open Its Doors to 1,000 Worshippers in Moss Side
» UK: Oxford Child Sex Trafficking Probe Widens as Number of ‘Victims’ Doubles to 50 Girls, Some as Young as 11
» UK: Stamp Collectors Shouldn’t Keep Their Lonely Pleasures to Themselves
» UK: The Hollow Men of British Politics
» UK: University to Have Alcohol-Free Areas for Muslims
» UK: Watchdog Criticizes Scotland Yard Over Phone Hacking Scandal
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists Bar Former Mubarak Regime Officials
» Egypt Candidate: Moderate Islamist, Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh
» Libya: So it Was All About Oil After All!
 
Middle East
» Osama Bin Laden’s Three Wives and Two Daughters to be Deported to Saudi Arabia, After Ruling by Pakistani Court
 
Russia
» Leading Member of Moscow’s Muslim Community Killed
 
South Asia
» Indonesia: West Java: Yasmin Church Members Celebrate Easter Underground
» Pakistan: Forced Conversions Spark Anger
 
Far East
» China Censors Bo Xilai Debate, But Chinese Work Around it
» Defectors Link North Korea’s Weapons Program to Food Shortage
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» ENI Nigeria Facilities Attacked by Oil Militants
 
Immigration
» Students From Pakistan Face Tough Tests to Enter Britain as Four in Ten Applicants Could be Bogus
 
Culture Wars
» Boris Blocks Christian Anti-Gay Poster Campaign on London Buses That Claimed Homosexuality Could be Cured
» Britain’s Christians Are Being Vilified, Warns Lord Carey
» Last Hope for the Left
» Liberals or Conservatives: Who’s Really Close-Minded?
» The ‘Bus Advert Storm’ Confirms That Christians Are Now More Progressive Than Gay Rights Activists
» Why Liberals Don’t Understand Conservatives
 
General
» Islam’s Real Origins?
» New Spencer Book Denies Existence of Muhammad

Financial Crisis


Greece: Easter: Poorest Migration in Years Begins

Lack of money, Greeks buy only what they strictly need

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — The Easter exodus of Greeks from the major cities begun yesterday and has continued this morning, although those leaving are perhaps as poor as they have been in decades as a result of the serious economic crisis gripping the country. Greek Orthodox Easter will be celebrated on Sunday April 15 this year. After the strike by maritime workers on Tuesday and Wednesday, that caused huge disruption for those due to travel to the islands, boats and all other means of transport are functioning as usual today. The effects of the economic crisis, though, are being felt.

The lack of money is forcing Greeks to buy only what they strictly need, despite the fact that ingredients for the Easter meal cost 10.5% less than last year, according to figures provided by the Greek Confederation of Trade.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy’s Budget Adjustment ‘Less Urgent’ Says OECD

Market reaction bigger issue says senior economist

(ANSA) — Rome, April 12 — Italy’s need for budget adjustment is lower than other eurozone members, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development says.

“The need for budget repositioning may be considered less urgent than other countries,” Douglas Sutherland, author of the Paris-based organisation’s latest policy paper on Italy, told ANSA.

“The biggest issue now are the markets and their reaction.

Aside from that, the Italian situation would be less worrying,” said OECD Senior Economist Sutherland.

Italy has approved austerity measures to balance the budget next year.

Markets are renewing pressure on Italian bonds amid Spanish debt doubts and fears about lack of growth.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Monti Clears the Air With Spanish Premier

Rajoy calls for ‘prudence’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 12 — Italian Premier Mario Monti phoned Spanish Premier Mariano Rajoy to clear up comments allegedly made by Monti linking the Italian spread increase to the Spanish economic situation, reported Spanish newspaper El Pais on Thursday.

Speaking before a Spanish parliament meeting on Wednesday, Rajoy cautioned European leaders to exercise “prudence”. On Thursday Rajoy, while speaking to the press, called for leaders to act with “intelligence, will and courage,” and to avoid “unnecessary alarmism”.

Monti’s government, like Rajoy’s, is trying to steer Italy away from debt-crisis contagion and introduce reforms to strengthen their economies.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Obama and Redistribution of Your Wealth

In a speech earlier this week (April 10), President Obama said the following: “So these investments — in things like education and research and health care — they haven’t been made as some grand scheme to redistribute wealth from one group to another…this is not some socialist dream.”

Yet, in 2008, Obama summarized his plan to make the tax code fairer by saying “I think when you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.” Obama may not be cut out of the same cloth as Lenin, but he is a socialist and socialism is his agenda.

Marxism spawned Socialism. Marxism produced the foundation of European welfare state socialism. The European model tried to nationalize Socialism, as with the Bolshevik revolution, but with less success. After the failure of nationalization through revolution, European socialists realized that free enterprise in private hands produced capital (money) which they could then steal through taxation and then redistribute to all through social programs, thereby achieving socialism. Where European socialism prevails, there is a cost. According to Paul Roderick Gregory, “The European welfare state takes one half of national output to provide state health care, pensions, extended unemployment benefits, income grants, and free higher education.” Obama feverishly promotes socialism as just described.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Keynesian Spending Spree is Over

John Maynard Keynes taught that it helps our economy when the government borrows so it can spend more than it is taking in. Generations of spendthrift politicians, economists, and ordinary citizens, who enjoyed government benefits beyond the means of the present generation, funded by borrowed money, have been very eager to believe in it. Many have questioned this view. If Keynes were right, then the massive deficit spending represented in the $10 Trillion plus in new official US debt since Bill Clinton left office early in 2001 ($5 trillion during Bush IIs 8-year watch, and another $5 trillion in just over 3 years of Obama’s watch), not to mention all the off budget promising, should have produced massive improvement in the economy. It hasn’t. QED: Keynes is wrong. See my previous article “The Central Fallacy of Keynes and Our Politicians.”

Even for Keynesians, however, the party has to end when people will no longer loan to the government by purchasing US Government debt. Recent news reports make clear that that day arrived some time ago, but that the government and Fed are doing everything they can to disguise the fact.

As reported by Lawrence Goodman in his March 27, 2012 Wall Street Journal article, the recently released Federal Reserve Flow of Funds report for all of 2011, reveals that the Fed (not real buyers) purchased a stunning 61% of all new US Debt issued during 2011, up from negligible amounts prior to the 2008 financial crisis. This not only creates the false appearance of limitless demand for U.S. debt but also blunts any sense of urgency to reduce supersized budget deficits.

This is a crucial fact.

Real buyers willing to buy US Treasuries have already headed for the exits, and have been out of the market for some time. This includes foreign and domestic governments and private buyers (the Chinese, for example, have been reducing their holdings of dollars and US Debt, according to several reports in recent months). See Lawrence Goodman’s article, “Demand for US Debt is Not Limitless,” in Wall Street Journal Online (April 27, 2012).

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The North-South Mortgage Divide: Negative Equity Map of UK Shows Clear Disparity

Plunging house prices have triggered a new negative equity crisis, with the North bearing a far greater burden than the South, a report revealed yesterday.

Hundreds of thousands more families have become trapped in the nightmare of having a mortgage bigger than the value of their home over the last 18 months.

The report, from the ratings agency Standard and Poor’s, said 3.6 per cent of mortgage-holders were in ‘negative equity’ during the spring of 2010. By the end of last year, the number had risen to 5.6 per cent.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The £54bn Pensions ‘Ticking Time Bomb’ That Could Drive Up Council Tax

Britain is sitting on ‘a ticking time bomb’ created by the generous pensions enjoyed by council workers, a report warns today.

The shocking analysis reveals councils across the UK have a pensions deficit of £54billion — amid warnings it could get even bigger.

Experts warn council tax bills will have to rise sharply in the future to pay for pensions paid to council workers, from bin men to town hall staff.

The equivalent of around £1 in every £5 of council tax is already spent on local authorities’ contributions to their workers’ pension scheme, according to the report by campaign group the TaxPayers’ Alliance.

The average pension paid to a council worker is around £4,200 a year, which covers all council workers, many of whom are on very low pay. But more than 2,700 scoop pensions worth at least £37,000 a year and more than 35,000 get at least £17,000 a year, according to official figures.

By comparison, most private sector workers do not have a pension — and it is worth only £1,400 a year to those who do.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Allen West Exposes Red Influence in Congress

Rep. Allen West’s comments about alleged communists in Congress have led to what West calls “A lot of buzz and inaccurate reporting” in the media. Some reporters have nitpicked West on whether he has concrete proof of actual card-carrying members of the Communist Party USA in the Congress.

Politico called him a McCarthyite and actually quoted a spokesman for the Communist Party as saying that West didn’t know what he was talking about.

But the alternative media, led by www.rebelpundit.com, have been covering the story of how the international communist movement, responsible for about one hundred million dead, is very much alive and has collaborators in the U.S. Congress. Rebel Pundit is the work of Jeremy Segal, a disciple of the late Andrew Breitbart who produced the recent video of Rep. Danny K. Davis being honored by the People’s World at the Communist Party U.S.A.’s headquarters in Chicago for a lifetime of “inspiring leadership.”

Davis serves on the Homeland Security Committee where his subcommittee assignments are the Subcommittee on Transportation and the Subcommittee on Oversight. He is also a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

When Segal started questioning the congressman outside the party headquarters, CPUSA members and a Davis handler wearing an Obama jacket tried to intervene to protect Davis from further questioning, with one person calling Segal “disgusting.” Segal protested, “Don’t touch me!”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Americans Oppose Anti-Islam Nominee to USCIRF

A broad national coalition of 64 organizations and individuals sent a letter to Senators Inouye, McConnell and Durbin expressing “deep concern” at the recent appointment of Zuhdi Jasser to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). “The USCIRF promotes the freedom of religion and belief, and it seeks to combat religious extremism, intolerance, and repression throughout the world. In contrast with these laudable goals, Dr. Jasser believes, ‘operationally, Islam is not peaceful.’ His consistent support for measures that threaten and diminish religious freedoms within the United States demonstrates his deplorable lack of understanding of and commitment to religious freedom and undermines the USCIRF’s express purpose.” The coalition noted that Jasser’s organization, the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, “applauded” an amendment to Oklahoma’s constitution that both a federal district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals 10th Circuit have held is in violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by clearly favoring all other religions over Islam. That amendment specifically targeted Islam for official censure.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



FBI Led to Anonymous Hacker After He Posts Picture of Girlfriend’s Breasts Online

This is the picture that led the FBI to a catch prolific hacker allegedly responsible for releasing the personal information of scores of police officers throughout the United States.

Higinio O. Ochoa III has been charged with illegally hacking into at least four U.S. law enforcement websites — feats he allegedly boasted about across social networking sites.

[…]

At the bottom of the website, there was the picture of the woman wearing the sign. Data taken from that picture showed it was taken by an iPhone, according to the FBI.

GPS co-ordinates embedded in the photo — as are found in all pictures taken by a smartphone — showed authorities the exact street and house in Wantirna South, Melbourne where it was taken.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Google Founders Tighten Grip on Firm and Record Profits

The online search leader has reported a 61 percent increase in net income for the first quarter of 2012 and has said it will issue a new class of stock aimed at helping Google’s senior leaders keep control of the firm.

Google’s first quarter revenues rose to $10.6 billion (8.04 billion euros) in 2012 — up 24 percent from the same period a year ago, and the second consecutive quarter in which revenues surpassed the double-digit billion dollar mark, the California-based firm announced Thursday.

Net profits came in at $2.89 billion after $1.8 billion in the first quarter of 2011, marking a staggering 61 percent increase in the course of last year.

Speaking of “another great quarter,” Google Chief Executive Larry Page said that the firm saw “tremendous momentum from the big bets we’ve made in products like Android, Chrome and YouTube.”

“We are still at the very early stages of what technology can do to improve people’s lives and we have enormous opportunities ahead,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



How Racially Divided is the United States Today?

As the national debate over the killing of Trayvon Martin rages on, a new poll suggests that a majority of Americans believe the country is divided by race. The Newsweek/Daily Beast poll shows that 72% of whites and 89% of blacks say the country is racially divided.

And almost four years after the election of the nation’s first black president, majorities of whites and blacks say race relations have either stayed the same or gotten worse.

There continue to be fundamental disagreements about when blacks will achieve racial equality. Whites are much more likely to think blacks have the same chance as they do to get housing and jobs.

As for the killing of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black Florida teen, there are more differences along racial lines. Blacks are more than twice as likely as whites to say Martin’s death was racially motivated. African-Americans are convinced that Martin was targeted because he was a young black man, while whites are divided.

Blacks overwhelmingly approve of how President Obama has handled the controversy, while a majority of whites disapprove. The differences go on and on. It’s a sad statement on race relations in the U.S. in 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Judicial Cowardice — A Stench Rolling Across America

“Is there anything more shameful than the man who lacks the courage to be a coward?” — Peter Blaunder

On April 10, 2012, another Obama/Soetoro ballot access hearing took place in New Jersey. Objectors were represented by superior legal counsel, Mario Apuzzo. Barry Soetoro’s attorney’ argument can only be described as delusional:

“Obama’s attorney made a motion to dismiss the Objection in its entirety. She argued that it was not relevant to being placed on the ballot whether Mr. Obama is a “natural born Citizen,” where he was born, and whether he was born to U.S. citizen parents. She said that no law in New Jersey obligated him to produce any such evidence in order to get on the primary ballot.”

What Ms. Hill is saying is that anyone can be a presidential candidate on their state ballot. Doesn’t matter where the individual was born or whether he was even born to U.S. citizen parents. The hell with the U.S. Constitution and why the framers grand fathered in the clause about ‘natural born citizen’.

The implications behind such lunacy, never mind stomping on the U.S. Constitution, are horrendous. But, of course, the useful fools who serve their master don’t give a damn. They care only for their paychecks and protecting the empty suit camped out in our White House.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Massachusetts “Educational Center” Uses Violent Electroshock on Teenager

[WARNING: Extremely disturbing content.]

The Judge Rotenberg Educational Center is a facility that provides services for children and adults with “severe developmental disabilities and emotional or behavior disorders”. In the past decades, the Center garnered negative criticism due to its use of aversives such as electric shock, the withholding of food, spanking with a spatula, pinching of the feet and forced inhaling of ammonia.

The recent release of disturbing footage from the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center — featuring a restrained teenager who gets electroshocked 31 times — brought the controversy to a whole other level. While the Center claimed that the use of electroshock was a form of “therapy” to change behavior, the footage shows an all-out torture session under the watchful eyes and laughs of Center employees.

Here’s a news report on the recently released of the footage from 2002 (the administration of the Center somehow managed block the broadcasting of the tape in the past).

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Mosque Growth Study Good News for Americans

New York, New York — You don’t have to be Muslim to find good news in a recent study on mosque growth in the United States. Co-sponsored by the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), Hartford Institute on Religion, the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), and Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), this national survey of mosque leaders in the United States found that more than 900 new mosques have been built in the United States since 2000-a period of increased scrutiny by government officials and increased controversy over mosque building. Of the 2,106 Muslim centres across the United States, a quarter of them were built in the last 10 years.

The first piece of good news in this discovery for non-Muslim Americans is that the First Amendment of the US Constitution-the part stating “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” — is in considerably better working order than it appeared in the summer of 2010. At that time, protests raged against a planned Islamic centre near the site of the World Trade Center and erupted into a national debate; anti-mosque demonstrations stretched from Tennessee to California. The too-commonplace anti-Muslim vitriol on the airwaves and over the internet that summer — similar in content and tone to the anti-Catholic tirades of the early 19th century-was, it now appears, a momentary setback in our 235 year on-going struggle for a more perfect union.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Obama Admirer to Teach ‘Understanding Obama’ Class at Harvard Law School

According to the Harvard Law School course catalog, professor Charles Ogletree will be teaching a reading group called “Understanding Obama” for one classroom credit during the 2013 spring term.

Obama graduated from Harvard Law School in 1991. He was elected the first African-American president of the Harvard Law Review in 1990. Ogletree was a mentor to both President Obama and Michelle Obama while they were Harvard law students.

In an interview, Ogletree explained to The Daily Caller that the reading group will deal with both the positive and negative issues surrounding Obama and his presidency.

According to Ogletree, his personal experience with the president, as Obama’s mentor, will not be a part of the reading group, though he made no bones about his admiration for Obama.

“I’m an Obama fan, I love the president — love him and his wife,” he explained. “They were wonderful people to serve as a mentor when they were here in the law school at separate times in the 1980s. There’s a lot to learn.” He asserted that none of his personal feelings about the president will be a factor in the class and that there will be no grade, paper requirements or exam requirements.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Repeat After Me: The Identity Thief is a Socialist

by Diana West

Now that Election 2012 is shaping up as a contest between President Obama and Mitt Romney, an observation and a prediction.

Our nation heads into a presidential campaign with an incumbent whose online birth certificate and Selective Service registration card are almost certainly forgeries, and this is a nonissue. (Don’t ask about the subpoena from a Georgia court that Obama ignored. Everyone else did, too.)

That’s the observation. The prediction is that unless voters come to view Barack Obama as a “socialist” — even a “democratic socialist” — and, as such, an existential threat to our (in theory) constitutional republic, President Obama, funny papers and all, will be re-elected in November.

The two stories are related. Both turn on the relative power of “evidence” vs. “narrative.” By evidence, I mean the facts and clues that support an argument or hypothesis. By narrative, I mean propaganda. For example, there is evidence of fraud in Obama’s identity documents, but such evidence does not fit the narrative that Obama’s identity documents are authentic. In the face of narrative, We the People are supposed to ignore the evidence. All of our officials and elites do.

Similarly, there is plentiful evidence of Barack Obama’s socialist beliefs and ties — Stanley Kurtz’s 2010 book “Radical-in-Chief: Barack Obama and the Untold Story of American Socialism” meticulously lays it out — but the narrative insists that Obama is anything but a socialist. And, as with the evidence of identity fraud, woe and besmirching to anyone who mentions it.

Now, what do I mean by socialism? Too often, and sometimes by design, defining socialism becomes an absurdly contentious exercise. If we narrowly define socialism as “government ownership of the means of production,” however, we’ll never know what hit us until it’s too late. I found it helpful to learn that Alexander Solzhenitsyn recognized there was no “single precise definition of socialism” out there. This is probably due to vagaries of time and place, and to the fact that, short of a violent revolution, socialism is a complex, messy work in progress. What’s vital to identify is the direction of that progress. If the progress tends toward increasing economic collectivism and political centralization, the movement is socialist. If the progress is in the other direction, the movement is known as capitalist.

By leaps of collectivism and bounds of centralization, Barack Obama has been taking the country in a socialist direction since he took office…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Strike Two for Marlin Manager Ozzie Guillen

Last week Miami Marlin’s manager Ozzie Guillen told Time magazine that he “loves and respects” Fidel Castro. This week, reacting to outrage by Americans of Cuban heritage (i.e. a huge chunk of Marlin ticket-buyers,) the Marlin’s suspended Guillen for five games. Apparently eager to head-off worse retribution (and damage—control ticket sales) on April 9th a moping Guillen issued a groveling apology at a Miami press Conference.

“I am here on my knees,” he whimpered. “I am here to say I am sorry with my heart in my hands…I hurt a lot of people’s feelings. Now I want to apologize because I did the wrong thing. It was a very stupid comment…If I don’t learn from this mistake, then I will call myself dumb.”

As if hailing a Stalinist dictator who jailed political prisoners at a higher rate than Stalin himself during the Great Terror, murdered more Cubans than Hitler murdered Germans during the Night of Long Knives, repeatedly craved to nuke Ozzie’s adopted country and shattered the lives of half of Miami’s families were some kind of offense in this country! (except for ticket-sales.)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Heart of the Problem is in the Heart

Benjamin Franklin told us, “Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters.”

Socialism is a debilitating confidence game dressed up as an ideology used by demagogues and want-to-be dictators to fool its victims into believing it is possible to have your cake and eat it too. Those who fall under the spell of the charlatans singing this siren song actually come to believe it is fair and just to force some people to labor for the good of others. This is the same type of sophistry and rationalization that was used by the clergy and philosophers of the Antebellum South to justify unending human bondage for an entire race of people because it was for their own good.

This twisted tool of central planners and bureaucratic tyrants teaches those who have not that it is fair and just to take from those who have and re-distribute the plunder as the government decrees. This is not fair! This is not just! To teach that it is raises up generations of people who believe they have a birth-right to that which is not their own forfeiting their true birth-right: the opportunity to succeed through their own efforts. The products of such an educational system are citizens without virtue voting pawns without honor. Not because they have made a personal decision to live without these two attributes but because they have been programmed to believe taking the fruit of someone else’s labor is permissible as long as it will be given to someone else. Theodore Roosevelt said, “To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to society.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



You Feel Me, My Fellow Americans?

Last time I checked, conservatives in general, and Republicans in particular, were racist Neanderthals engaging in a “war on women” as a hobby, which is not to be confused with their full-time jobs of screwing over the 99 percent by not paying their “fair share” of taxes. Thus, you can imagine my surprise when a couple of outbursts from the oh-so-tolerant precincts of the left upset the proverbial apple cart.

Exhibit A is the well-mannered and even-tempered chief of staff for the New Black Panther Party, Michelle Williams. Expressing her frustration with the fact that the George Zimmeman/Trayvon Martin case has insufficiently ignited the kind of racialist passion Ms. William deems necessary, she offered America the kind of level-headed reasoning we were promised as an integral part of the Obama administration’s post-racial 2008 hope and change campaign. In a call to a radio program, Ms. Williams said the following:

“I just want to say to all the listeners on this phone call, that if you are having any doubt about getting suited, booted, and armed up for this race war that we’re in that has never ended, let me tell you something the thing that’s about to happen these honkies, these crackers, these pigs, these people, these motherf*er it has been long overdue.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Children Stolen by the State Needlessly, Causing Utter Misery in One of Britain’s Most Disturbing Scandals

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

Yesterday the Daily Mail reported that applications to take children into care in England have soared to an all-time record, for the first time topping 10,000 in just 12 months.

Since 2008 alone, the figure has much more than doubled, to some 225 cases a week — bringing the total number of children in care in the UK as a whole to at least 90,000.

The official reason given for this explosion in the number of children being removed from their families by social workers in only four years is that 2008 was the year when the nation was shocked by the events leading to the death of Baby P — later named as Peter Connelly.

He was just 17 months old when he died in North London at the hands of his mother Tracey and her violent partner, suffering more than 50 injuries.

The story goes that social workers have become much more eager to take children into care because they do not wish to see any repetition of the scandal surrounding their failure to save Baby Peter, even though they and other officials had visited his home 60 times.

But one hugely important ingredient is missing from the way this version of events is being put across by the authorities responsible for ‘child protection’.

Evidence is accumulating on all sides to show that far too many children are now being removed from their parents wholly unnecessarily, often for laughably inadequate, even absurd, reasons.

No one could object if the rise in the number of families being torn apart was simply due to the increased determination of our social workers to intervene in situations likely to lead to another Baby P tragedy.

But the fact is, happy children are today being snatched from loving parents for reasons they cannot begin to fathom, leaving all concerned in a state of utter misery. And this can constitute a tragedy in its own way scarcely less heart-rending than those where a child has been genuinely abused.

Having investigated scores of such cases over the past three years, I do not hesitate to describe this as one of the most disturbing scandals in Britain today.

The manner in which, every week, dozens of families are wantonly ripped apart has become truly horrifying. And the only reason this does not itself make headline news is that our so-called ‘child protection’ system has become so ruthlessly hidden from view by the wall of secrecy built round it by our family courts.

[…]

Meanwhile, countless children find themselves living with strangers in foster homes, where all the evidence shows — despite many shining exceptions — they may risk physical abuse or emotional harm far worse than anything their parents were accused of inflicting on them.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Conversion to Islam Growing Dramatically in Austria

Official records suggest a dramatic growth in conversions from Christianity to Islam, in the predominantly Christian European country of Austria, Press TV reports.

“We see that people have spiritual longing that they feel there is something missing in their lives, if there is no dimension, no horizon as to the hereafter, or where am I? Why am I here?” Says Mr. Bagajati, an Austrian convert to Islam. Austria is a predominantly Catholic Christian European country of over eight million people with strong and deep historical roots in Christianity. Many Christians express that they were disillusioned and had lost their faith in Christianity, and of course the recent recurring sexual scandals of Catholic Church has played a major role in their exodus, which at the end led to many of them convert to Islam, where they could find comfort. Most non-Muslim, European citizens have always been presented with an ugly and awful image of Islam, linked mainly to extremism and fundamentalism, by the Western culture. Meanwhile, Ms. Bagajati believes that it is the “perfect time” for Islam to show its “peaceful nature” to non-Muslims, in a time when the United Nations has expressed concerns over growing religious discrimination and violence against religious groups. Estimations show that almost half a million Austrian Christians have converted to Islam since roughly two years ago, with the numbers of conversions keeping thriving.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Danish Court Puts Four Men on Trial on Terror Charges

Four men have been put on trial in Copenhagen for allegedly trying to attack the offices of a newspaper that published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammed. The 2005 cartoons sparked outrage in the Muslim world.

Four men accused of plotting an attack on a Danish newspaper that published controversial caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad have gone on trial in Denmark.

If convicted, the three Swedish citizens and one Tunisian resident of Sweden could face a maximum of 16 years in prison.

All four men were arrested in December of 2010. At the time of their arrest, three of the suspects were allegedly on their way to the offices of the Jyllands-Posten newspaper in downtown Copenhagen, where police said they planned to “kill as many people as possible.”

Police, who had been wiretapping the three suspects, said they arrested the them after hearing one of them say they were “going to” the newspaper’s offices.

During the arrest, police found a machine gun with a silencer, a revolver and more than 100 bullets. The fourth suspect was arrested in Stockholm and subsequently extradited to Denmark. Danish security officials described the men as “militant Islamists with relations to international terror networks.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Mohammed Cartoons Have Lasting Effect

The trial of four men suspected of plotting an attack on a Danish newspaper that published cartoons considered offensive to Islam begins Friday. The cartoon controversy marked a turning point for political cartooning. The editorial headquarters of the Jyllands-Posten newspaper in Copenhagen resembles a maximum security facility, with plenty of gates, metal detectors and guards intended to keep undesired guests out.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Abdennour Bidar: Mohammed Merah, A Monster Created by Islam’s Illness

A great French Muslim philosopher asks whether salafist violence — like that which killed the children of Jewish school in Toulouse — is not a symptom of something deeply wrong with the Muslim tradition. A religion that has closed in on itself. To renew Islam today, the challenge of modernity and humanism must be accepted. “Who will have that courage? Who will take this risk?”. The analysis of Fr. Samir Khalil.

Beirut (AsiaNews) — Mohammed Merah, killed at age 23, is infamous as the author of the slaughter of Jewish children at the school of Toulouse (France), on March 19, and a few days earlier the killing of French paratroopers in Montauban. Besieged by police for hours in the house where he was imprisoned, he died in shoot-out on March 22.

Abdennour Bidar is a French Muslim philosopher[1], I have had the joy of knowing. On 23 March, he published an article in the newspaper “Le Monde”, entitled: “Merah, a monstre issu de la Maladie de l’Islam (Merah, a monster created by Islam’s illness).” Given its importance, I would like to present it here.

“When the killer of Toulouse and Montauban was identified as’ Salafi jihadist ‘… the declarations made by Islamic dignitaries in France were careful to avoid any’ amalgam ‘between the radicalism of this individual and the peaceful nature of France’s Muslim community to “clearly” distinguish between Islam and Islamism, Islam and violence. “

However, a serious question remains: “On the whole, can the religion of Islam be declared alien to this type of radical action? … Or perhaps, is this gesture the extreme expression of an illness within Islam itself?”.

Bidar recallsr that in Islam there is a “degeneration” that takes multiple forms: “ritualism, formalism, dogmatism, sexism, antisemitism, intolerance, religious illiteracy or ‘subculture’ are ills which afflict it”.

These diseases are prevalent, but there are also “Muslims morally, socially, spiritually enlightened by their faith.” One can not say therefore that “Islam is essentially intolerant.” You can however say that Islam contains — beside certain moral demands — elements of intolerance that at times reappear in different circumstances. He adds: “All of these ills I have enumerated alter the health of the Islamic culture in France and elsewhere.”

Faced with this situation, Muslims must respond with courage. The author says that Islam must recognize “that this kind of gesture, despite being outside its spirituality and culture, however, is the most serious, most outstanding symptom of the deep crisis that it is experiencing.” And he asks: “Who will have that courage? Who will take this risk?”

One may wonder why the author speaks of courage. The reason is that for “several centuries” Islam has been stuck in its certainties. It does not dare to question itself. It is content to affirm and reaffirm its “truth”. The more it states this with force, the more it reveals its internal weakness. Before a world which contests it, it responds with violence, because it dare not face the outside world, except to declare it evil and corrupt. It “is incapable of self-criticism,” says Bidar.

This is Islam’s illness: “considering with paranoia that any calling into question of its dogmas is a sacrilege. The Koran, the Prophet, Ramadan, halal, etc. ..: even among educated people, cultured, ready for dialogue in many areas, the slightest attempt to call into question these totems of Islam, meets with a final refusal. “

In their majority, Muslims deny anyone to be able to call into question their traditions, their rituals, their customs and habits. They have walled themselves in to their own world, which they worship, declare absolute and sacred. “Most Muslim consciences refuse and even to refuse anyone else the right to discuss what tradition established as untouchably sacred thousands of years ago: rituals, principles, customs, which, however no longer meet all the spiritual needs of the present time. “

They have remained deeply attached to these traditions, set in the 7 th century, in a Bedouin context and “do not realize that ever more frequently even they themselves and their demands have changed in nature.” The values that they claim as authentically Muslim, because faithful to the practice of the “Ancients” (the Salaf, hence the word Salafi), no longer meet the current criteria of all Muslims, established criteria “in the name of completely profane values: the right to difference, tolerance, freedom of conscience. “

And our author adds: “Is it no wonder that in this general climate of frozen and schizophrenic civilization, some ill spirit would transform and radicalize this collective closure into murderous fanaticism?”.

In fact, for the Salafists, the model remains fixed to the past, to the era of the “Prophet”, the seventh century, the model of Bedouin society. The model goes backward and not forward. The true Muslim, according to these Salafists, to find the true essence of Islam, must go back to the past and not look ahead to the future, this “forward” represented by Western culture, is branded as corrupt and depraved.

The average Muslim reacts by saying that these Salafis are the exception, they do not represent true Islam, an Islam that is retrograde, etc. …. At the same time, the Salafis, present themselves as the only “authentic” ones because they are faithful to the “Tradition of the Prophet” (sunnat al-Nabi), and that the Prophet is presented in the Koran as the model par excellence (Koran 33: 21 ). In turn, the average Muslim says that true Islam is peaceful Islam, in accordance with the Koran that says “there is no compulsion in religion” ((Koran 2, 256).

The average Muslim says that “a similar fanaticism is [only] specific to an individual and is the tree that hides the forest of a peaceful Islam.’“

But Bidar raises the question: “What is the real state of the forest in which trees like this take root? Could a healthy culture and a true spiritual education create such monsters?”

These cases are too numerous to be just a tree in the forest! How come there are so many “fanatics” who are often educated people who, far exceeding the Muslim average? How is it that so many Western converts to Islam, or Muslims who live in the West for so long, feel attracted to this extreme?

And even more so, how is it that so many imams and guides, trained in the best and most authentic Islamic centers worldwide, go on to promote this form of Islam?

“Some Muslims — says the author — sense that this type of issue has been delayed for too long. They are gradually becoming aware [over time] that it will become more difficult to remove responsibility from Islam for its fanatics, and behave as if it is enough to draw the distinction between Islam and radical Islam. “

Faced with frequent manifestations of radical Islam it is only too easy to say that this is not Islam. The “Arab spring” that we see developing before our eyes is too often turned into an “Islamic autumn.” And Islamism is likely to bring us back to the civilization of the desert.

And Bidar proclaims: “But for many more Muslims it should now become clear that in this religious culture, the roots of the sick tree are too absorbed and too numerous for it to continue to believe it can be satisfied with simply denouncing its black sheep… ‘Islam must accept the principle of its complete re-establishment or — without doubt — its integration into a broader humanism, which leads eventually to overcome its frontiers and horizons. “

It is therefore a case of superseding itself, “its borders and its own horizon,” says Prof. Abdennour. The choice is this or death. A case of a “complete re-establishment” in a “broader humanism.” And at this point he asks the question: “But will [Islam] agree to die in this way so that a new form of spiritual life can be reborn from its legacy? And where can we find the inspiration for this?”.

As a good philosophy professor, Abdennour (“the servant of the Light”), gives this answer: “As a specialist of Islam’s deepest thoughts, I see that the philosophical and mystical thought of Averroes (1126-1198) and Ibn Arabi (1165-1241) [have] a wisdom that has been lost — the majority of Muslims do not even know their names. However, it is not a case of resurrecting them, or repeating them. It is now too late for that . It is about finding their equivalent for our time. From this point of view, it is not enough to be ready to admit that ultimately there is “a general illness within Islam” and that we must return to these “wisdoms of the past.”

So there is a “general illness of Islam”. For several decades, Islam has been facing a crisis of the strongest nature. Most of the intellectuals and enlightened thinkers have said it and repeated it. Many are trying to emerge from this crisis, but the fundamentalist trend is stronger and blocks any effort to renewal or reform, as Bidar says. The point is that the leap forward is a leap into the unknown, with all the risks this entails, while going backwards appears more certain, in accordance with the Sunnah and it is reassuring. For Bidar, Islam “has to re-invent itself a spiritual culture.” This last word is one of the key words of our philosopher, in all his works: spirituality. Thus we quote his conclusion:

“The challenge is much more important. Islam should come to this completely new lucidity in which to understand that it must reinvent a spiritual culture from the ashes of the material death of its traditions. But, another important problem, it can not do by itself and for itself: today it would serve no purpose to establish an “Islamic humanism” next to a “Western humanism” or “Buddhist humanism.” If the tomorrow of the twenty-first century is spiritual, this will not occur in separate modalities between the different religions and worldviews, but on the basis of a common faith in man. To be found together. “

————————————————————————————————————————

[1] Born in Clermont-Ferrand 13 January 1971 to a French Muslim mother. Educated by his grandfather, an extreme secularist, he sought his path in a reflective and spiritual Islam. I personally met Bidar on July 12, 2007 at the Senate in Paris, during the Colloquium, “East Europe: Dialogue with Islam,” sponsored Christian Poncelet, President of the Senate (see:

http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Abdennour-Bidar:-Mohammed-Merah,-a-monster-created-by-Islam’s-illness-24478.html

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



German Civil Servant Says ‘He Did Nothing for 14 Years’

A German civil servant has admitted that he “did nothing for 14 years” in frank retirement email sent to colleagues.

The man, aged 65, sent a farewell message to 500 colleagues on his retirement day after learning his job was axed due to cuts. In the email round robin to other civil servants in Menden, in Germany’s North Rhine-Westphalia, he boasted that he had earned £613,000 (745,000 euros) for doing no work. “Since 1998, I was present but not really there. So I’m going to be well prepared for retirement — Adieu,” he wrote, in an email leaked to the Westfalen-Post newspaper. The admission that a civil servant could be paid for 14 years without doing any work is embarrassing for Germany because it is leading calls for austerity cuts to the public sector in eurozone countries such as Greece and Spain.

The unnamed man, who has worked in a municipal state surveyor’s office since 1974, accused the municipal authorities of creating inefficient, overlapping and parallel structures, even employing another surveying engineer to do the same job, leaving him with nothing to do. Of course, I well benefited from the freedom that came by to me,” he wrote. He also accused the Menden city authorities of buying unusable computers and software but has since refused to publicly detail his allegations. “I do not wish to say anything else. That email was not intended for public view,” he said. Volker Fleige, the mayor of Menden, said that he had felt a “good dose of rage” when he saw the email, as the employee had not once complained about not having enough to do during his 38 years of employment. “This kind of behaviour is very worrying,” he said. Mr Fleige said that there would be no sanctions against the former civil servant and that following budget cuts his job would not be filled.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Greece: Ex Defense Minister Tsochatzopoulos Arrested

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 11 — Former Greek Defense Minister Akis Tsochatzopoulos was arrested on Wednesday in connection with charges of failing to declare a property he owns in central Athens on his origin of wealth form in 2010. Tsochatzopoulos, as daily Kathimerini website reports, was arrested outside his home on Dionysiou Areopagitou Street and taken to the headquarters of the Athens police, known by its acronym GADA, shortly before noon. The minister made no statements to reporters. His arrest came swiftly after the decision by judicial authorities on Wednesday morning to issue an arrest warrant. Officers of the Financial Crimes Squad (SDOE) were immediately dispatched to the former minister’s home. According to sources, warrants have also been issued for the arrest of other individuals alleged to have helped Tsochatzopoulos conceal his assets. Appeals prosecutor Galinos Bris had recommended on Tuesday that Tsochatzopoulos stand trial for declaring an income of almost 251,000 euros, which included two bank loans totaling 150,000 euros, but not the building on Dionysiou Areopagitou Street. Tsochatzopoulos insists the property came into his possession after the form was submitted.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Bakoyannis Immunity to be Lifted, Asks Supreme Court

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 12 — Greece’s Supreme Court has asked for Parliament to lift the parliamentary immunity of Democratic Alliance leader Dora Bakoyannis so she can be investigated in connection with the alleged non-declaration of 1 million dollars, as daily Kathimerini website reports. The sum relates to money that Bakoyannis’s husband, Isidoros Kouvelos, made on the US stock market and then used to buy a ship in the UK. Kouvelos has been accused of not declaring the amount on the source of wealth form that the couple submitted. Bakoyannis insists that there was no wrongdoing and that she has been victimised. As elections were announced on Wednesday, Parliament has now been dissolved so the Supreme Court’s request will not be examined until after the May 6 elections.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Scandal-Hit Northern League Expels Senate Deputy Speaker

Rosy Mauro latest victim of party-funding furore

(ANSA) — Milan, April 12 — The scandal-hit Northern League on Thursday expelled Senate Deputy Speaker Rosy Mauro for her rumoured role in the alleged financial misdealing that has damaged the image of the party.

The League also expelled former treasurer Francesco Belsito, who is under investigation for allegedly channelling public funds to the family of ex-leader Umberto Bossi, who stepped down a week ago.

Mauro, who has denied all wrongdoing, has been boycotted by Senators since the allegations broke

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Ruby: Ghedini: Berlusconi Payments Not Connected to Trial

(AGI) Rome — Niccolo Ghedini denied any connection between payments made by Silvio Berlusconi and evidence in the Ruby case. Ghedini explained: “In relation to the article published today in Corriere della Sera on certain payments made by Silvio Berlusconi we would like to point out that they are clearly sums paid by bank transfer, fully tracked, from a personal account of the same Prime Minister Berlusconi. The juxtaposition between contributions and the status of witnesses in the so-called Ruby case is absolutely preposterous and devoid of merit. Moreover, it is very normal and unproblematic for there to be economic relations existing between persons suspected or accused persons and witnesses. Just consider the owner of a company with employees or witnesses who are family members or relatives. Actually Mr Berlusconi with his usual generosity decided to help, in total transparency and clearly through his bank, persons who, owing to the hype created on non-existent legal events, are going through times of great family, professional and economic difficulties. So there is nothing in the least illegitimate.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Welcome to Ikea-Land: Furniture Giant Begins Urban Planning Project

Would you like to feel that way all the time? The people who run the Swedish home-furnishings behemoth are launching a bold push into the business of designing, building and operating entire urban neighbourhoods. Where once they placed a couch in a living room, the Swedes now want to place you and 6,000 neighbours into a neglected corner of your city, design an entire urban world around you, and Ikea-ize your lives. Their bold, high-concept notion of an urban ‘hood could be an important solution to the housing-supply shortages that plague many large cities — but it could take some getting used to.

I recently made the long drive into the vanguard of Ikea’s city-building ambition, in a triangle of post-industrial wasteland surrounded by goods-shipping canals and highway ramps in the far reaches of East London, not far from the 2012 Olympics grounds. Here is the site of Ikea’s effort to bring a very Scandinavian model of urban design and managed living into the English-speaking world.

Amid this 11-hectare expanse of ancient rusting machinery, waste piles and grinding construction equipment is a converted brick sugar warehouse where a team of Swedes and Brits are poring over blueprints and renderings. LandProp Services bought the land in 2009. Their vision is to turn this grey netherworld, once planning approval is done, into a tightly packed neighbourhood they’ll call Strand East.

It will look, once complete, like a reproduction of the sort of historic, chic downtown neighbourhoods you find in the far more central parts of London or Paris, not in this distant expanse of former dockyards and bloodless public-housing project. At its core are straight, car-free streets lined with simple townhouses and ground-floor-access flats in five-storey rows. In the alleyways behind — an imitation of the classic London backstreet, the mews — will be little two- and three-storey homes, all with direct access to the street.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The New German Problem

Christopher Caldwell knows how to grab our attention:

“Once again, Europe has a country at its centre that is too big for its neighbours. Merely by keeping on its best behaviour, Germany has managed to reawaken the historic ‘German problem’.”

However, as his troubling article for Standpoint makes clear, today’s German problem is very different to its earlier incarnations. While Germany once threatened the sovereignty of its neighbours, the German response to the current crisis in the Eurozone is to sacrifice its own independence on a European altar:

“Germany is in a position where it is going to haemorrhage either cash or sovereignty. The government has decided it would rather haemorrhage sovereignty. Voters will notice it less. They get to accumulate money in the short term. The EU gets to accumulate sovereignty in the long term.”

A transfusion of power from Berlin to Brussels might not be such a bad thing if accompanied by German qualities of discipline and efficiency. However, as Caldwell point out, these qualities are under threat:

“Germany is experiencing more political tumult now than you would expect from perhaps the world’s most successful major economy. The country is clearly moving left.”

By way of evidence, he cites the electoral collapse of the free-market FDP (so much for liberal conservatism), the strength of the Greens and the resurgence of the Left Party (successors to the East German Communists):

“Chancellor Merkel can read the writing on the wall… she must now audition a new cast of coalition partners. The Social Democrats, with whom she shared power to the satisfaction of the public between 2005 and 2009, appear most likely to get the role… Observers speak of a “Social Democratisation” of the CDU.”

What changes Germany changes Europe; and that — one way or another — includes us.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The Nation as a Family

As well as introducing us to Jonathan Haidt’s work, David Goodhart’s review is an important article in its own right, exposing the extreme universalism of Britain’s cultural elite:

“My fellow partygoers were all too representative of a part of liberal, educated Britain. Shami Chakrabarti, of the human rights group Liberty, has argued: ‘In the modern world of transnational and multinational power we must decide if we are all ‘people’ or all ‘foreigners’ now.’ Oliver Kamm, the centrist commentator, said to me recently that it was morally wrong to discriminate on grounds of nationality, ruling out the ‘fellow citizen favouritism’ that most people think that the modern nation state is based on. And according to George Monbiot, a leading figure of the liberal left, ‘Internationalism… tells us that someone living in Kinshasa is of no less worth than someone living in Kensington… Patriotism, if it means anything, tells us we should favour the interests of British people [before the Congolese]. How do you reconcile this choice with liberalism? How… do you distinguish it from racism?’“

The obvious answer — at least to a conservative — is that the nation is analogous to the family. One presumes that Chakrabarti, Kamm and Monbiot feel a particular attachment and responsibility to their own families, but does that mean they consider people in other families to be of lesser worth? Of course not. If such a principle can apply to one’s family, then why can’t it apply to one’s country?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: 25 Firemen Who Scrambled to Rescue a Seagull From a 3ft-Deep Pond Refused to Wade in Because of Regulations — Leaving it to Joe Public to Save the Bird

It looked like a major emergency — 25 firemen standing at the water’s edge assessing the life-threatening situation before them.

Stranded 200ft out and struggling for survival was the victim they had come to rescue…a seagull.

And if that scenario were not ludicrous enough, there was worse to come.

The firemen were then barred from going into the 3ft-deep water because it was judged to be a health and safety risk.

As crews from five fire engines stood beside the pond in South London for up to an hour, it fell to a member of the public to pull on his waders and rescue the bird, which was caught up in a plastic bag.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: British Muslims Have Given David Cameron an Object Lesson in Democracy

by Parveen Akhtar

In Indonesia, Cameron called for Islam to embrace democracy; the young Muslim voters of Bradford West would agree

In his speech in Jakarta on Thursday, David Cameron told Muslims in the east that “democracy and Islam can flourish together”, the implication being that they often don’t. Especially with a focus on Britain, these comments are not without irony. Exactly two weeks previously, Muslims in a northern city of Britain had exercised their democratic right to vote, helping to elect George Galloway as MP for Bradford West. In so doing, they highlighted that although the issues of Islam, Muslims abroad, the east and the Middle East matter to them, of equal importance is local life.

Galloway’s “Bradford spring” saw politicians and journalists bandying about terms such as “biraderi”, “clan” and “kinship politics”. Biraderi, which literally translates as “patrilineage” is commonly used by Pakistanis to refer to networks of individuals who share a common ancestry. Kinship networks are indeed an important form of social organisation amongst British Pakistanis, a type of internal welfare system for family and blood relations. However, the biraderi politics referred to in comment pieces discussing Bradford West is a very British phenomenon. Biraderi politics in the UK refers to the practices of British politicians of using community leaders in British constituencies with significant Pakistani voters to attain bloc votes. Roy Hattersley, who held the Sparkbrook constituency in Birmingham with a large Pakistani population, once remarked that whenever he saw a Pakistani name on a ballot paper he knew the vote was his.

In Bradford West, Galloway’s supporters are largely young, British-born Bradfordians of Pakistani Muslim descent. They are the children and grandchildren of postwar economic migrants: manual labourers in the textile mills and manufacturing industries of the north. Biraderi-based politics had a successful run for nearly 40 years in these areas, but the children of the pioneer generation, born and bought up in the UK, do not identify with this kind of politics. They believe that community leaders do not engage with the issues that concern them.

The whole point of patronage-based politics is that politicians don’t have to work for their votes. Alienated by this system, these young people were drawn to George Galloway. Galloway’s oratorical skills and abilities in public debate have led some to suggest that Bradford West was a one-off result engineered by a truly individual politician who is a “standard bearer” for British Muslims in a constituency with a large Muslim population. Galloway is certainly regarded as a hero among British Pakistanis, because he is seen as the only politician to challenge the status quo with regards to Iraq and other issues of Muslim concern. This may have won him the election in 2005 in Bethnal Green and Bow, but it would be misleading to think that he won in Bradford West because young British Muslims are preoccupied with the war. They may have an interest in Muslim issues abroad, but international politics plays only one part in their attitudes. What really matters is the unglamorous world of local politics: street lighting, children’s schools, rubbish collection, the problems of vermin and drugs, the lack of opportunities: the bread-and-butter issues of life in the UK.

In electing George Galloway, some Pakistanis made a cognitive leap and reasoned that if Galloway is speaking positively about Muslims abroad, he will also care about them here, and help fight a fight which they believe the older generation of Pakistani community leaders has abandoned, by accepting patronage roles from mainstream politicians who want to stay propped up in their constituencies. Trying to explain the defeat in Bradford West, John Mann, Labour MP for Bassetlaw, blamed the party for having no strategy in the area. On the contrary: the party did have a strategy. The problem was that it was an old strategy, based on the belief that community leaders could guarantee the local Labour candidate a win.

What the Bradford West byelection highlighted so dramatically was that Labour, and indeed all the mainstream political parties, can ill-afford to rely on the patronage-based relationships they enjoyed with the older generation of Pakistanis. Young British Pakistani Muslims are actively participating in British democracy. Religious identity and local concerns flourish side by side. Politicians have to earn and not expect their votes. That is democracy, in east and west.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Great-Grandmother, 94, Suffers Horrific Injuries After Falling Out of Hospital Bed Because ‘Elf and Safety Rules Ban Side-Bars

[WARNING: Disturbing Content.]

A great-grandmother looked like she had ‘been beaten up’ after falling out of bed at her care home — because of ‘stupid’ new health and safety rules banning bed bars, her family claims.

Elderly Jane Jones, 94, was rushed to hospital after cutting her head, arm, hand and nose when she fell three-and-a-half feet out of her care home bed.

The sides of her bed had not been put up after a Health and Safety Executive (HSE) warning against using side bars because they restrict ‘free movement’ — allowing Mrs Jones to freely tumble out of bed.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: London Metropolitan University Mulls Alcohol Ban for ‘Conservative Muslim Students’

A London University may become the first in the country to ban alcohol from part of its campus to attract more Muslim students, its Vice Chancellor has said.

London Metropolitan University is considering banning the sale of alcohol from some parts of the campus because a “high percentage” of students consider drinking “immoral,” Prof Malcolm Gillies said. One-fifth of the University’s students are Muslim, and of those the majority are women. It is an issue of “cultural sensitivity” to provide drink-free areas, Prof Gillies told a conference, adding he was “not a great fan of alchol on campus”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Mehdi Hasan: A Beacon for Islam [Reader Comments Only]

by Rod Liddle

[…]

[Reader comment by YA on 12 April 2012 at 5:03pm]

The phrase “rational message of the Quran” reminds other pearls of islamist propaganda, as “secular muslims”, “islam is indigenous to Britain”, “science of the Quran” and alike.

another method of making news from Islam is calligraphy jihad — “kaffar”, “Maccah”, “Mashaal”, all that countless “Etihads” and “Emirates” looking at you from every wall today.

Basically, the message to unbelievers is “we are here already in big numbers, not only to colonize your lands, but also to suppress and deform your minds”. For which purpose islamists are skilled in hijacking words. And to keep it interesting, they will continue hijacking airplanes. Hasan is much more dangerous than Qatada or Hook, because he has the same goals but also a voice in the UK granted to him by “progressive” traitors — no other conclusion might be made from all of the above. Thanks Rod for Your honesty.

[Reader comment by Redneck on 13 April 2012 at 11:53am]

Henry, YA, Master Cobbett, Nicholas & Wilhelm

Agree with your posts. How do those who support open-door immigration think this is all going to pan out? If you look around, in most parts of the UK, there are significantly increasing numbers of people who have no reason to feel loyalty to our country. Presumably all enjoy our freedoms at present but many, sadly, want to radically change them.

They are being aided by far too many who should be able to see the logical conclusion. Part of this is the ability to castigate any attempt at debate on the value of mass immigration. Any attempt to open this discussion is immediately branded as “racist”: this is effectively the most toxic label with which to be branded in the UK and US now. It silences completely dissent from the “party line”.

I do not see any way “the Left” can integrate these radical-religious groups into mainstream UK life. These groups are intolerant, aggressive and broadly cohesive in their aims. I am yet to be convinced of a single benefit they’ve brought to me or my fellow UK citizens. I don’t hate them but regard their intolerance and clearly expressed distaste for my way-of-life as an unequivocal threat. I fear them but will not take their belligerence passively: I think we (the UK population) are signing our own death warrant, should we allow this to continue.

I am fearful that too many on the Left are patsies and grossly naive if they think this can be a peaceful integration, bringing untold benefits for our country and at the same time cleanse their souls of past-colonial “stains”. They, like the rest of us, are going to rue the day when we “kaffars” are brought to heel.

[Reader comment by AY on 13 April 2012 at 1:49pm]

daniel maris –

de facto all normal people in the country already feel like they are “coalition”. the only way to bring counterjihad movement to political domain is to vote for BFP party. Paul Weston is an example of decency and loyal service to people. Why do I know that — because he says explicitly that he doesn’t mind if even BFP policies and solutions would be “borrowed” by conservatives or whatever. BFP are patriots, not greedy for power, and with clear vision of country’s protection from islamic enslavement. listen to Paul’s latest speech at BFP meeting 7 April — it is remarkable. He is British Geert Widers.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: New £1m Mosque to Open Its Doors to 1,000 Worshippers in Moss Side

A major new mosque to serve Muslims across the region is set to open within weeks after a three-year building project. The £1m Darul Aman Mosque in Moss Side, Manchester, will accommodate up to 1,000 worshippers. Built to serve the revisionist Islam movement Ahmadiyya, it will be the sect’s second largest mosque in western Europe. Work to create the new building, complete with domed roof and minaret, began three years ago, funded mainly by donations from worshippers. The existing building at the site on Greenheys Lane has also been refurbished and incorporated into the new design. The Ahmadiyya movement, which has around 1,000 members in Manchester, focuses on promoting peace and understanding between Islam and other religions. Working with the motto ‘Love for all, hatred for none’, the mosque’s name translates as ‘abode of peace’.

[…]

[JP note: While public houses continue their unwelcome decline in the UK, ‘abodes of peace’ flourish unchecked.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Oxford Child Sex Trafficking Probe Widens as Number of ‘Victims’ Doubles to 50 Girls, Some as Young as 11

A suspected sex trafficking ring in which girls as young as 11 were allegedly targeted was far larger than previously feared, according to police.

As many as 50 young girls have come forward claiming to have been sold for sex in Oxford, detective confirmed today.

It was originally thought that 24 girls, aged between 11 and 16 years, were the only victims but more youngsters have since contacted the police alleging they were also victims.

Oxford police commander, Acting Superintendent Chris Sharp, said more ‘potential victims’ had come forward as a result of the publicity the case had received.

A total of 13 men were arrested when more than 100 police swooped in the raids across Oxford, codenamed Operation Bullfinch.

A group of six Asian men — including two sets of brothers — have been charged by police in connection with allegedly running the sex trafficking ring in the university city known for its dreaming spires.

Since the initial dawn raids last month, officers had made a further two arrests as part of the probe, a police spokesman said.

A 39-year-old man and a 40-year-old woman were detained on suspicion of ‘grooming’ this week.

The man has been freed on police bail to return to a police station in May, pending further inquiries and the woman was released without charge.

Police arrested 13 men in raids across Oxford on Thursday, March 22, after investigating the suspected ring since May last year.

Six men were charged and appeared at Aylesbury Crown Court, sitting at Amersham on Friday, March 30, for a preliminary hearing and were all remanded in custody.

Father of two Kamar Jamil, aged 26 years, of Summertown, Oxford, who is charged with four counts of rape, two counts of arranging the prostitution of a child, one count of making a threat to kill and one count of possession with intent to supply class A drugs, has since been granted conditional bail by the court.

Seven men returned to a police station to answer bail on Thursday and had their bail extended for a further eight weeks.

High Wycombe Magistrates Court heard during the first hearing last month how the accused men are believed to have groomed 24 girls for sex between May 2004 and March, this year.

Four girls, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were allegedly given alcohol and drugs, and forced to have sex with some of the men.

Clare Tucker, prosecuting, said during that hearing: ‘These charges relate to the sexual exploitation of girls between 11 and 16 across the Oxford area over a period of several years.’

Zeshan Ahmed, 26, is charged with ten counts of engaging in sexual activity with a child.

Anjum Dogar, 30, is charged with one count of conspiring to rape a child, one count of arranging prostitution of a child and one count of trafficking.

His brother, Akhtar, 31, is charged with three counts of rape, one count of conspiring to rape a child, three counts of arranging the prostitution of a child, one count of making a threat to kill and one count of trafficking.

Mohammed Karrar, 37, has been charged with two counts of conspiracy to rape a child and one count of supplying a Class A controlled drug to a child.

His brother Bassan, a 32-year-old father of two, is charged with one count of raping a child in 2006.

Detective Inspector Simon Morton, of Thames Valley Police, said at the time of the arrests: ‘We are working closely with social services to make sure the young girls involved are safe.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Stamp Collectors Shouldn’t Keep Their Lonely Pleasures to Themselves

by Harry Mount

Philatelists are up in arms about the Royal Mail for a very odd reason — because they’re issuing too many stamps. This year, with the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee and the Olympics, the Royal Mail are releasing more stamps than ever before. Each collector has to get — or feels like they have to get — the complete set: postcard, international stamp and recorded delivery stamp. The expense, they say, is getting too much. Military memorabilia collectors don’t complain when a cache of Waterloo artefacts appears on the market. And addicts — stamp collectors, like all collectors, are addicts, usually male ones — should be delighted when their drug of choice is made more widely available. In any case, stamps are not for sealing away in mausoleum-like albums, but for sending, and for looking at in their real habitat: on the tear-drenched envelope from your first girlfriend, or the last postcard your granny sent from Hastings.

How nice it is to look at the latest issue from the Royal Mail — a charming collection of UK landmarks from A to Z. Presumably, those raging philatelists would have preferred a collection that went from A and stopped at B. The pleasure in the landmarks collection comes from the same quality that brings the collectors such pain — their number and variety. Some of the heritage greatest hits are there: the Roman Baths in Bath, York Minster, the White Cliffs of Dover. But, because the collection is dictated by the random nature of the alphabet, there are also some oddities. Not many tourists make their way to Manchester Town Hall — one of the featured sites — but it is one of the great municipal buildings of Britain. Inky, bristling and spiky, Alfred Waterhouse’s 1877 Town hall is English Gothic Revival at its most self-confident; it represents the British Empire’s trading cities at their most prosperous; and it takes you back — stamps have an inherently nostalgic quality; all those weeping girlfriends and grannies in Hastings again — to a time when municipal government was a vital, reforming force for good, not the bloated, council tax collection service they now are.

Not everything in the landmark collection is as distinguished as Manchester Town Hall. Handsome as Narrow Water Castle, County Down, is, it isn’t out of the ordinary: a plain, 16th century, crenellated tower house, familiar throughout Northern Ireland and the Republic. And the Kursaal in Southend is, almost at its own admission, a joke building — the first ever theme park, built in 1901, with the first female lion tamer, it is frothy Edwardian classicism gone haywire, with Dutch gables cheerfully matched with a baroque dome and banded columns. Illuminate it with candy-striped lighting, stick a ten-pin bowling lane inside, and you have gloriously silly British seaside architecture at its best.

It would be perverse to say that British architecture ever hit the original heights of the Italian Renaissance (although our Gothic cathedrals and country houses are unmatched). But we are unique in so many other architectural fields: in our seaside buildings, in the range and quality of our medieval castles, in our obsession with follies. More than any other country, we have mined the past to produce original confections of ancient styles borrowed from other countries. Only in Britain do you get this odd mixture of form clashing so happily with function: with a tea-house disguised as a pagoda, say, as in Sir William Chambers’s 18th century folly in Kew Gardens; or a prison wrapped in the skin of a medieval castle, as at Victorian Holloway Prison in north London.

Portmeirion, Gwynedd, also featured in the stamps, is the perfect example. Here in north Wales — natural home to mammoth invaders’ castles, nestling next to small native, Gothic and Italianate chapels — Clough Williams-Ellis built an architectural historian’s dream model village. A mock Gothic castle huddles next to a baroque church tower, alongside an Ionic portico and a Bavarian onion dome. A crazy combination — utterly unsuited to the Welsh climate, and foreign in all its influences, except one: the sometimes infuriating, sometimes engaging, British desire to entertain. As the summer season begins, a lot of these places, like Portmeirion, will fill up and lose some of their appeal. It’s hard to appreciate Roman and Regency Bath, when you’re swamped by Jane Austen obsessives and French teenagers with their lethal, swinging rucksacks.

But plenty of Britain’s unsung beauties are empty, even at the height of August. On high summer days, I have had Pembrokeshire beaches and the chapel of Queen’s College, Oxford — an under-appreciated college, also on the Royal Mail list — to myself. It is when they are empty that buildings and natural scenery are at their most affecting, with a near-religious power to calm and enchant. Stamp collectors know that power of lonely pleasure better than most. But there’s no shortage of lonely pleasures to go round, and no need to ration them or selfishly keep them to yourself.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Hollow Men of British Politics

by Melanie Phillips

A poll of voters in the south London borough of Bromley, taken by the Times (£) to gauge support for Labour’s Ken Livingstone and the Conservatives’ Boris Johnson in the London Mayoral contest, is fascinating — not just for what those polled were saying about the two candidates but also about the Tory Prime Minister, David Cameron:

‘“All the time things were going quite well, Mr Cameron seemed quite impressive,” Graham said. “But as soon as they don’t, he doesn’t come across so well…When things go wrong he doesn’t seem to know what to do. He pretends he’s a man of the people but he’s not.”

‘“We need a strong leader, another Margaret Thatcher. At least she had the courage of her convictions. She’s like Boris Johnson, but in a different way. In a dress,” Gary said.’

This chimes with the opinion expressed in the Telegraph by Don Porter, former chairman of the National Conservative Convention and deputy chairman of the Conservative Party Board, who writes that the party has lost sight of its true values and disconnected itself from its grass-roots through a ‘loss of clarity, principle and policy direction’. Such opinions will undoubtedly be causing concern to the Tory leadership — but on past form, are unlikely to lead them to draw the right conclusion. This is that their entire strategy of decontaminating the brand to regain power was totally misconceived. As I have been writing consistently since this strategy was first developed when the Tories under Cameron were in opposition, it was based on a fundamental misreading of why they had lost the previous three general elections, and a corresponding misreading of why Tony Blair had won them.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: University to Have Alcohol-Free Areas for Muslims

A university Vice-Chancellor is planning to ban the sale of alcohol in parts of the campus because some Muslim students believe it is “evil” and “immoral”.

Prof Malcolm Gillies of London Metropolitan University said he wants to create alcohol free areas on campus out of “cultural sensitivity”. About a fifth of students at the university come from Muslim families — many of them young women from traditional homes. For many of them, the drinking culture among students marred rather than heightened their student experience, he said. Prof Gillies, an eminent Australian music scholar, said that he was consulting with staff and students about creating alcohol-free areas on the universty’s two campuses as part of a major redesign. It is expected that the informal dry areas will be created within the next six months.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Watchdog Criticizes Scotland Yard Over Phone Hacking Scandal

An inquiry into senior police officials in connection with the News of the World phone hacking scandal has found no evidence of corruption. The watchdog, however, criticized the officials for unprofessional conduct.

An independent watchdog on Thursday rejected allegations of corruption against senior former officials at London’s Metropolitan Police in connection the News Corp. phone hacking scandal, while criticizing them for using poor judgment and becoming too cozy with journalists.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said that senior people at Scotland Yard had been “oblivious to the perception of conflict” when they hired former News of the World deputy editor Neil Wallis as media advisor.

Wallis joined the Metropolitan Police in 2009, shortly after leaving the Sunday tabloid, which faced mounting allegations that it had hacked the voicemails of public figures. The former deputy editor was arrested in July 2011 in connection with the hacking scandal.

“It is clear to me that professional boundaries became blurred, imprudent decisions taken and poor judgment shown by senior police personnel,” IPCC deputy chair Deborah Glass said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists Bar Former Mubarak Regime Officials

Parliament passed the bill yesterday but the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces must still approve it. Any prime minister or top official from the Mubarak regime is barred from active politics for ten years. Various presidential candidates could be excluded.

Cairo (AsiaNews/ Agencies) — Egypt’s parliament, which is dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists, has approved a law that would bar members of ousted president Hosni Mubarak’s party from running for office. Anyone who has served as prime minister or was a senior member of the old regime would be barred from political activity for 10 years.

Adopted yesterday, the law still needs to be ratified by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), but the Justice Minister has already described it as unconstitutional.

The new law comes a few days after Omar Suleiman, a former vice president and intelligence chief under Mubarak announced that he was seeking the presidency in the upcoming elections. In order to attract the support of secular votes, he said he was running to prevent Egypt from becoming an Islamic state. If adopted, the law could jeopardise May’s presidential elections.

Experts say the race is dominated by Islamist parties and former officials in Mubarak’s regime and his National Democratic Party, who have come out of the shadow after a year of silence. Pro-democracy parties, which led the Jasmine Revolution, are de facto excluded from the election.

Out of 23 candidates, only three moderate figures have any chance of challenging the stranglehold of the Muslim Brotherhood, Salafists and old Mubarak cronies. They are: Khaled Ali, a lawyer and human rights activist and a former director of the Egyptian Centre for Economic and Social Rights, Ayman Abd el Aziz Nour, head of the El-Ghad Party (a liberal secular party) who first challenged Mubarak in the sham 2005 election, and Amr Moussa, a former secretary general of the Arab League and a onetime foreign minister under Mubarak.

The Muslim Brotherhood is putting forward Khairat and l-Shater, a rich businessman and the party’s treasurer who was released from prison in 2011.

Salafists are presenting Hazem Salah Abu Ismail. A fixture on national TV, he is one of the radical Muslim leaders with the largest followings, especially among young Islamists who recently organised demonstrations across the country against his exclusion from the race on a technicality.

Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, secretary general of the Arab Medical Association and a former member and supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood, is one of the independent candidates.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Egypt Candidate: Moderate Islamist, Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh

Abdel Moneim Aboul Fatouh was a prominent figure within Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood but was forced to leave after he declared his intention last year to stand for the presidency.

At that stage, the mainstream Islamist group, which was keen to show it did not seek to monopolise the new political scene, had said it would only nominate candidates for the parliamentary vote. Dr Aboul Fotouh, a respected moderate who is head of the Arab Medical Union, decided to run for office as an independent. Speaking to a crowd of thousands of supporters after handing in his candidacy papers in early April, he presented a presidential platform focusing on social justice with plans for development and security. “We can realise our dreams and the co-operation of the great Egyptian people,” he said, promising to make use of the country’s “most valuable source of wealth”, human potential, if elected. “Let us work as groups, not as individuals, the era of the all-inspiring president and all-knowing leader is over,” he added. His plans include establishing a minimum standard income, restoring security within 100 days of taking office, re-equipping the Egyptian military from sources not funded by the United States and appointing a young vice-president, aged under 45. He has attracted the support of many Muslim Brotherhood youth who have grown weary of the group’s hierarchical structure and hostility to change. This remains a source of contention with the Brotherhood leadership. It has now put up its own presidential candidate and demands that members of the group support him.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Libya: So it Was All About Oil After All!

Last year NATO countries bombed Libya, demanding “democracy” in the country. But now it’s clear it was all about oil and it’s not like the Americans and Brits are going to be democratic about it, and share those spoils equally with France and Italy.

So… oil giants Total from France and ENI from Italy are just going to have to wait in the sidelines while the hungry American and British big boys take their juicy oil slices first… ExxonMobil, Chevron, Texaco, BP, Shell…

It’s no surprise then to read in The Wall Street Journal that the US Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC), together with the puppet Libyan “authorities” are launching “investigations” into both companies’ “financial irregularities” in their shady dealings during the forty-two years of Gaddafi’s power. Now who would have imagined this! An Italian oil company involved in kick-backs? Corruption at the highest echelons of the French oil industry?!? Tsk, tsk!!! Unheard of…! The US and UK would never do something like that!! Just ask Enron, ask Halliburton, ask BP…

Clearly, major oil companies will now be judged on how close or how far they were from the Gaddafi’s, and on how much their respective countries contributed to last year’s war effort. Perhaps even on how much and how far and wide they shared their huge ill-obtained profits. It seems that scorecards must now be completed…

It’s worth remembering that at the height of the Libyan fighting last year, the “rebels” found the necessary time, between their “freedom fighting” shifts, to set up a new national oil company. As Bloomberg reported on 22nd March 2011, “The Transitional National Council released a statement announcing the decision made at a March 19 meeting to establish the “Libyan Oil Company as supervisory authority on oil production and policies in the country, based temporarily in Benghazi, and the appointment of an interim director general” of the company.”

And just as big oil and big finance always dance together, that report then went on to explain that “The Council also said it “designated the Central Bank of Benghazi as a monetary authority competent in monetary policies in Libya and the appointment of a governor to the Central Bank of Libya, with a temporary headquarters in Benghazi.”

Like Romeo and Juliet, Tristan and Isolde, or Abelard and Eloise, Oil and Money are probably the West’s most universal and paradigmatic duo. Their love affair has been going strong for many decades.

Oil is a mighty powerful global business. Oil companies can make or break governments and entire countries. Nationalizing a foreign oil company like Iran did in the early fifties can put the CIA and MI6 spy agencies into full-gear ousting democratically elected governments and replacing them with “more suitable leaders’.

Trading oil in any currency other than the US Dollar as Saddam Hussein dared to do in November 2002 can get you invaded just a few months later. Even weak Argentina’s finger-pointing at illegal British oil escapades in the Falkland Islands resulted in the Royal Navy dispatching super destroyers and nuclear subs to the region…

Libya is the world’s 9th largest oil producing country and holds Africa’s largest oil reserve. Gaddafi was planning to introduce a new currency for Libyan and regional oil: the Gold Dinar which, contrary to the US Dollar, would have had true intrinsic value. Gaddafi’s central bank, in turn, was fully independent of the global financial usury-based system presently in global free-fall. Gaddafi was using oil revenues for his own people and not for the US/UK/EU/Israeli war efforts in the Middle East and further afield.

So, when the Persian Gulf became the very, very hot spot it is today, the global oil cartel together with the mega-bankers who shuffle those trillions upon trillions of Petro-Dollars all over the world, had to make sure that their respective governments would put their military on red-alert, as the oil giants scrambled for new sources…

The focus is increasingly on oil fields lying in “kinder, gentler” parts of the world: the Falkland Islands, the Brazilian Coasts, and Libya that lies smack in the middle of that easy-to-attack “it’s our-bloody-Mediterranean-Sea” North African Coast.

Last year’s destruction of Libya was a reflection of just this type of complex behind-the-scenes engineering of all these key oil, financial, military, media and political players. It’s the kind of Real News that seldom if ever hits the headlines… just because it is the Real News!

During the better part of last year until the public execution of Muhamar Gaddafi by the Western Power’s proxies inside Libya — i.e., mercenaries, criminals, thugs and CIA/MI6/Mossad agents, aka “Freedom Fighters” — the Western media repeated time and again how very bad Gaddafi had suddenly become overnight; how the poor Libyans were clamouring for “democracy”; and how the heroic Libyan “freedom fighters” based, armed, trained and financed in Benghazi were battling to “liberate” Libya and impose Clintonite “democracy” and “human rights”. Actually these “freedom fighters” overshot their runway: now that Libya is finally “free”, they’re asking for the Eastern Cyrenaica region to secede from the rest of the country.

Was civil war part of the West’s plan for Libya? Last year, after securing full UN backing via Resolution No. 1973 allowing NATO air strikes to devastate the country and impose the most violent regime change seen in recent times, NATO-backed thugs have plunged the country into chaos.

As the “Libya Business News” publication mentions on Tuesday, “About 3,000 people gathered in Benghazi last month to announce that Barca (Cyrenaica) was an autonomous region within a federal state. Barca is at the centre of Libya’s oil industry, with two thirds of production and three quarters of reserves there.” It is one of the three historic regions into which the country is divided. And while Barca has the most oil, the other two is home to two thirds of the population. So the question now is how the rich revenues from rich oil reserves will be “democratically” distributed among the population.

Adrian Salbuchi for RT

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Osama Bin Laden’s Three Wives and Two Daughters to be Deported to Saudi Arabia, After Ruling by Pakistani Court

Osama Bin Laden’s family will be forced to take a flight from Pakistan to Saudi Arabia next Wednesday, following a court decision in the capital of Islamabad.

Two of the terrorist leader’s former wives — Khairiah Sabar and Siham Sabar are Saudi nationals, while the third — Amal Ahmed Abdul Fateh is from Yemeni.

According to their lawyer Aamir Khalil, the relatives of the dead terrorist leader will be deported as soon as their 45 day house arrest was served.

All three, along with Bin Laden’s 17 and 21 year old daughters, were placed under house arrest earlier this month having pleaded guilty to living illegally in Pakistan.

Just a few days ago the Al Arabiya television network released footage from inside the ‘guest house’ in Islamabad, where Bin Laden’s family members have been holed up .

Toddlers and children are seen playing with teddy bears and cricket bats, while the three widows of Bin Laden look on or read the Koran.

But the boarded-up windows and a heavy armed presence outside given an indication that while the place may serve as a home for the occupants, it is also a prison for Osama’s relatives.

It is still not clear whether the Yemeni widow, Amal Ahmed Abdul Fateh, would stay in Saudi Arabia or would be transported on to her own country of origin.

According to CNN a source familiar with the widows’ case said the Yemeni government has expressed a willingness to let Fateh return to her homeland.

The three former wives of Bin Laden have been in Pakistani custody since U.S. Navy SEALs raided the terrorist’s compound in Abbottabad and killed the al Qaeda leader in May 2011.

All the women confessed to impersonation, illegal entry into Pakistan and staying illegally, so a trial was not required. Mr Khalil said his clients would not appeal the ‘lenient” sentence.

Fateh told Pakistani investigators that Bin Laden spent years on the run in Pakistan after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, moving from one safe house to another and fathering four children.

A deposition taken from Fateh gives the clearest picture yet of bin Laden’s life while international forces hunted him. He and his family move from city to city with the help of Pakistanis who arranged ‘everything’ for them. she is reported as saying.

She told police she never applied for a visa during her stay in Pakistan.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Russia


Leading Member of Moscow’s Muslim Community Killed

Metin Mekhtiev was from Azerbaijan. Suspicions of yet another racially motivated attack perpetrated by militant ultranationalist. In 2011, 21 murders were racially motivated.

Moscow (AsiaNews) — A leading exponent of the Russian Muslim community was stabbed and killed in Moscow near the Belorusskaja station. Many suspect that the crime was perpetrated by militant right-wing ultranationalists. Metin Mekhtiev (pictured) was a native of Azerbaijan. According to preliminary reports, on the night between 10 and 11 April, he was waiting for the arrival of his wife and son of two months at the station. Ria Novosti agency police sources report that his body bore several stab wounds on the neck and face.

Mekhtiev was head of international department of the Islamic Cultural Centre of Russia, an organization founded in the Federation in 1991 with support from the Saudi embassy and banned by the Russian Supreme Court last year. According to the group, the judges’ initiative was instigated by the Russian secret services. According to website Aze.az, Mekhtiev worked with all major Muslim organizations in the country and was very active in working with students and young people from the Caucasus. “It is a brutal, barbaric and medieval murder,” reported the head of the Islamic Cultural Centre in Moscow, Abdul-Wahid Niyazov, according to whom the man was attacked by a gang of five persons, one of which was a young woman.

For now, the police have released no details on the possible motive for the killing, but among the Russian bloggers many support the hypothesis that crime is linked to the ultra-nationalists.

After the collapse of the USSR, Russia experienced a sharp rise in nationalist sentiment. Racially motivated violence killed 21 “non-Slavic-looking” people in 2011 alone, a figure down from 42 similar murders recorded in 2010, according to data organization Sova.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Indonesia: West Java: Yasmin Church Members Celebrate Easter Underground

Forced by extremists and the authorities to meet in secret, churchgoers still hold Holy Week services, meeting at various private homes to avoid attacks. The head of the Synod of Indonesian Churches appeals to the authorities to respect religious freedom.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Against a background of threats from Muslim extremists and great pressure from the authorities of the city of Bogor (West Java), especially the major, the members of a Protestant community, the Taman Yasmin Church (GKI), celebrated Holy Week and Easter services in secret, opting to meet and hold services in different private homes. In one case, at least 78 GKI members met in great secret on Easter Sunday for an underground ceremony to mark the Resurrection of Jesus. “This time, the secretary general of the Synod of Indonesian Churches (PGI), Rev Gomar Gultom was also present,” a GKI spokesperson told AsiaNews.

Since church members have been prevented from holding their services in public, prayers and celebrations have been held underground. Although churchgoers “have been targeted by hard-liners,” the police has refused to protect them, GKI spokesperson Bona Sigalingging said. “This is really a paradox. When we informed them [the police] of the place where we wanted to worship, fundamentalists would easily find us and attack us,” Sigalingging explained, without eliciting any police intervention.

Speaking to his fellow Christians, Rev Gomar Gultom expressed his strong appreciation for their strong commitment to practice their Christian faith despite intense attacks and violence.

The Protestant leader also made an appeal to Bogor authorities to uphold the law and protect human rights, including religious freedom.

The Yasmin Protestant Church has been the scene of open violations of the law and the principle of religious freedom by Bogor mayor Diani Budiarto. In total contempt for a ruling by Indonesia’s Supreme Court in favour of the local Christian community, he has prevented Christians from holding their services.

In spite of the fact that it was built by the book and had all the building permits necessary for places of worship, the authorities seized the church.

In October, the mayor ordered the security forces to remove worshippers who, deprived of their church, had opted to hold their services in the street. Now even that has been denied to them.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Forced Conversions Spark Anger

Lahore, 13 April (AKI/Dawn) — Prof. Ashok Kumar is not afraid of taking a prominent stance on the Rinkle Kumari issue.

Fear, he says, is secondary compared to what is happening to the Hindu community in Pakistan, in particular Sindh. “We can’t just sit back and watch what our community is going through,” he says.

The recent case of Rinkle Kumari is not altogether an uncommon occurrence. Several young Hindu girls have been kidnapped in the dead of night from their homes, and dragged off to be forcibly converted to Islam, as they and their family members have later alleged. Usually this conversion is accompanied by a signing of the ‘nikahnama’ which strengthens the kidnappers’ side of the story, but still does not provide any kind of proof whether the marriage was done under duress or not.

On Thursday, protesters belonging to the Hindu and Christian communities in Lahore, accompanied by representatives of the Joint Action Committee (a group of social organisations), gathered outside the Lahore Press Club and shouted slogans in response to the slow treatment of the case, venting anger at religious fascism, forcible conversion, and a lack of support from the government.

Ashok Kumar, a professor of Sindhi language in the Linguistics Department of the Punjab University, is one of the protesters.

There are others too, students, professionals, young women, social workers, but the turnout has not been very high.

“We only decided this last night so couldn’t inform everyone on such short notice,” said Shahtaj Qizalbash from AGHS Legal Aid.

But Tanveer Jahan, also a member of the JAC, gives a more direct reply. “When it comes to minority rights, or any such sensitive issue, one just cannot expect any mass participation in Pakistan,” she says.

“You can just forget about the masses.” She says that both sides of the picture are grim — one side which does not support, and only watches the situation passively, while the other side which does come out on the streets but does so for its own vested interests and exploitation. “It is social workers like us who are stuck in the middle.”

“Down with mullah-ism!” shout the protesters, and a small number of drivers slow down on the busy section of the Simla Hill roundabout to see what the commotion is about. While many simply shake their heads and carry on, some are affected nevertheless, like Mehr Muhammad, a contractor.

“It is a sin to take away anyone’s rights like that,” he says, as he stands by watching the protest. “No religion allows this trampling of religious freedom. These girls should not be kidnapped and converted through force…how is it even conversion?” he questions, his brow furrowing over the worrying situation.

But another man has a completely different opinion. “Isn’t it a blessing if anyone is being converted into a Muslim?” he questions.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected two petitions, one filed by Rinkle’s husband, and the other filed by the father of another Hindu girl Dr Lata, from Jacobabad.

The two wanted to meet the girls, but the apex court observed that the two girls should be allowed to make a decision on whether they want to go with their parents or husbands based on a freewill therefore they were sent to Panah, a shelter home run by human rights lawyer Dr Majida Rizvi, where they will stay isolated till the court summons them again. The matter is to be taken up again on April 18.

The matter has been tangled yet further with the alleged involvement of Mian Mithu, a PPP MNA from Ghotki, where Rinkle was kidnapped, and also one Naveed Shah, who was a close associate of Mithu.

“Even when Nafisa Shah and some other PPP MNAs tried to move a resolution against this issue in the assembly, Mian Mithu did not support it,” says Tanveer Jahan. “I simply ask if an FIR has already been lodged against these two then why are they not under arrest?”

Another girl, Asha is still missing and Dr Ashok says: “The state of the Hindu girls being converted is terrible. Since January there have been at least 47 kidnappings. Another point to observe is that this is only happening to young girls, never boys or elders.”

Peter Jacob, worker for minorities’ rights, says this forcible conversion is not restricted to just Hindus and in Sindh. “In the last five years, there have been up to 400 to 500 conversions of Christians. And something equally horrifying, I know of: forcible circumcision of young men in Punjab and one in Balochistan…where are we going, one asks.”

In feudal terms, owning another party’s woman is having the upper hand. That coupled with marriage, gives the perpetrator more strength. No one knows what becomes of many of the girls after being married. Meanwhile, many Hindus feel that they are simply being harassed so they leave the country forever.

“But this is not just an issue restricted to Sindh,” says one. “This protest is meant to be calling out to the whole nation…Why does no one raise their voices for our rights too?” he asks.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Censors Bo Xilai Debate, But Chinese Work Around it

In a sign of how sensitive the issue is for the ruling Communist Party, censors blocked online searches for the name of Bo Xilai, the former Chongqing party boss who fell from grace this year amid scandal.

Chinese on Wednesday streamed onto the Internet in forbidden debate over China’s biggest political upheaval since the 1980s after a top official was flung from the inner circle of power and his wife detained over the murder of a British businessman. In a sign of how intensely sensitive the issue is for the ruling Communist Party, censors continued to block online searches for the name of Bo Xilai, the former Chongqing party boss cast out of the party’s Central Committee, according to state media reports late on Tuesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Defectors Link North Korea’s Weapons Program to Food Shortage

North Koreans living in South Korea say the North’s military program is responsible for the country’s poverty and hunger and they fear their countrymen in the North will not even find out the mission failed.

North Korea’s failed attempt to launch a rocket into space on Friday is a grim reminder to those who’ve fled the repressive nation that nothing has changed under the leadership of Kim Jong Un. Some defectors had hoped that when Kim, who is only in his late 20s, assumed power last December that the lives of ordinary North Koreans might improve. That’s because as a boy, Kim studied in Switzerland and might have learned a thing or two about human rights.

But that appears not to be the case, says Han Gi-hong of the Committee for Democratization in North Korea, an organization comprised of refugees in Seoul.

“Kim Jong Un has no interest in the lives of the people. He is only interested in the survival of the regime,” he said during a press conference on Friday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


ENI Nigeria Facilities Attacked by Oil Militants

MEND rebels say well and pipeline ‘destroyed’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 13 — Oil militants in Nigeria on Friday attacked facilities belonging to the Italian fuels giant ENI.

The rebels, belonging to the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), said they had “destroyed” a well and a pipeline run by ENI subsidiary Agip.

ENI confirmed the attack and said it was trying to establish the amount of damage.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Students From Pakistan Face Tough Tests to Enter Britain as Four in Ten Applicants Could be Bogus

Every Pakistani student wanting to come to Britain will face tough new tests after a pilot scheme found that as many as four in ten applicants may be bogus.

Home Office figures have revealed that thousands of student visa applicants cannot speak English, despite claiming they want to study here.

Home Secretary Theresa May has now decreed that anyone wanting to come to study in Britain from Pakistan must be interviewed by border agency officials before a visa is granted.

An estimated 10,000 students apply to come to the country from Pakistan every year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Boris Blocks Christian Anti-Gay Poster Campaign on London Buses That Claimed Homosexuality Could be Cured

Boris Johnson has blocked Christian campaigners from using advertisements on London buses to promote their message on homosexuality.

The London mayor personally vetoed the campaign, which was due to start next week, because he said it suggested gay people can be cured.

The Christian adverts, which mimic an initiative by pro-gay group Stonewall, were intended to advertise ‘gay conversion’ through therapy.

[…]

The adverts were expected to appear for two weeks on five routes covering top tourist destinations including St Paul’s Cathedral and Oxford Street.

They were a direct response to Stonewall’s most recent campaign, which suggested being gay is innate and unchangeable.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Britain’s Christians Are Being Vilified, Warns Lord Carey

Christians are being “persecuted” by courts and “driven underground” in the same way that homosexuals once were, a former Archbishop of Canterbury has warned.

Lord Carey says worshippers are being “vilified” by the state, treated as “bigots” and sacked simply for expressing their beliefs.

The attack is part of a direct appeal to the European Court of Human Rights before a landmark case on religious freedom.

In a written submission seen by The Daily Telegraph, the former leader of more than 70?million Anglicans warns that the outward expression of traditional conservative Christian values has effectively been “banned” in Britain under a new “secular conformity of belief and conduct”.

His comments represent one of the strongest attacks on the impartiality of Britain’s judiciary from a religious leader.

He says Christians will face a “religious bar” to employment if rulings against wearing crosses and expressing their beliefs are not reversed.

Lord Carey argues that in “case after case” British courts have failed to protect Christian values. He urges European judges to correct the balance.

The hearing, due to start in Strasbourg on Sept 4, will deal with the case of two workers forced out of their jobs over the wearing of crosses as a visible manifestation of their faith. It will also take in the cases of Gary McFarlane, a counsellor sacked for saying that he may not be comfortable in giving sex therapy to homosexual couples, and a Christian registrar, who wishes not to conduct civil partnership ceremonies.

Lord Carey, who was archbishop from 1991 to 2002, warns of a “drive to remove Judaeo-Christian values from the public square”. Courts in Britain have “consistently applied equality law to discriminate against Christians”.

They show a “crude” misunderstanding of the faith by treating some believers as “bigots”. He writes: “In a country where Christians can be sacked for manifesting their faith, are vilified by State bodies, are in fear of reprisal or even arrest for expressing their views on sexual ethics, something is very wrong.

“It affects the moral and ethical compass of the United Kingdom. Christians are excluded from many sectors of employment simply because of their beliefs; beliefs which are not contrary to the public good.”

He outlines a string of cases in which he argues that British judges have used a strict reading of equality law to strip the legally established right to freedom of religion of “any substantive effect”.

“It is now Christians who are persecuted; often sought out and framed by homosexual activists,” he says. “Christians are driven underground. There appears to be a clear animus to the Christian faith and to Judaeo-Christian values. Clearly the courts of the United Kingdom require guidance.”

He says the human rights campaign has gone too far and become a political agenda.

Keith Porteous-Wood, executive director of the National Secular Society, said: “The idea that there is any kind of suppression of religion in Britain is ridiculous.

“Even in the European Convention on Human Rights, the right to religious freedom is not absolute — it is not a licence to trample on the rights of others. That seems to be what Lord Carey wants to do.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Last Hope for the Left

by David Goodhart

The liberal, secular world view may hold sway over western elites, but it is struggling to answer the conservative challenge

Elite colleges produce WEIRD people: Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich and Democratic

The Righteous Mind

by Jonathan Haidt (Allen Lane, £20)

Together

by Richard Sennett (Allen Lane, £25)

A few years ago I was at a 60th birthday party for a well-known Labour MP. Many of the leading thinkers of the British centre-left were there and at one point the conversation turned to the infamous Gordon Brown slogan “British jobs for British workers,” from a speech he had given a few days before at the Labour conference. The people around me entered a bidding war to express their outrage at Brown’s slogan which was finally triumphantly closed by one who declared, to general approval, that it was “racism, pure and simple.” I remember thinking afterwards how odd the conversation would have sounded to most other people in this country. Gordon Brown’s phrase may have been clumsy and cynical but he didn’t actually say British jobs for white British workers.

In most other places in the world today, and indeed probably in Britain itself until about 25 years ago, such a statement about a job preference for national citizens would have seemed so banal as to be hardly worth uttering. Now the language of liberal universalism has ruled it beyond the pale. My fellow partygoers were all too representative of a part of liberal, educated Britain. Shami Chakrabarti, of the human rights group Liberty, has argued: “In the modern world of transnational and multinational power we must decide if we are all ‘people’ or all ‘foreigners’ now.” Oliver Kamm, the centrist commentator, said to me recently that it was morally wrong to discriminate on grounds of nationality, ruling out the “fellow citizen favouritism” that most people think that the modern nation state is based on. And according to George Monbiot, a leading figure of the liberal left, “Internationalism… tells us that someone living in Kinshasa is of no less worth than someone living in Kensington… Patriotism, if it means anything, tells us we should favour the interests of British people [before the Congolese]. How do you reconcile this choice with liberalism? How… do you distinguish it from racism?”

It is not only people on the left who think like this. On a recent BBC Radio 4 Moral Maze programme about development aid, the former Tory cabinet minister and born-again liberal Michael Portillo had this to say: “It is quite old fashioned to think about national borders, and rather nationalistic to say we must help people who are only moderately poor because they happen to be in the UK rather than helping people who are desperately poor because they happen to be a long way away.” All of the above are, in the formulation of a group of North American cultural psychologists, WEIRD-they are from a sub-culture that is Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich and Democratic. They are, as we have seen, universalists, suspicious of strong national loyalties. They also tend to be individualists committed to autonomy and self-realisation. Balancing that they are usually deeply concerned with social justice and unfairness and also suspicious of appeals to religion or to human nature to justify any departure from equal treatment-differences between men and women, for example, are regarded as cultural not biological.

This is what one might call the secular liberal baby boomer worldview and it is in many ways an attractive and coherent one. It is also for historical reasons, to do with empire, unusually ingrained in the British cultural and political elite, the default position in much of the education system (especially higher education) and the public services more generally, plus significant parts of the media. The Daily Mail is dedicated to a Kulturkampf against it precisely because it is so powerful. In the neat slogan about British politics since about 1975, “the right won the economic argument, the left won the cultural argument.” But is the left now losing the cultural argument too? Or, to put it another way, is the WEIRD elite coming up against some of the boundaries of everyday morality?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Liberals or Conservatives: Who’s Really Close-Minded?

by Andrew G. Biggs

Conservatives understand their ideological opposite numbers far better than do liberals.

To be “close-minded” is, according to the dictionary, to be “intolerant of the beliefs and opinions of others; stubbornly unreceptive to new ideas.” To be conservative and close-minded, according to popular portrayal, is a redundancy-a package deal that liberals can and do take for granted. But University of Virginia Professor Jonathan Haidt’s new book The Righteous Mind doesn’t simply suggest that conservatives may not be as close-minded as they are portrayed. It proves that the opposite is the case, that conservatives understand their ideological opposite numbers far better than do liberals.

Haidt’s research asks individuals to answer questionnaires regarding their core moral beliefs-what sorts of values they consider sacred, which they would compromise on, and how much it would take to get them to make those compromises. By themselves, these exercises are interesting. (Try them online and see where you come out.) But Haidt’s research went one step further, asking self-indentified conservatives to answer those questionnaires as if they were liberals and for liberals to do the opposite. What Haidt found is that conservatives understand liberals’ moral values better than liberals understand where conservatives are coming from. Worse yet, liberals don’t know what they don’t know; they don’t understand how limited their knowledge of conservative values is. If anyone is close-minded here it’s not conservatives. Haidt has a theory regarding why this is the case, based on the idea that conservatives speak a broader and more encompassing language of six moral values while liberals embrace three of the six in a narrow set of core values. I see nothing wrong with this explanation.

But let me present a complementary, more practical explanation: If you’re a conservative who lives in a major metropolitan area or who simply reads the New York Times, you get used to being outnumbered by liberals. Liberals, by contrast, get used to being surrounded by other liberals, both in person and in culture and the media. As a result, liberals speak their minds freely, often in ways that are harshly condemnatory of conservatives and their stands on issues. As a conservative, you can defend your values against friends and acquaintances who essentially just called you stupid and evil or you can keep quiet.

Most conservatives, most of the time, choose the latter. That is, they stay in the closet to avoid being accused of hating the poor, gays, or polar bears. As a result, liberals aren’t gaining any commensurate information. In fact, the silence of their conservative friends helps reinforce their views. Much of the time, liberals’ views of conservative positions and values are simply a caricature that bear little resemblance to what conservatives actually think and, more importantly, why they think it. But during that time when conservatives’ mouths are shut, their ears are open. They’re listening and understanding what liberals think-and what liberals think of them. Conservatives understand their own world-whether it’s of religious organizations, talk radio, Fox News, or whatever-along with the New York Times, network news world of liberals. That helps explain why a conservative’s reaction to a liberal critique often isn’t “you’re wrong.” It’s “you don’t even know what I’m trying to say.” Haidt’s research seems to show that this reaction is warranted.

Andrew G. Biggs is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The ‘Bus Advert Storm’ Confirms That Christians Are Now More Progressive Than Gay Rights Activists

by Brendan O’Neill

The fuss over the anti-gay bus advert confirms that there has been an extraordinary shift in the debate about homosexuality. Once upon a time, conservatives and Christians argued that homosexuality was a genetic trait, while gay-rights activists insisted it was a lifestyle choice. Now, in an eye-swivelling turnaround, their arguments have reversed. Surely, this is the most comprehensive position swap in the history of culture wars? The reason the bus advert riled gay-rights activists was because it implied that homosexuality is a phase that some people go through — one that can be rectified with therapy. The ad was designed by a Christian outfit called the Core Issues Trust in response to a Stonewall ad. It reads: “Not gay! Ex-gay, post-gay and proud. Get over it!” Transport for London has now blocked it.

The ban has delighted gay activists since they claim it is wrong to depict homosexuality as something “freely chosen”. The assumption is that the Christian lobby is backward and the gay-rights lobby is correct. But is it really? The idea that homosexuality is a determined trait is new in gay-rights activism. It would have been anathema to the gay campaigners of yesteryear. Indeed, they once kicked against the idea. In the bad old days, the conservative side claimed homosexuality was “an involuntary physical condition”, arguing that there was something different in the “cerebral cortex” of homosexuals — that they were somehow diseased.

Today’s trendy belief in the “gay gene” echoes these old ideas about a “gay germ” that carried through to the 1950s. We see this in 1955 when the British Christian theologian Derrick Sherwin Bailey described gayness as “an inherent condition” with “biological, psychological or genetic causes”. And then again, as late as 1980, when Catholic writers like the American John Boswell (who was very sympathetic to homosexuals) referred to homosexuality as something that was “biologically predetermined”. So for much of the twentieth century it was only those who were disgusted, confused or pitying of homosexuals who thought it was biological.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why Liberals Don’t Understand Conservatives

It is, for many conservatives, a familiar feeling — the sense that our counterparts on the liberal left not only disagree with us, but don’t even understand us.

Well, it seems there is hard evidence to support our suspicions. It comes from an unlikely source — the American psychologist (and political liberal) Jonathan Haidt. The basis of his research is a framework of five moral ‘foundations’: care/harm, fairness/cheating, loyalty/betrayal, authority/subversion and sacredness/degradation. Gathering masses of survey data (to which you can contribute here), Haidt and his colleagues have built-up a detailed picture of the degree to which these various foundations underpin the liberal and conservative worldviews.

In a book review for Prospect, David Goodhart provides an excellent summary of Haidt’s findings:

  • “His main insight is simple but powerful: liberals understand only two main moral dimensions, whereas conservatives understand all five.
  • Liberals care about harm and suffering (appealing to our capacities for sympathy and nurturing) and fairness and injustice. All human cultures care about these two things but they also care about three other things: loyalty to the in-group, authority and the sacred.
  • As Haidt puts it: ‘It’s as though conservatives can hear five octaves of music, but liberals respond to just two, within which they have become particularly discerning.’“

Haidt’s recommendation to his fellow liberals is to make a greater effort to understand conservative concerns:

  • “For example, if you want to improve integration and racial justice in a mixed area, you do not just preach the importance of tolerance but you promote a common in-group identity. As Haidt puts it: ‘You can make people care less about race by drowning race differences in a sea of similarities, shared goals and mutual interdependencies.’“

For David Goodhart — a prominent liberal opponent of multiculturalism — the Haidt approach is the “last chance for the left.” However, one might also argue that if you start acting upon conservative moral insights you might as well become a conservative.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Islam’s Real Origins?

In the Shadow of the Sword: the battle for global empire and the end of the ancient world by Tom Holland (Little, Brown, £25)

Memory is a double-edged sword in the human consciousness. We relish, and even idolise, memories of the past, but we often overlook memory’s enduring partner: forgetfulness. Our memories are rife with deliberate amnesia, and history, at best, is a selective remembrance. Historians edit and repackage the past, sometimes invidiously omitting those “inconvenient truths” which could upset their preferred interpretations. Memory’s imperfect fabric is the platform from which Tom Holland plunges into the story of the rise of Islam in his latest book, In the Shadow of the Sword.

Ostensibly, Islam was born “in the light of history” — the details of Islam’s origins and rapid expansion in the Near East purportedly have been faithfully remembered by the Muslim tradition. But Holland questions whether Islam’s version of history can be trusted: after all, most Arabic primary sources were written some centuries after Muhammad and naturally were subject to the selective biases of Muslim historians and theologians. In a direct challenge to the tradition’s authenticity, Holland marshals alternative sources, principally Byzantine and Persian, to explore how others saw Islam’s rise and he weaves a complex historical critique into a dramatic narrative.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



New Spencer Book Denies Existence of Muhammad

Robert Spencer, professional Islamophobe, has a new book coming out in which he attempts to show the historical problems with the historical record of Muhammad and Muslims. Unfortunately, the Islamophobia industry will likely get the book wide exposure. A press release about the book, lays out several “questions” about Muhammad and the origins of Islam. I show below why the book is really a “so what” rather than a “oh wow.”

How the earliest biographical material about Muhammad dates from at least 125 years after his reported death.

Yep. Any decent historian or scholar of religion will tell you this. It’s like asking why earliest biographical material about Jesus dates from at least two generation after his life. Welcome to the wonderful world of pre-modern history. Literacy is not such a big deal. A good resource for learning about this is Monty Python’s “Holy Grail.” It’s probably a more accurate portrayal of Medieval English history than anything Spencer concocts.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120412

Financial Crisis
» Bernanke’s Warning: We Stand on the Precipice of Economic Destruction
» British Official Trade Deficit Increases in February
» Developing Nations Invest Less Abroad, UNCTAD Says
» EU Calls for Eurozone Unity Amid Spain Strains
» EU: German Pay Deals Add to Euro Divergence
» Gallup CEO: High Unemployment Will Make Romney President
» Greece: Banks Facing Specter of Nationalization
» Greek State Gets New Powers to Force Payment of Debts
» IMF, EU to Conduct New Assessment Mission in Romania
» Mass Unemployment in the Balkans — A Need to Act
» Uncertainty About Spain Worries Euro Zone
 
USA
» 24 Outrageous Facts About Taxes in the United States That Will Blow Your Mind
» A New Crop of Digital Science Books Will Change the Way Students Learn
» A Storm-Chaser Who’s Looked Straight Into a Tornado’s Heart
» Better or Worse?
» Birmingham News Drops the Ball on Black-on-White Crime
» Cave Bacteria Finding Suggests Ancient Origins of Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs
» ‘Flying Yogics’ Explains Hopping Mad OWS
» Former Astronauts & Employees to NASA: Stay Away From Global Warming
» Governments Everywhere Having Deep Money Problems
» Mike Tyson: Kill George Zimmerman
» Obama’s “Fairness” Equals Socialism
» The ‘Doomsday Shelter’ Being Built Below Kansas Prairie Where Millionaires Will be Able to Sit Out the Apocalypse in Style
» Unfortunately Named the Affordable Health Care Choices Act of 2009
» US Prosecution of Fundamentalist Muslim Seen as Setback for Free Speech
» Washington Post Suggests Bilderberg Group to Pick Romney’s Running Mate
 
Canada
» Local Muslims Honour Pioneers, Supporters
 
Europe and the EU
» Belfast Embraces ‘Unsinkable’ Titanic Heritage
» Bolkestein Criticises Dutch Journalism as Sentimental
» Council of Europe Ditches Italian Party Funding System
» Council of Europe to Demand More Pressure on Swiss Tax Cheats
» France’s Muslim Allergy: Sarkozy Can Say Goodbye to the Muslim Vote
» France: Hollande Vows to ‘Dominate Finance’
» Free Koran Distributions Have Germany Concerned
» German Piraten Leapfrog the Green Party and Rank Third
» Germany Monitors Koran Distribution by Salafists
» German Politicians Attack Salafist Koran Giveaway
» Iceland’s Volcanoes May Power UK
» Italy: Puglia Governor Under Investigation for Abuse of Office
» Italy: Tearful Bossi Apologises to Northern League for Children
» Italy: Supreme Court Sentences Non-Italian Father for Child Abuse
» Italy: Contracted Works Never Performed in Salerno: 4 Arrested
» Italy: Berlusconi Defense in Ruby Case Paid Minetti Lawyers
» Sweden: Seven Convicted in Brutal Gang Rape Case
» Sweden: Several Injured in Malmö Gang Brawl
» The Mafia and the European Championships: Price Gouging Adds to List of Ukraine’s Troubles
» UK: First-Class Dishonours
» UK: London University Considers Stopping Sale of ‘Immoral’ Alcohol on Campus Because it Offends Their Muslim Students
» UK: Mehdi Hasan: A Beacon for Islam
» UK: Popular Vicar Converts to Catholicism… And Takes Half His Flock With Him to Church 500 Yards Away
» UK: Police Anti-Terror Hotline Hacked and Conversations Leaked Online
» UK: TV Row Mosque Opens School
» UK: The Rise of UKIP is a Nightmare for David Cameron
» UK: U-Turn on Mosque Free Parking Plans
 
Balkans
» Croatia: Police Ban International Ultra Rightists’ Gathering
» Kosovo’s Demographic Time-Bomb
 
North Africa
» Egypt: 2 Dead in Clashes Over Toll Raise
» The Devil We Don’t Know, Part 1
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israeli Minister Offers to Meet Grass on ‘Neutral’ Territory
» Palestinians Snub Israel Talks Offer
» Palestine in UNESCO — Ending the State of Confusion
 
Middle East
» Qatar: Ad for Qatari Domestic Help Triggers Protests
» Syria: Lebanese Soldiers Defect, Join Rebels
» Syria’s Minorities Unite Against Assad
» Turkey: China Lands 1 Bln USD Wind Power Deal
» UAE: Peace Convention Begins Today
» UAE: Iranian President’s Visit to Island Raises Tension
 
Russia
» Leading Muslim Public Figure Killed in Moscow
» Punks Against Putin Face Prison Sentence
» Russians Want Dialogue Between Kremlin and Protestors
 
South Asia
» Drug-Resistant Malaria Spreads Across Thailand
» India: the Baby Killed Because it Was a Girl
» India: Hang Baby’s Dad, Say City’s Muslim Leaders
» India: Muslim Militants Attack Christians, Several Injured
» Indian Court Sentences Gujarat Rioters to Life
» Indonesia: British PM Warns of Islamic Extremism on Asian Trip
» Indonesia: Muslims ‘Must Embrace Democracy’ Says David Cameron
» Modi’s Clearance in the Gujarat Riots Case Angers Indian Muslims
» Pakistan: Court Shows Displeasure Over Police Official
» Policy: Bold Strategies for Indian Science
 
Far East
» China’s Stem-Cell Rules Go Unheeded
» New Sony Chief Reboots Business Strategy, Cuts Jobs and Costs
» North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket: Reports
» North Korean Rocket Launch Fails
» Philippines Withdraws Warship From China Standoff
» South China Sea: Common Stance Against Beijing’s Imperialism
» The Mysterious Fall of China’s Bo Xilai
 
Australia — Pacific
» UK: Afghan Refugee Who Said Raping Woman Was Part of ‘Cultural Differences’ Is Jailed for 14 Years
 
Immigration
» UK: Despair is Sometimes the Only Possible Response
» UK: PM Retreats on Kicking Out Foreign Criminals Including Burglars and Violent Thieves
» UK: The Sheikh, The Minister and the Shambles
 
General
» Distant Galaxies Confirm Accelerating Growth of Universe, Dark Energy

Financial Crisis


Bernanke’s Warning: We Stand on the Precipice of Economic Destruction

This week, Federal Reserve boss Ben Bernanke again warned that out of control borrowing and spending will eventually destroy the country.

Said Ben to the the Budget Committee:

[…]

But here is something Bernanke didn’t mention — a large chunk of that debt is owed to the Federal Reserve. In February, the corporate media fessed up to this undeniable fact. From CNBC:

[…]

The bankers that own the Federal Reserve love debt and that’s why they continually expand the money supply.

“Without the Fed’s relentless expansion of the money supply during both the Greenspan and Bernanke eras, the U.S. Treasury never would have been able to issue the staggering sums of debt that now threaten our economic well being,” Ron Paul told the House Committee on Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy last year. “This Treasury debt is the very lifeblood of deficit spending, permitting one Congress after another to spend far more than the Treasury collects in taxes. It is precisely this unholy alliance between the enabling Fed and a spendthrift Congress that I hope our witnesses will address today.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



British Official Trade Deficit Increases in February

(LONDON) — Britain’s trade-in-goods deficit widened in February by more than expected, as exports to countries outside the European Union fell, official figures showed on Thursday.

The deficit grew to GBP 8.8 billion (10.7 billion euros, $14.0 billion), the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in a statement. That compared with a revised shortfall of GBP 7.9 billion in January.

Market expectations had been for a smaller February deficit of GBP 7.6 billion, according to economists polled by Dow Jones Newswires.

Exports of goods to non-EU countries fell 8.8 percent to GBP 11.7 billion, while British imports rose 1.0 percent to GBP 16.7 billion, leading to a trade deficit with countries outside the European single market of GBP 5.0 billion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Developing Nations Invest Less Abroad, UNCTAD Says

Direct investments abroad have increased globally, a new study by the United Nations’ trade and development body bears out. But developing and emerging nations have not contributed to the rise.

Foreign direct investments (FDI) rose by 16 percent globally last year, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development announced on Thursday. The Geneva-based body said financial outflows in 2011 amounted to $1.66 trillion ($1.26 trillion euros), up from $1.43 trillion in the previous year.

But the picture was far from homogeneous, UNCTAD warned in its report. While the value of money flowing from highly industrialized nations jumped by a quarter, developing and emerging countries scaled back their foreign financing by 7.0 percent.

Rich nations invested $1.235 trillion abroad in 2011, up from $985 billion in 2010. The corresponding figure for developing nations last year was $357 billion, down from $383 billion in the previous year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Calls for Eurozone Unity Amid Spain Strains

(BRUSSELS) — The European Commission urged eurozone leaders to work together on Thursday after Spain came under criticism from other governments over strains in its public finances.

“We want the 17 euro area member states to move forward together to preserve their common good, the euro,” Olivier Bailly, spokesman for the European Union’s executive arm, told a news briefing.

“A problem with the macro-economic stability and financial stability of one of the 17 eurozone states affects the other 16,” he added. “What we want today is collective solutions and consensual actions to be put in place.”

With its borrowing costs surging to worrisome levels, Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy urged EU peers on Wednesday to be “prudent” when making comments about its economic woes.

In recent days both French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti have made references to public finances in Spain, in a context of market concerns about the country’s finances.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU: German Pay Deals Add to Euro Divergence

Brussels, 4 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Wage moderation in Germany may be coming to an end at precisely the wrong time for European Central Bank President Mario Draghi.

As nations from Greece to Spain battle recessions and record unemployment, workers in Germany are winning some of the biggest pay increases in two decades, with public service staff set to gain 6.3 percent more by the end of next year. That’s widening the gaps between Europe’s largest economy and its euro- area peers, making the ECB’s one-size-fits-all monetary policy less effective.

“While the German wage deals are good news for workers, Draghi is unlikely to be popping the champagne corks,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING Group in Brussels. “ECB policy is inappropriate for each individual country in the euro area; it’s too loose for Germany and too restrictive for the periphery. It could end up making the divergences even bigger.”

Draghi is facing the possibility of price pressures building in Germany just as they wane in nations that have been pushed into austerity drives by the sovereign debt crisis. Only months after the ECB cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low and pumped more than 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of cheap cash into Europe’s banking system to stem the crisis, Draghi warned of “upside risks” to inflation and started talking about how to withdraw the emergency measures.

German Reforms

ECB officials meeting in Frankfurt today will keep their key rate at 1 percent, according to all 57 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The decision is due at 1:45 p.m. and Draghi holds a press conference 45 minutes later.

Labor-market reforms last decade increased Germany’s competitiveness, transforming the economy from the so-called “sick man of Europe” into the region’s locomotive. German nominal gross wages rose an average 2 percent a year between 2000 and 2009, according to Eurostat, less than half the 4.7 percent annual average gain in Spain.

Now, with unemployment at a two-decade low and exports to countries outside the euro area partially shielding the economy from the debt crisis, German workers are asking for a bigger slice of the pie.

IG Metall, Europe’s biggest labor union with about 3.6 million workers, is demanding 6.5 percent more pay.

‘Turning Point’

Germany’s 2 million public service workers are set for a 6.3 percent raise over two years under an agreement reached with the government, the Ver.di union said on March 31. That would be the biggest increase negotiated by the union since 1992.

“The agreement will likely mark a turning point in wage developments in Germany after years of wage restraint,” said Klaus Baader, an economist at Societe Generale SA in Hong Kong. “Given the robustness of Germany’s economy and the continued decline in unemployment, the fact that wage growth is rising is not surprising. If anything, it is surprising it has taken so long.”

Germany’s economy expanded 3.7 percent in 2010 and 3 percent in 2011 before the debt crisis applied a brake. The European Commission projects growth of 0.6 percent this year. That compares with its forecast for a 0.3 percent contraction in the euro-area economy as output declines in Italy, Spain, Belgium, Greece, Cyprus, the Netherlands, Portugal and Slovenia.

Rebalancing Process?

Some economists say rising German wages are part of a rebalancing that has to take place within the 17-nation euro zone. Germany, which has long relied on exports for growth, needs to spur household spending, while peripheral nations have to cut wages to improve competitiveness and export performance.

Greece has slashed its minimum wage by 22 percent as part of efforts to make the economy competitive again.

Still, “the ECB is in a dilemma,” said Holger Sandte, chief economist at WestLB Mellon Asset Management in Dusseldorf. “It’s not an optimal currency area. The economy is terrible in some parts and okay in others, and prices are diverging.”

House prices in Spain plunged 11.2 percent last year; in Germany they rose 5.5 percent, the most since the country’s post-reunification property boom in the early 1990s.

Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann is among the ECB policy makers to have begun talking of an eventual exit from the central bank’s emergency lending measures, saying they entail significant risks.

Draghi, in an interview with Germany’s mass tabloid Bild newspaper, said he shares Weidmann’s concerns and “all members of the Governing Council have taken to heart Germany’s stability culture.”

‘Nowhere Close’

“Exit talks are in large part targeted at Germans and other inflation hawks concerned about rising inflation and the emergence of asset-price bubbles,” said Marco Valli, chief euro-area economist at UniCredit Global Research in Milan. “They want to show they have the tools available to tackle inflation, but they’re nowhere close to a starting the exit.”

While Draghi will probably affirm his view that the euro- area economy has stabilized, contracting manufacturing output suggests the recovery remains fragile.

At the same time, euro-area inflation, driven by higher oil prices and tax increases, will breach the ECB’s 2 percent limit for a second straight year in 2012.

The ECB predicts it will slow to 1.6 percent next year. Still, the days of counting on Germany to exert downward pressure on the rate may be coming to an end, said Juergen Michels, chief euro-area economist at Citigroup in London.

Weak domestic demand and austerity measures will probably result in deflation in periphery countries, giving the ECB room to increase stimulus, he said, yet in Germany price pressures are likely to remain elevated.

“As a consequence, we expect that in contrast to the period since introducing the euro, German inflation rates will be above the euro-area average over the medium term,” Michels said.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Gallup CEO: High Unemployment Will Make Romney President

Jim Clifton, GEO of Gallup, the leading poll company in America, told Russia Today unemployment will sink Obama’s re-election bid.

“According to the Gallup poll, if we vote tonight, Romney will beat him… They are not voting for Romney — they just vote against the president,” Clifton said.

Forget Afghanistan, Pakistan and a new war in Africa — Americans are more concerned about losing their jobs. “If something really big happens… that will only make a little bit of a difference. Americans don’t want to hear about foreign policy. They should, but they don’t,” Clifton said.

Clifton admitted unemployment is around 20 percent, far higher than the 8 percent the government and the establishment media keep insisting it is. Others put the number at 22.5%, a number closing in on the last Great Depression’s unemployment figure of 25%.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Banks Facing Specter of Nationalization

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 6 — Even the large Greek banks are facing the specter of nationalization in view of the enormous support for recapitalization they will need from the Financial Stability Facility (FSF), sources said on Thursday. On Friday, as Reporter.Gr writes, the Greek lenders will have to submit to the Bank of Greece their plans for boosting their capital adequacy following the huge write-downs they have had to take as a result of the Greek bond haircut. The country’s international creditors are pressing for the terms of recapitalization to be defined urgently. The banks, whose combined market capitalization has dwindled to less than 3 billion euros, have already divested a large part of their real estate assets but results have been mediocre because of the slump. The banks are asking that shareholders be given incentive to repurchase as many shares as possible after three years, so that they will return to private Greek hands.

However, the central bank is said to be unhappy by the business plans the lenders have presented so far.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek State Gets New Powers to Force Payment of Debts

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 10 — Greek State is aiming at securing the outstanding debts of taxpayers and corporations by confiscating salaries, pensions, real estate, deposits and securities. According to the manual issued by the Finance Ministry, as reported by daily Kathimerini, confiscations can be made provided their amount exceeds 1,000 euros per month after compulsory charges are deducted, while the remainder cannot be under 1,000 euros. Confiscation will also apply to benefits paid by the state and to properties held by third parties (such as banks). The measure does not concern people with debts up to 300 euros, or those with debts from traffic fines and to local authorities. Also exempt are taxpayers who have already arranged for the settlement of their debt through installments or those who benefit from legal clauses in their favor.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF, EU to Conduct New Assessment Mission in Romania

(BUCHAREST) — The International Monetary Fund and the European Union will review economic reforms in Romania during a new audit, from April 24 to May 7, the IMF said on Thursday.

“A mission from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), headed by Jeffrey Franks, will visit Bucharest from April 24 to May 7, 2012, to conduct the fifth review of Romania’s Stand-By Arrangement”, the IMF office in Bucharest said in a press release.

The head of the mission Jeffrey Franks will be accompanied by his successor Erik de Vrijer, the IMF said.

At the end of their previous review, in February, EU and IMF representatives trimmed Romania’s 2012 growth forecast to 1.5-2.0 percent, owing to international economic turbulence.

Franks had called on authorities to continue prudent fiscal policies. “With the upcoming elections and the economic growth slowdown, it is essential to maintain the course of reforms.”, Franks stressed.

In March 2011, the IMF and the EU had agreed to provide Romania with a fresh credit line of five billion euros ($6.8 billion dollars) to be drawn only in case of emergency.

Two years earlier, Romania had obtained a 20-billion-euro rescue package from the IMF, the EU and the World Bank which helped it emerge from recession.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mass Unemployment in the Balkans — A Need to Act

Leskovac, once known as the Serbian Manchester, is home to a textile industry that began in the 19th century, flourished under Communism, and has survived — albeit barely — until today. The town, which lies in the south of Serbia, boasts a textile school (set up in 1947), an association of textile engineers and its very own textile magazine. The boom years are a distant memory, however.

Leskovac’s Socialist-era companies are bankrupt, their production halls empty and their machines have been dismantled and sold as scrap. At the heart of the town’s plight, and that of so many other regions in the Western Balkans, is the impact of dramatic de-industrialisation.

Contemporary Serbia is a society whose population is both aging (with an average age of 41, it is one of the oldest in the world) and shrinking. So is its industry. After stagnating during the economic recovery of the 2000s, the employment rate (the percentage of people of working age actually working) has sharply fallen since 2008. Today it is about 45 per cent, more than 20 percent worse than the EU average.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Uncertainty About Spain Worries Euro Zone

The markets appeared to have forgotten about the euro crisis for a few weeks, but now uncertainty is returning, with yields rising again on Spanish and Italian government bonds. The effects of the ECB’s massive cash injection are wearing off, and Spain’s banks have already reportedly run out of the cheap cash they got from the central bank.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


24 Outrageous Facts About Taxes in the United States That Will Blow Your Mind

The U.S. tax code is a complete and utter abomination and it needs to be thrown out entirely. Nobody in their right mind would ever read the whole thing — it is over 3 million words long. Each year, Americans spend billions of hours and hundreds of billions of dollars trying to comply with federal tax requirements. Sadly, it is the honest, hard working Americans in the middle class that always get hit the hardest.

The tax code is absolutely riddled with loopholes that big corporations and the ultra-wealthy use to minimize their tax burdens as much as possible. Many poor people do not pay any income taxes at all. The dishonest are rewarded for cheating on their taxes (if they can get away with it) and the ultra-wealthy have moved trillions of dollars to offshore tax havens where they can avoid U.S. taxation altogether. Our system is incredibly unfair to the millions of hard working people in the middle class and upper middle class that drag themselves out of bed and go to work each day and try to do the right thing. In addition, the current U.S. tax system is incredibly inefficient, it diverts a tremendous amount of resources away from more valuable economic activities, and it has chased thousands of businesses and trillions of dollars out of the United States. The U.S. tax code is such a complete and utter mess at this point that it can never be “fixed”. The only rational thing to do is to abolish it completely, and any politician that tells you otherwise is lying to you.

The following are 24 outrageous facts about taxes in the United States that will blow your mind…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



A New Crop of Digital Science Books Will Change the Way Students Learn

Next-generation science e-books may help keep young people engaged

Science can advance quickly, rendering existing textbooks obsolete. Now new digital textbooks are emerging intended to better engage students and keep them up-to-date on the latest research. These e-books will cost (and weigh) less than the average printed tome. In January, Apple announced its iBooks 2 textbook platform for the iPad, and publishers, including McGraw-Hill, Pearson, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, have signed on to create content for it.

In February, Nature Publishing Group, of which Scientific American is a part, came out with Principles of Biology, an interactive, multimedia “book” intended for university-level introductory biology classes that is accessible online using tablet computers, laptops, desktops and smartphones. Principles of Biology integrates text with videos, simulations, interactive exercises, illustrations and tests and also includes classic and current papers from Nature and related journals. Future titles in the life and physical sciences are in the works.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



A Storm-Chaser Who’s Looked Straight Into a Tornado’s Heart

The tornadoes that recently swept through the Dallas Forth Worth area were a reminder of their destructive power. While the most sensible response might be to go as far away as possible from such things, atmospheric scientist Joshua Wurman runs right at them.

What makes tornadoes so unpredictable?

We know the fundamentals of how supercell thunderstorms-the ones that produce tornadoes-form. We know that there need to be certain conditions of temperature, relative humidity, and wind speeds at different altitudes. What we don’t really understand very well is why only 25 percent of the supercells make tornadoes and when in their life cycle they do it: Why did that particular supercell make a tornado now, not 15

minutes ago, or 15 minutes from now? The reason we drive 15,000 miles a year to catch 10 tornadoes is because we don’t know which supercells are going to make them or when.

Why is it so difficult to collect data on a tornado?

It’s a pretty foggy, blurry view-we’re looking through a distorted window with cracks in it. We do fairly well at seeing the winds throughout the storm. Radar is great at doing that. We should probably get a B+. Where we get an F, maybe an F+, is in measuring the temperatures and relative humidities, what we call the thermodynamics,

inside the storms. We know that something is causing the winds to move up and down in the supercell, and we believe that the temperatures and relative humidity are critical to that process.

Yet we have almost no direct way of obtaining those numbers. We tried with unmanned aerial vehicles but didn’t get many measurements.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Better or Worse?

All politics are the politics of the future. The one cause that we all champion, regardless of our political orientation, is the cause of the future. All that we fight for is the ability to shape the future.

[…]

The left tends to view the past negatively and future shock positively. It wants change to disrupt the old order of things in order to make way for a new order. It hews to a progressive understanding of history in which we have been getting better with the advance of time, the march of progress mimics evolution as a means of lifting humanity out of the muck and raising it up on ivory towers of reason through a ceaseless process of change.

The right often views the past positively, it sees change as a destroyer that undermines civilization’s accomplishments and threatens to usher in anarchy. It fights to conserve that which is threatened by the entropic winds of change. The conservative worldview is progressive in its own way, but it is the progress of the established order. It sees progress emerging from the accretion of civilization, rather than from the disruption of revolution.

[…]

The left destroys its future by breaking with the past in search of the future. Like a fish out of the water or a tree with no roots, it perishes and becomes a meal for passing predators. It conceives of futures that have no link with the past and ruthlessly strives to implement them over piles of corpses. It fails to understand that the past is neither good or bad, but a mix of the two that has been tested and refined by struggle and conflict. The future will have both good and bad in it as well, but the more it breaks with the past, the more it will be untested and unrefined.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Birmingham News Drops the Ball on Black-on-White Crime

A couple of days ago I reported on the stabbing of white truck driver Nick Stokes by members of a black motorcycle gang called the Outcasts of Alabama. It’s not merely a scary story but also an unusual one, mostly because of the behavior of law enforcement. The Adamsville, AL police department not only failed to question or detain any of the gangsters, but, outrageously, also told Stokes that they “don’t mess” with the Outcasts.

What isn’t at all unusual about the story is the mainstream media’s reluctance to cover a case of black-on-white crime. In particular, I cited the Birmingham News (BN), whose crime-beat reporter, Carol Robinson, had brusquely dismissed the incident as not newsworthy. She now has finally treated it — no doubt as a result of pressure — but in a manner so incomplete that it reflects a grudging attitude. More on that in a moment.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cave Bacteria Finding Suggests Ancient Origins of Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs

Our pill-popping culture and over-zealous livestock farmers typically take the blame for the widespread resistance of many harmful strains of bacteria to entire classes of antibiotics. And the Food and Drug Administration took a bold move today with a new voluntary plan to help curtail the over-use of antibiotics in agriculture.

But the capacity to fend off antibiotics might actually be lodged deep in bacteria’s evolutionary history. A new study has uncovered dozens of species of bacteria in a 4 million-year-old cave that harbor resistance to both natural and synthetic antibiotics.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Flying Yogics’ Explains Hopping Mad OWS

Some folk are mystified by a video showing Occupy Wall Street (OWS) activists prepping for May Day Protest events by hopping their way “bunny style” to the call of their leaders for a kumbia group hug.

“Yes, those people are hopping to the circle where they execute the group hug. (And nowhere is the strange hopping explained).” (The Blaze, April 11, 2011).

OWS activists hopping to their group hug triggered by a leader shouting “Love is the answer” are not making like the Easter bunny. They are in their own minds (believe it or not) getting ready for the next battle against capitalism by practicing—”flying yogics”.

It should be no surprise to Glenn Beck, who was the first to report on the inauguration of Yoga at the first OWS protest, that The OWS hop seen on the video clip is a form of yogic flying.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Former Astronauts & Employees to NASA: Stay Away From Global Warming

A group of former NASA employees, including astronauts, has called on the agency to stop making “unproven and unsubstantiated remarks” regarding global climate change — specifically that human activities are driving global warming. “We believe the claims by NASA and (Goddard Institute for Space Studies), that man-made carbon dioxide is having a catastrophic impact on global climate change are not substantiated,” write the 49 signatories in a letter to NASA administrator Charles Bolden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Governments Everywhere Having Deep Money Problems

It was 13 months ago we disclosed that the administration passed a stimulus bill known as the $17.5 billion “Hiring Incentives Act” to restore employment. It required that foreign banks not only withhold 30% of all outgoing capital flows, and disclosure of the full details of transactions of non-exempt holders to the Internal Revenue Service. They want the structure of how money ended up at that bank. In addition banks, particularly in Switzerland are required to close the account. That is equivalent to capital controls, so in future it will be easy to put currency controls of all funds entering or leaving the US.

Now we have a new gem on our hands, Senate Bill 1813, which was presented by California Senator Barbara Boxer. The bill has been passed in the Senate 74-23 under the “Moving ahead for progress legislation in the 21st Century Act.”

Section 4034 of the legislation states that any individual who owes more than $50,000 to the IRS will have their passport confiscated, revoked, or put on special terms and they will be denied exit or entry, out or into the US. The bill is loosely written, so as usual the interpretation is left up to bureaucrats in Washington. Hopefully this inclusion will be struck down in the House. Inasmuch almost all our Congress is bought and paid for — you will have to lobby very hard to eliminate it from the bill. This is not about tax evasion; it is about people control and their assets. E-mail, fax, write and call all House members to stop another nail being put in our coffin.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Mike Tyson: Kill George Zimmerman

Former boxer Mike Tyson has weighed in on George Zimmerman. He says it’s a shame he has not been murdered.

In an interview with Yahoo News, the former heavyweight champ said:

[…]

Tyson admits he wasn’t there, so he is not certain what happened — including the possibility Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin in self-defense — but says Zimmerman needs to be shot anyway.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s “Fairness” Equals Socialism

On the tenth of April, 2012, at the Florida Atlantic University, President Obama stated: “This is not some socialist dream … “ I would beg to disagree. That is exactly what it is. And it is HIS dream, not mine, and it is not a dream the majority of Americans share.

It doesn’t take a college degree in politics and/or government to know socialism when you see it, especially for my generation. We grew up fighting it. I mean, we literally took up arms against socialism.

Today in America, socialism has a death grip on the Oval Office of the President of the United States. Far from fighting socialism, as a President of a free country ought to do, Obama has embraced it and is now proselytizing for socialism. He sounds more like a missionary sent from the old Soviet Union to bring America the gospel of socialism than he does the president of a capitalist, democratic country. Sad to say, Obama resembles Hugo Chavez more every day.

President Obama, who has been calling for tax increases on the wealthy in America to “spread the wealth around,” is vehemently denying that his tax increases on the rich are an attempt to “redistribute wealth.”

Let me state this as clearly and concisely as I can: The President of the United States is telling us a lie. And it is a malicious lie, because he KNOWS he is lying!

Redistribution of a nation’s wealth IS socialism, period.

[…]

However, we make a mistake by thinking that Obama is talking to us. He is not. He is talking to his base, the voters who put him in office in 2008. Governor Chris Christie, of New Jersey, nailed it just a few day ago. Paraphrasing, he said, we have become a people sitting on the couch waiting for the government check to arrive. And THAT is Obama’s base.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The ‘Doomsday Shelter’ Being Built Below Kansas Prairie Where Millionaires Will be Able to Sit Out the Apocalypse in Style

When you buy a house, you end up feeling like you will be paying it off until the world ends. Well, how about one of these luxurious condos, which come with all the mod-cons, as well as a pool, a movie theater and a library — oh, and a guarantee that it will survive Doomsday if and when that fateful day comes. For these luxury flats, deep below the Kansas prairie in the shaft of an abandoned missile silo, are meant to withstand everything from economic collapse and solar flares to terrorist attacks and pandemics.

Naturally, there will be no one around to phone if the guarantee fails — but at that point, the insurance will probably be the least of your worries. So far, four buyers have thrown down a total of about $7million (£4.4m) for havens to flee to when disaster happens or the end is nigh. And developer Larry Hall has options to retro-fit three more Cold War-era silos when this one fills up. Hall said: ‘They worry about events ranging from solar flares, to economic collapse, to pandemics to terrorism to food shortages.’

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Unfortunately Named the Affordable Health Care Choices Act of 2009

According to The Hill, “the Obama administration is quietly diverting roughly $500 million to the IRS to help implement the president’s healthcare law. The money is only part of the IRS’s total implementation spending and it is being provided outside the normal appropriations process. The tax agency is responsible for several key provisions of the new law, including the unpopular individual mandate.” (The Hill, April 9, 2012)

[…]

Socialized medical care in Western Europe’s nations fares slightly better. Doctors are still paid a government capped salary, there is rationing of care, long waiting lists for procedures, and gross negligence in hospitals. When patients have sniffles, everyone is treated, no problem. That is when free medical care works best. When more expensive procedures and long-term care become an issue, rationing ensues, depending on the patient’s age.

Dr. March was not aware that Muslims are exempt from the requirements of The Affordable Health Care Choice Act but will be full beneficiaries of free health care paid by the rest of us, a blatant form of dhimmitude.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Prosecution of Fundamentalist Muslim Seen as Setback for Free Speech

Prosecutors call Tarek Mehanna a dangerous radical, but he says he’s being punished for not turning into an FBI informant

On Thursday in a Boston court, a 29-year-old Muslim student faces being sentenced to life behind bars in a case that civil liberties groups raises profound questions for freedom of speech in America. Tarek Mehanna, a bearded Islamist with fundamentalist beliefs, was convicted last year for conspiring to provide support to terrorists by downloading jihadi videos from the internet and translating Islamist documents that he found online.

Prosecutors portrayed Mehanna as a dedicated radical who tried, and failed, to get terrorist training in Yemen in 2004 and then devoted himself to promoting and spreading the violent views of radical Islam in America. Defence lawyers had insisted that Mehanna’s trip to Yemen was to find a religious school and that his radicalism has been greatly overstated. They say he was a family man, angry at American foreign policy, who considered himself an outspoken Islamic intellectual and saw the west’s treatment of Muslims as wrong.

However, regardless of which version of Mehanna’s beliefs was the truth, civil liberties groups say the Mehanna case is a huge setback to America’s freedom of speech and that he was essentially prosecuted for “thought crimes” that should be constitutionally protected by the First Amendment. “It is thought crime. We should be very concerned about this,” said Steve Downs, a New York state lawyer who works with various groups examining legal cases brought against Muslims in the decade since September 11.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) tried to file a brief in support of Mehanna during his prosecution but was refused the opportunity by the presiding judge. The ACLU had argued that Mehanna had consumed information freely available on the web and that his freedom of speech was of paramount importance, even if the material was offensive, anti-American or pro-violence. “This is a big case. Weakening the First Amendment is a slippery slope. Certain federal judges seem to ignore it at will,” said Nancy Murray, a director at the Massachusetts branch of the ACLU.

Some observers believe that radical Muslims get different treatment to other extremist groups. Mehanna was convicted of supporting terrorism despite there being no proven active link between him and any terrorist or terrorist organisation, and his activities appeared to consist of spreading easily available material he found on the internet. There is no evidence he actively plotted to take any terrorist action in the US, but he now faces a possible life sentence in jail.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Washington Post Suggests Bilderberg Group to Pick Romney’s Running Mate

A story in today’s Washington Post written by veteran columnist Al Kamen suggests that the Bilderberg Group may have a decisive role to play in picking Mitt Romney’s running mate, continuing a recent trend in which the secretive cabal has had a direct influence on the U.S. presidential election.

[…]

As we have exhaustively documented, despite the fact that the establishment media, many titans of which are Bilderberg members, routinely plays down the weight of the group’s influence on world affairs, in a 2010 radio interview former NATO Secretary-General and Bilderberg member Willy Claes admitted [url] that Bilderberg attendees are mandated to implement decisions that are formulated during the annual conference of power brokers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Local Muslims Honour Pioneers, Supporters

Pioneers of the local Muslim community will be honoured tonight at a dinner organized by the Windsor Islamic Council. Dr. Osman Tarabain, president of the Windsor Islamic Council, said the recognition is long overdue. “We want to honour pioneers in the community like Dr. Gordon Jasey and Dr. Ismail Peer,” said Tarabain. “Both are past presidents of the Windsor Islamic Association and helped in getting the first mosque built in Windsor.” The first mosque was located in downtown Windsor, Tarabain said. He said it was built in the 1950s by Jasey and members of the Lebanese community. As the community grew, Jasey was responsible in 1964 for the development of another mosque at the corner of Dominion and Northwood. “It was later expanded to its current structure in 1972 by Dr. Jasey and Dr. Peer,” Tarabain said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Belfast Embraces ‘Unsinkable’ Titanic Heritage

A century after the Titanic sank, the Northern Irish city of Belfast, where the liner was built, is finally coming to terms with the disaster and attempting to capitalize on the ship’s unique pulling power.

In May, 1911, 50,000 people gathered on Belfast’s docks to watch as the Titanic was floated from the slipway. Some 3,000 men had worked for nearly three years to build the largest vessel the world had ever seen.

“There was a huge amount of pride. It was seen then as a symbol of ambition, a symbol of confidence, of Belfast as being an industrial might,” said Tim Husbands, chief executive of Titanic Belfast, a new visitor attraction built just 100 yards from where the ship was originally launched.

Less than a year later, the ship was lying at the bottom of the ocean. Four days into its maiden voyage from Southampton, England to New York City, the Titanic hit an iceberg and sank in the early hours of April 15, 1912. Of the 2,200 passengers on board, 1,500 drowned in the icy waters of the North Atlantic.

“I think it took many decades for the city (of Belfast) to come to terms with that sense of association of grief, that sense of loss, that sense of embarrassment,” Husbands said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bolkestein Criticises Dutch Journalism as Sentimental

THE HAGUE, 11/04/12 — Dutch journalism is leftwing. Journalists embrace everything that is week and fail to see in capitalism the only workable system, says former conservative (VVD) leader Frits Bolkestein in an opinion article in De Volkskrant.

“Why do the overwhelming majority of journalists vote left?” asked Bolkestein rhetorically. He gave the answer himself: “We are a moralising people and journalists are a reflection of this.” But “moralising means exercising power via the back door. Where freedom reigns, this is impossible.”

The VVD misses out on a good deal of the sympathy of journalists because it, unlike Labour (PvdA) and the Christian democrats (CDA), does not moralise. Except for in economically difficult times like the present, because the VVD is then respected by journalists because impractical idealism then as to give way to real solutions.

“In the big countries around us, the situation is different. There one does find rightwing quality newspapers: the Daily Telegraph in England, the Figaro in France, Die Welt in Germany,” Bolkestein went on.

According to the former VVD leader, who is held in high regard inside and outside his party, CDA and PvdA follow the ethics of intentions. “If the intention is only good, the operation is also good.” The VVD in fact follows the ethics of the consequences. “If these are good, the operation itself is also good.”

The VVD approach is more businesslike and admits less emotions, declares Bolkestein. He considers this necessary because the Netherlands is a small country with a high population and communication density where everyone at every moment talks about the same thing. “Then sentimentality is dominant. We have become a feminine country.”

Capitalism is not popular among journalists, but their opposition to the market is nonsensical, because the alternative is that prices are fixed by bureaucrats. “And what that leads to, we know since the fall of the Wall.”

It is true that capitalism from time to time produces a crisis, like the present one, but this is largely caused by governments, says Bolkestein. “It is certainly true that some — particularly the bankers — have misbehaved. But the government has offered them the room for this. The rules must now be tightened up so that this room is restricted.”

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Council of Europe Ditches Italian Party Funding System

(AGI) Strasbourg — A Council of Europe reports rejected the Italian party funding system. The document drafted by the Greco Commission, the CoE’s anti-corruption monitoring organization, pinpoints “important” shortfalls, “inefficient” controls and “ineffective” sanctions. The control system is identified as the true “weak point” of the Italian legislation on this matter.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Council of Europe to Demand More Pressure on Swiss Tax Cheats

Already involved in tax-disputes with Germany, the US and the EU, Switzerland is also coming under pressure from the Council of Europe. A resolution to be voted on 27 April by its Parliamentary Assembly calls on the Swiss to “exert more pressure” on “tax havens” and bank secrecy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France’s Muslim Allergy: Sarkozy Can Say Goodbye to the Muslim Vote

by Eman El-Shenawi

“France is the worst place in Europe to be a Muslim, because the government is so against us. And if Nicolas Sarkozy is re-elected, it can only get worse.”

Ahead of an upcoming presidential election in France, policymakers are riding a wave of Islam-dominated issues that have unwittingly taken center stage in the country’s public domain. Concerns over Islamic fundamentalism reached a peak in recent weeks when French police launched the latest of a series of raids on suspected Islamic militants, detaining 10 people across the country in predawn arrests. This also came hand-in-hand with news that imams (clerics) were being deported, moderate Muslim preachers were being denied access to the country, and mosques were increasingly being monitored by French authorities. The measures come under the pretext that French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is battling for re-election ahead of the first round of votes on April 22, is brazenly intent on clamping down on dangerous radicals threatening France.

In the spotlight was last month’s Toulouse episode, an al-Qaeda-inspired gunman, Mohammed Merah, who murdered seven people in a nine-day terrorist rampage through the French city. “France will not tolerate ideological indoctrination on its soil,” Sarkozy said in March, as he vowed to jail anyone who viewed jihadist videos online or visited international training camps. But some described Merah’s shooting rampage as “an unexpected gift for Sarkozy” which he “exploited” to increase his chances in the upcoming elections, says Dr. Marwan Kabalan, International Relations and Diplomacy expert at the University of Kalamoon in Syria. And yes indeed, Sarkozy won several percentage points following the range of measures against the Muslim community in France, having previously lagged behind in opinion polls prior to the Toulouse incident, Kabalan adds.

Sarkozy’s opponents have pointed out that amplifying the fear of Islamic fundamentalism has been a very convenient way of appearing as a strong, active president. But in reality, many will argue that French premier practically made his name within the government for drilling the topic of Islamist extremism to the public. Sarkozy became interior minister by taking on the angry young men in the mainly Muslim suburbs of Paris during the 2005 riots, Harriet Alexander of the Telegraph notes, planting his own, individual seed of anti-Islam sentiment into the government. Last September, the president took to banning Muslims from praying in the streets, after photos of Friday prayers spilling out onto the pavements were deemed by far-Right candidate Marine Le Pen as evidence of a supposed Muslim takeover. And in congruent timing, this week marks the first anniversary of a French law banning the wearing of full-face veils in public; a decision by Sarkozy made under the ruse of upholding secular values.

In par with this reasoning, a promise by the president was made early on this year to introduce a law in France to ensure the labeling of all meat killed in accordance with halal Islamic traditions. “It’s frightening at the moment,” Mounia Bassnaoui, a Muslim woman born in France told The Telegraph. “France is the worst place in Europe to be a Muslim, because the government is so against us. And if Nicolas Sarkozy is re-elected, it can only get worse.” Bassnaoui is one of France’s estimated six million Muslims, making the country home to the largest Muslim population in Europe.

Alexander notes that the three elements of immigration, security and Islamic fundamentalism have frequently spoken of in the same breath by Sarkozy, implying a chain of interlinked threats stemming from the Muslim community. “French politicians across the spectrum link Islam and immigration, and the French people end up believing this,” Professor Olivier Roy, a French authority on the link between Islam and politics and an adviser to the French foreign ministry told the newspaper. “But it’s not the case; the wave of North African immigration has slowed to a trickle, and most immigrants now come from China or Eastern Europe,” Roy explained.

Still, for many who support Sarkozy’s efforts to rid the country of the danger from Merah-like figures lingering in the psyche of the average French citizen, the president will continue to be seen as a protector. Last month, before the Toulouse shootings, Sarkozy voiced his intent on keeping moderate voters from defecting to the far-right; encouraging his UMP party to hold a public debate to discuss the compatibility between Islam and France’s secular values. But weeks before the debate has begun, dissent within the UMP over the wisdom of the idea hurt Sarkozy’s credibility, hinting that his leadership of the party is less than ironclad. “If this debate were to be focused only on Islam, if it were to lead to a stigmatization of Muslims, then I would oppose it,” Prime Minister Francois Fillon had said on RTL radio.

Indeed, Muslim groups boycotted the event, accusing the UMP of targeting their faith. “This debate has only one purpose and that is to keep the UMP in the media in the year before the election,” Hassan Ben M’Barek of “Banlieues Respect” group, told Reuters last week. “Clearly, this will feed into Islamophobia,” he added. Despite Islam being France’s second largest religion after Roman Catholicism with some 5-6 million followers, according to government figures, the spotlight on the Muslim community in the country is intensifying and for many Muslims, it is bordering on offensive. “French policymakers must try to acquire better understanding of Islam, religion and culture, in order to win, rather than alienate, their Muslim citizens,” wrote Dr. Kabalan. “More important, perhaps, they must respect the beliefs of the local Muslim community, which is French first and foremost. They may need to check through the constitution of the French Republic, which — among many things — guarantees all citizens the right to choose their religion and practice their faith,” he added.

Whether Sarkozy will win a second term on the back of his anti-Islam drive is tough to tell. Despite his many supporters who have pushed his popularity skywards in the aftermath of the Toulouse shootings, the French premier should be concerned over his electoral losses at the hands of a bulky population of Muslim voters that may be encouraged to vote this year more so than ever.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Hollande Vows to ‘Dominate Finance’

French Socialist presidential candidate Francois Hollande vowed on Thursday to “dominate finance”, following warnings from the right that a left-wing victory would trigger attacks on the euro.

Hollande is on course to unseat right-wing incumbent President Nicolas Sarkozy in the poll to choose the powerful leader of the eurozone’s second economy, which will be conducted over two rounds on April 22nd and May 6th.

With eurozone bond markets on edge over renewed fears that Spain and Italy will struggle to cope with their sovereign debt, Sarkozy has warned that France would be next in the firing line in the event of a Socialist victory.

But Hollande hit back hard, accusing Sarkozy of racking up debt and of allowing France to be bullied by the world of finance into sacrificing growth for austerity, without reaping any benefits for the real economy.

He said he would fight “speculation” and work with France’s EU partners to better regulate markets, rather that surrendering to them, as he alleged Sarkozy has done since his election in 2007.

“What I want is for us to show, France but also Europe, that we have a shared capacity to dominate finance,” Hollande said, on public television.

“I’ve said very clearly what would be my path towards the repair of our public finances. I’ve said that we need more growth, because it is needed, and so I need fear no crisis,” he declared.

“And if the markets are worried — I don’t know if they are, I know that for now they are unfortunately mobilised as regards Italy and Spain — I will tell them here and now that I will leave them no space to act,” he said.

And he dismissed fears his election would trigger a speculative attack on the euro, noting that he has been the opinion poll frontrunner for months and so the markets have had time to get used to the idea of him as president.

“It’s the outgoing president who brought the country to the situation it is in. Public debt has grown by 600 billion euros, we’ve lost our Triple-A credit rating and we have a trade deficit of 70 billion euros,” he said.

“And now he comes to tell us: ‘Watch out, it could be even worse if someone else was in charge’? Well, no it couldn’t.”

Countries borrow money on international bond markets to finance their budget deficits and to rollover their debt. If they lose the confidence of investors, the interest rate to borrow can rise to unsustainable levels, forcing a government in trouble to seek rescue help elsewhere.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Free Koran Distributions Have Germany Concerned

Salafist Muslims have been handing out free Korans across Germany in recent weeks. But the group’s radicalism has many politicians concerned — as does a recent video posted on YouTube that allegedly threatened journalists who wrote critical reports on the religious offensive.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Piraten Leapfrog the Green Party and Rank Third

(AGI) Berlin — The Piraten continue their political ascent, leapfrogging the Green Party, becoming Germany’s third-largest party. A survey conducted by the Forsa Institute for the RTL broadcasting network reveals that the Internet party climbs to 13% in a single go, leapfrogging the Green party, which drops 2 points to 11%. Also the Liberal party is recovering ground and, for the first time in almost a year, regains the 5% threshold enabling it to return to the Bundestag in case of new elections. The Social-Democratic party loses 1 percentage point to 24% along with Linke that slips to 8% (-1%), while Angela Merkel’s CDU/CSU grows one point to 36%. The survey also reveals that with an estimated 5%, the Piraten would also make it into the two regional Parliaments of Schleswig-Holstein and North Rhine-Westfalia, where elections are scheduled for the 6th and 13th of May respectively. After the success recorded in Berlin and in the Saar region, the party that only counted 70 members up to 6 months ago when it still didn’t have a political agenda could conquer a representation in all four regional Parliaments. The large drop in votes for the Green Party is unanimously attributed to the fact that Angela Merkel, having decided to abandon nuclear power, robbed the environmentalist party of its best asset in 20 years of activity.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Germany Monitors Koran Distribution by Salafists

A branch of the German security service is monitoring a campaign by Salafist Muslims to give away 25 million Korans to see if it violates constitutional rules on religious freedom.

Ibrahim Abou Nagie, a Cologne-based preacher, says he wants to save non-Muslims from hell. The interior ministry in North Rhine-Westphalia said the campaign was a form of aggressive proselytising. So far, about 300,000 copies have been given away. Salafists are very conservative Muslims who try to emulate the earliest followers of the Prophet Muhammad.

‘Disturbing the peace’

The Office for the Protection of the Constitution in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, which keeps extremist and violent groups under surveillance, has been monitoring Mr Abou Nagie’s organisation. Parties from across the political spectrum united to criticise the Koran giveaway. “Wherever possible, this aggressive action must be stopped,” said Guenter Krings of the governing centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), in an interview with the Rheinische Post newspaper. He admitted that handing out religious material was not in itself objectionable, but said the Salafist radicals were disturbing the religious peace with their behaviour. The centre-left Social Democrats and the Green Party have also expressed their concern.

Salafists have been handing out the German-language copies of Islam’s holy books in the pedestrianised zones of cities, including Cologne. “What is presented as the simple distribution of the Koran is in truth the subtle spreading of the Salafist ideology,” said a spokesman for the state interior ministry of North Rhine-Westphalia. Additional copies are also being distributed in Austria and Switzerland. Last summer, the president of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Heinz Fromm, said: “Not all Salafists are terrorists. But almost all the terrorists we know about had contacts with Salafists or are Salafists themselves.” The project has been funded by Muslims buying a copy of the Koran which then funds the production of a second one to be given away. Wealthy donors based in Bahrain have also made contributions.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



German Politicians Attack Salafist Koran Giveaway

A conservative Islamist group plans to hand out tens of millions of copies of the Koran in Germany this weekend. Leading political figures have criticized the move. Regional politicians on Wednesday slammed a reported plan by an Islamist group to give away up to 25 million free copies of the Koran translated into German in the country’s most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia. Although the act is not illegal, they said such actions were incompatible with German values.

“This aggressive project has got to be stopped if possible,” said Guenter Krings, deputy parliamentary leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party, the Christian Democrats (CDU). “I have nothing in principle against spreading religious scriptures,” he told the Rheinische Post newspaper. But he added, “The radical group of Salafists are disturbing the religious peace in our country.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iceland’s Volcanoes May Power UK

The energy minister is to visit Iceland in May to discuss connecting the UK to its abundant geothermal energy

The volcanoes of Iceland could soon be pumping low-carbon electricity into the UK under government-backed plans for thousands of miles of high-voltage cables across the ocean floor.

The energy minister, Charles Hendry, is to visit Iceland in May to discuss connecting the UK to its abundant geothermal energy. “We are in active discussions with the Icelandic government and they are very keen,” Hendry told the Guardian. To reach Iceland, which sits over a mid-ocean split in the earth’s crust, the cable would have to be 1,000 to 1,500km long and by far the longest in the world.

Hendry has already met the head of Iceland’s national grid about the plan. The web of sea-floor cables — called interconnectors — planned for the next decade would link the UK to a Europe-wide supergrid, which is backed by the prime minister. The supergrid would combine the wind and wave power of northern Europe with solar projects such as Desertec in southern Europe and north Africa to deliver reliable, clean energy to meet climate change targets and reduce dependence on fossil fuel imports.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Puglia Governor Under Investigation for Abuse of Office

Accusations stem from ‘resentment’ Vendola says

(ANSA) — Bari, April 11 — A key figure in the Italian left-wing opposition, Puglia Governor Nichi Vendola, announced Wednesday that he is under investigation for alleged abuse of office in the appointment of a local chief of surgeons. Vendola said at an emergency press conference that he was “not at all worried” by allegations that he unlawfully appointed Paolo Sardelli chief surgeon at Bari’s San Paolo hospital. Cited in the same probe was Lea Cosentino, the former head of the health board in Bari whom Vendola fired in 2010 after she was placed under house arrest during a graft investigation. Vendola said the current probe is based solely on testimony against him from Cosentino.

“She is accusing me due to her strong resentment,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Tearful Bossi Apologises to Northern League for Children

Former leader says fraud probe is plot against party

(ANSA) — Rome, April 11 — Umberto Bossi has apologised to the Northern League on behalf of his children after resigning as its leader last week when his family was linked to probes into fraudulent use of party money.

Bossi fought back tears as he apologised “in the name of those who bear my name” at a grass-roots party meeting in Bergamo late on Tuesday.

Prosecutors investigating alleged fraud by the populist party’s former treasurer Francesco Belsito suspect party money was misspent on Bossi’s children.

Bossi’s son Renzo resigned his position as councillor in the Lombardy regional assembly on Monday, in a bid to stem some of the disillusionment the scandal has caused among League supporters.

The firebrand former leader, whose speech has been impaired since he suffered a stroke in 2004, also suggested the probes were a “plot” against the party, although a number of people in the crowd jeered when he said this.

Bossi also called on the party to be united in this difficult period.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Supreme Court Sentences Non-Italian Father for Child Abuse

Judge refuses defense’s ethnic-religious argument

(ANSA) — Rome, March 30 — The Italian Supreme Court on Friday upheld a sentence for abuse and aggravated assault by a Moroccan father against his 12-year-old daughter.

Defense lawyers maintained that the father, who allegedly beat his daughter with a broom handle for “corrective” purposes after she could not properly recite the Koran, did so because of “cultural” reasons and should be given a lighter sentence accordingly.

The judge dismissed the defense’s argument, calling the treatment “violent and unjustifiable” whether from Italian nationals or foreigners.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Contracted Works Never Performed in Salerno: 4 Arrested

(AGI) Naples — Institutions in the Salerno area fully paid for contracted works that were never actually performed. Some regard non-existent roads, like the one, the mayor of Pollica, Angelo Vassallo had reported before he was killed in an ambush in September 2010. The Financial Police arrested an officer of the Provincial government, a contractor and two employees of a bank, one of whom is the treasurer of the paying the institution. Goods and money, motorcycles and cars worth over six million were seized in apartments in Salerno and the surrounding areas. All four are accused of criminal conspiracy, embezzlement and falsification of public documents, and the two bank employees also of money laundering.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Defense in Ruby Case Paid Minetti Lawyers

(AGI) Milan — Silvio Berlusconi allegedly paid Nicole Minetti’s lawyers 100,000 euro on June 22nd 2011 after hearings for the Ruby case had started. The news was revealed by reports sent from the Bank of Italy to prosecutors in Milan. The following day, June 23rd 2011, Lombardy’s Regional Councillor, charged with encouraging and supporting the prostitution of minors, also transferred a number of sums to her lawyers, 37440 to Daria Pesce, 24,960 to Piermaria Corso and a further 24,960 to the Gagliani Right legal offices. In a statement Bankitalia emphasizes the “possibility of payments made by third parties (Silvio Berlusconi) to Nicole Minetti’s defense team.” And this is not all. during the period between April 15t 2011 and October 14th of the same year, the former premier sent Minetti 145,000 euro.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Seven Convicted in Brutal Gang Rape Case

Seven of the eight men charged with the aggravated rape of a woman at a housing facility for asylum seekers in Småland, southeastern Sweden, last year were convicted and sentenced to prison on Wednesday in the Eksjö District Court.

“I was hoping I’d pass out, that it would be over and that someone would enter the room,” said the woman, according to daily Aftonbladet.

The woman, a 29-year-old mother of two, had been having a good time at a party, which was held in early December 2011 in a flat inhabited by asylum seekers and part of a Migration Board (Migrationsverket) housing complex.

However, quite out of the blue, the seven men forced the woman into a bedroom, tore off her clothes, held down on a bed and proceeded to take turns raping her.

“I didn’t understand anything. I thought at first that they were joking. Everyone had been so nice before, and then suddenly it happened,” said the woman, according to Aftonbladet.

The men restrained her by holding her hips, arms and shoulders against the bed, and covered her mouth to prevent her from screaming.

She tried to get free by kicking her legs, thrashing with her body, and banging her head against the wall, but to no avail.

According to the woman, none of the perpetrators tried to stop the others from raping her once they had got started.

“They were clapping their hands and laughing and not one said no at any time,” she said during interrogation, according to the paper.

When the 25-year-old man who had initially brought the woman to the party returned to the flat after a few hours, the woman hoped he would save her, but instead he joined in with the others.

It wasn’t until some of the men had left and others fallen asleep that the woman managed to alert the police herself, after crouching behind a rubbish bin.

All seven men denied the allegations but the court found the body of evidence against them to be convincing. Two of the men admitted having had sex with the woman but claimed that it was consensual.

However, the court found the woman’s version of events to be credible and where she was unable to provide details there was other evidence to support her story.

The forensic investigation unearthed DNA traces both on the woman’s body and in the room where the rape took place.

One of the eight charged men were acquitted of the charges but the remaining seven received long prison sentences.

Four of the men were sentenced to six years in prison, two to six years and six months and another, below 21 years of age when the crime was committed, to 4 years and six months.

Prosecutors labelled the incident as a planned attack. All seven were therefore convicted of aggravated rape as they carried out the attack together.

Six of the convicted men are Afghan citizens and will be deported from Sweden and not allowed back for at least fifteen years after they have served their sentence.

The 29-year-old woman will also receive 300,000 kronor ($44,226) in compensation.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Several Injured in Malmö Gang Brawl

Several people with connections to Malmö’s underworld were hospitalized late Wednesday night after knife-wielding thugs kicked off a fight in the city. “All the injured are part of an underworld faction,” said Anders Kristersson of the Malmö police to local paper Sydsvenskan.

According to the paper, a woman was brought in to the emergency room after being hit over the head with a blunt object, following an argument with some gang members. The woman is previously known to the police in connection to narcotics crimes and fraud. She reportedly had a grievance against some street gang members from the city and enlisted the help of a male acquaintance to rough them up with a knife.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Mafia and the European Championships: Price Gouging Adds to List of Ukraine’s Troubles

Troubles continue to plague Ukraine ahead of this summer’s European Football Championships, which the country will co-host. Criminal gangs have stormed hotels, some hotel operators have tripled prices and others have cancelled contracts with the tour operators that will bring sports enthusiasts to the country. The greed threatens to keep fans away.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: First-Class Dishonours

by Geoffrey Alderman

A great many people have had their say on the decision of the officers of Leeds University JSoc to withdraw from Brooke Goldstein the invitation previously extended to her to address the society. In all the hullabaloo that has surrounded this incident, some basic facts seem to have been lost sight of. The first is that, in its treatment of Ms Goldstein, Leeds JSoc acted with incredible rudeness. Had the society’s officers considered her suitability as a speaker and come to a decision that she should not be invited, one might have acquiesced in it. One might have questioned the reasoning that lay behind even the politest of refusals but one could, I think, have accepted it on the basis that it is for the society’s elected officers to decide whom they invite. But this isn’t what happened. What happened was that they decided to invite Ms Goldstein. And then, two days before she was due to speak, and after the event had been advertised, the invitation was withdrawn.

The withdrawal of the invitation was not merely discourteous and impolite. It was deliberately discourteous and knowingly impolite. More than that, it amounted to a gross interference with Ms Goldstein’s freedom of expression. I say this because the grounds upon which the invitation was withdrawn related — or so we are told — to matters that must have been well known to or, easily ascertainable by, the Leeds JSoc officers at the time at which the invitation was originally despatched. These grounds are summarised in a Leeds JSoc press release as having to do with Ms Goldstein’s “links with anti-Muslim propagandists”. I don’t propose here to investigate these links, for the simple reason that they are completely irrelevant. Upon Islam, as upon any other subject, Ms Goldstein is entitled to her views and to express such views publicly. They may or may not be “controversial” — or even (to quote Leeds JSoc) “too controversial”. So what? I am sure that Ms Goldstein, an accomplished lawyer, did not need to be reminded that whatever she was minded to say — had she been permitted to say it — had to be within the law of the land.

Mercifully, in this country (as in the USA), it is still within the law of the land to express in public views that may be considered contentious and even divisive. And if one cannot express controversial, contentious and/or divisive views within the portals of a university, where precisely may one express them? It is here that we reach the nub of the matter, which is that, by their actions, those in charge of the affairs of Leeds JSoc have demonstrated that they have not the slightest notion of what a university is for and what principles underpin its functioning.

So let me tell them. A university exists for the pursuit of truth — no matter how unpleasant, offensive or unpalatable. And, in order that it may pursue the truth, a university exists to protect and facilitate the questioning of received wisdom and the expression of opinions with which others may profoundly disagree. These principles are core to the idea and purpose of a university. They are not negotiable. I am told that some members of Leeds JSoc are congratulating themselves on the fact that no less than 14 members, vice-presidents and trustees of the Jewish Leadership Council appended their signatures to a pitiable letter (published in the JC two weeks ago) expressing confidence in the society and thanking its officers “for simply trying to do the best they can”.

Apart from the fact that, by signing this letter, these 14 grandees have demonstrated their utter unwillingness — or, inability — to comprehend the above underlying issues of principle, I must point out that no less than (by my reckoning) 18 trustees, members and vice-presidents of the so-called Jewish Leadership Council did not sign the letter. Out of this sorry affair, that is the only grain of comfort I can offer. As for Leeds JSoc, the very least its members can do — apart, that is, from offering Ms Goldstein an unequivocal public apology — is to dispense with the services of the current office-holders and replace them with persons who have at least a modicum of understanding of the purpose of a university education.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: London University Considers Stopping Sale of ‘Immoral’ Alcohol on Campus Because it Offends Their Muslim Students

A university is considering ending the sale of alcohol on campus due to concerns from Muslim students.

London Metropolitan University could take action because a ‘high percentage’ of its students thought drinking was ‘immoral’, according to its vice chancellor.

Professor Malcolm Gillies raised the prospect of an alcohol-free campus after gauging the changing values from the influx of new students.

He said it would be unwise to ‘cling’ to a ‘nostalgic’ view where the vast majority wanted alcohol to be available and instead take account of diverging views.

He told MailOnline: ‘I was raising the issue of changing values in student populations and the question of how a responsible university responds.

‘London Metropolitan University is a highly diverse university ethnically and in religious terms. ‘

‘Our students come from all over the world and they come with changing balance of values.

Welcome to the Halal Inn: Britain’s first alcohol-free Islamic pub

‘So the issue of how we cater for those values while still remaining true to being a British university is one of the constant issues any responsible university would be considering.

‘We do have a high percentage of Muslim students — we estimate it may be around 20 per cent for our university.

‘And therefore as most Muslims do look on drink as something which isn’t an acceptable part of everyday life, seeing how do we provide an environment that can respect that, while also respecting values of people such as me who do drink, and who believe drink in moderation is acceptable part — in fact sometimes a good part — of a social community.’

Professor Gillies first raised the subject during a speech to the Association of University Administrators’ annual conference in Manchester on 3 April.

London Metropolitan University was founded in 2002 and has around 30,000 students from 190 countries.

He added: ‘Here’s the problem for London. The majority of our students in London primary schools now have a home language other than English — in other words they come from a very diverse ethnic base.

‘As we go through the next 10 or 20 years in London, we are going to find these cultural values and their differences become more and more important in society.’

Professor Gillies said he would work with the student body to move towards having areas on campus where ‘one serves alcohol and others don’t’, but could foresee a time when the university was an alcohol-free zone.

He added: ‘That’s what education’s actually about, modeling diverse behaviours so we create liberal students in a liberal intellectual environment.’

He questioned whether the university should subsidise student bars, although it was not an issue he felt ‘too strongly’ about, adding: ‘This is about how best you use limited resources to cater to the broadest range of students’.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Mehdi Hasan: A Beacon for Islam

The idiotic Mehdi Hasan has just written a lengthy piece in The Guardian demanding that all Londoners vote for Ken Livingstone in the forthcoming mayoral election. After dismissing Livingstone’s tax avoidance in a few words (yeah, he probably shudda paid more tax), Hasan posits that people have to vote for Ken because if they’re not doing so they’re effectively voting for Boris. He dredges up once more Boris’s remarks about African ‘picaninnies’ with ‘water-melon smiles’, as if this contravention was in some way enough, by itself, to stop anyone voting for the current mayor.

Well, yet again, for the record, let me be absolutely clear about what Boris meant when he made those references: he was being rather bitterly ironic. His comments were directed to two UN workers as he was being driven around Africa witnessing their supposed good works, and the chillingly orchestrated support they were being given at every village. It was a clever, and funny comment, on what he later described as the UN’s ‘neo-colonialism’. It was a sharp comment, in other words, from the left. How do I know this? Because I was sitting with him, in the UN van, when he said it. As is so often the case, a liberal thug has twisted and distorted the very meaning of what Johnson had to say.

But then, reading what Hasan has had to say in the past, you can perhaps understand his contempt for the rest of us kufr scum:

‘The kaffar, the disbelievers, the atheists who remain deaf and stubborn to the teachings of Islam, the rational message of the Quran; they are described in the Quran as, quote, “a people of no intelligence”, Allah describes them as; not of no morality, not as people of no belief -people of “no intelligence” — because they’re incapable of the intellectual effort it requires to shake off those blind prejudices, to shake off those easy assumptions about this world, about the existence of God. In this respect, the Quran describes the atheists as “cattle”, as cattle of those who grow the crops and do not stop and wonder about this world.’

Thanks for that, Mehdi. Ties in nicely with Ken’s wish to make London a beacon for Islam, doesn’t it? Maybe Mehdi himself could be that very beacon.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Popular Vicar Converts to Catholicism… And Takes Half His Flock With Him to Church 500 Yards Away

A vicar led half his congregation in converting to Catholicism after complaining that the Church of England is telling believers in traditional values to ‘sod off’.

Father Donald Minchew was followed by 70 of his flock when he left the Anglican church where he has led services for nearly two decades to join a Catholic church less than 500 yards up the road.

He said the extraordinary leap of faith made him feel like the ‘Prodigal Son’ returning to a church with established beliefs after years of enduring the ‘pick and choose’ attitude of the CofE where congregations are fed on a diet of ‘pap and banality’.

The 63-year-old quit St Michael’s and All Angels parish church in Croydon, south London, to move to neighbouring St Mary’s Church because he opposed many decisions by the General Synod, including the ordination of women priests and bishops.

When he first told his congregation at St Michael’s of his plan during a service there was ‘surprise and astonishment’, he said.

‘They faced a stark choice — to follow me or stay where they were with what was left.

‘I never bullied or pressured anyone to join me. I let them make their own choices.

‘In the end about 70 of the congregation of 120 came with me.

‘They are very brave because they have answered the call of God and done it at great cost, often causing rifts and divisions with family and old friends.

‘The Anglican bishop and Archdeacon of Croydon were extremely understanding and supportive.

‘But from within St Michael’s there were a few false rumours put around to try to keep members of the congregation, including the ludicrous claim that the Catholic church would be ordaining women within a decade.

‘It was a little uncomfortable but I have no regrets.

‘When I was ordained in the Church of England in 1976 there were some things that would never be challenged.

‘But now it just seems that everything has come up for grabs.

‘Those of us who believed in traditional values and opposed the ordination of women and other innovations, who were once an honoured and valued part of the Cof E, are now just being told to ‘sod off’. That’s the bottom line.

‘They all talk of being inclusive and being a broad church when what they really mean is bugger off if you don’t believe in what we believe.

‘Making the move has been like coming home. I feel like the Prodigal Son returning.

‘It is a return to a faith that has fixed values that are not going to change at the next meeting of the General Synod.

‘The Church of England has become like a buffet where you pick and choose which commandments and doctrines you want to follow.

‘We are being fed this pap diet of common worship and banality upon banality rather than the Book of Common Prayer.’

Father Minchew and his followers were received into the full communion at St Mary’s Church last week. Former Anglican bishop Monsignor John Broadhurst received and confirmed the group, who will now form the Croydon Ordinariate.

Father Minchew said 2,000 people attended the mass at St Mary’s on Easter Sunday — more than ten times the congregation he got at his previous church on an Easter Sunday.

He said: ‘In the Catholic Church they take their faith seriously compared to the take it or leave it attitude of the Church of England, where there’s a sense of ‘I don’t fancy it this Sunday.’

The father of four, who is a widower, spent a year deciding on whether to make the move which had serious financial implications for him and his family.

He sacrificed his £11,500-a-year pension — which he was due to start drawing in 18 months — and will have to leave his vicarage home because of his decision.

Parishioner Barry Barnes was one of those who left after 30 years in the congregation at St Michael and All Angels.

He said: ‘We saw where the church was going and decided we could no longer stay in the Church of England.

‘My wife and I decided the Church of England was no longer where we wanted to be and we joined the Ordinariate for a number of reasons.

‘Their attitude towards homosexuality and in light of the possible ordination of women as bishops, neither of us can accept that.’

A spokesman for the Diocese of Southwark, said while they regretted losing Father Minchew and some members of his congregation, ‘we wish them well for their future Christian journey’.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Anti-Terror Hotline Hacked and Conversations Leaked Online

An investigation is under way after hackers targeted Scotland Yard’s anti-terror hotline and leaked conversations between officials on the internet.

An organisation called Teampoison claimed to have carried out the cyber-attack, claiming it was in response to the detention of innocent people on terrorism charges.

The group, which recently claimed responsibility for defacing a Nato website, launched a “phone-bombing” exercise against the anti-terror hotline, making non-stop phone calls for 24 hours.

The activity led to phone-lines at the service being jammed and genuine callers being unable to get through and report potential terror threats.

Hackers then appear to have illegally intercepted an internal call between officials reporting the incident.

The recordings were later posted online in what will be regarded as a major embarrassment of the security services.

In the first recording a voice, which is believed to be generated by a software programme and has an American accent, can be heard speaking to an official at the anti-terror hotline.

The caller claims to be called Robert West and tells the official: “I got some terrorism for you here.”

After explaining that the call was from the group known as Teampoison, he tells the official: “Our philosophy is pretty simple, it’s knowledge is power.”

The call lasts several minutes before an official tells the caller that they are terminating the conversation and passing the details to the FBI.

In the recording between officials, one person can be heard telling another that the hotline received more than 700 phone calls from the group.

He is heard to say: “We have been subjected to a barrage of calls from a group called Teampoison. We have had about 700 calls over the last couple of nights. One of the conversations I had last night was leaked on Youtube.

“Everyone else calling was effectively shut out and could not through at all.”

A statement from the Metropolitan Police Service said: “We are aware of an issue whereby telephone conversations relating to the anti-terror hotline were recorded. Officers are currently looking into the matter and appropriate action will be taken.”

It is the second time in a matter of months that hackers have gained access to private telephone conversations involving Scotland Yard personnel…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: TV Row Mosque Opens School

A MOSQUE where clerics were secretly filmed preaching hate is opening a fee-paying school for pupils from all faiths. Students will be expected to memorise the Koran and wear traditional Pakistani dress. Arabic will be the “key language” taught at the £3,500-a-year Green Lane Masjid Independent Boys’ School. Its annual intake will be 20 students aged 11-16. But they will follow the GSCE curriculum in subjects such as science and geography. Green Lane Masjid in Small Heath, Birmingham, sparked controversy in 2008 when a Channel 4 documentary showed Islamic scholars peddling hate against homosexuals and non-Muslims. Mosque spokesman Ifaan Raza said: “We will be treating the students as young adults and expose them to a variety of opinions and it is up to them to make up their own minds as to what is right or wrong in the eyes of Islam.” Mr Raza said the school did not operate a Muslim-only policy.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Rise of UKIP is a Nightmare for David Cameron

by Iain Martin

How much damage can Ukip do to the Tories? Some Conservative über-modernisers seem to have concluded that the answer is: “not very much”. Given their record, which involved adherence to a strategy which resulted in a failure to beat Gordon Brown outright, I am tempted to conclude that Conservatives should now be very worried indeed. Professor Tim Bale has said that Tories concerned about Ukip are worrying about a “daft distraction” and should aim only for the centre ground. He says the real threat to Conservative prospects will come from Labour. Well, yes, of course the next election will principally be a fight between the two largest parties. But that is only part of the story: elections have sub-plots that can turn out to have a significant impact.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: U-Turn on Mosque Free Parking Plans

PLANS to give a mosque free car parking spaces in Blackpool have been shelved. And the handling of the situation has been blasted as “chaotic” after Blackpool Council withdrew the offer. There was uproar when it emerged the Noor-a-Madina Mosque, on Waterloo Road — which has been refused planning permission by Blackpool Council — had been conditionally offered eight free car parking passes for the Blackpool South car park. But it has now been revealed senior officers and councillors were unaware of the deal — and the mosque has been stripped of the offer. Deputy leader of the opposition, Coun Tony Williams, now wants a full investigation into the circumstances surrounding the offer, and said: “This is totally chaotic — who is running the council? It is a total shambles and a disgrace.” The council has stressed the passes would only have been issued if a planning appeal by the mosque was successful and said the decision was made because other places of worship had been granted similar arrangements in the past.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Croatia: Police Ban International Ultra Rightists’ Gathering

Zagreb, 12 April (AKI) — Croatian police on Thursday banned an international gathering of “ultra-right” political parties, planned for Friday and Saturday in Zagreb, saying it was a threat to public order and could provoke violence.

The gathering was organized by ultra-right Croatian Pure Rights Party (HCSP), but triggered protests by human rights and anti-fascist organizations and center-left government officials.

“We won’t allow the gathering of those who call for violation of constitutional order and snatching a part of Croatian territory,” said prime minister Zoran Milanovic. “Such people can come to Croatia as tourists, but not as political opponents,” he added.

HCSP has invited many European right wing political parties for a conference in Zagreb and an outdoor protest against verdicts by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.

The tribunal sentenced a year ago two Croatian generals, Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac to 24 and 18 years in jail respectively, for crimes against Serb civilians during military operation “Storm” in August 1995.

Though the list of foreign attendants wasn’t made public, Milanovic said they were united in “international solidarity” by hatred against minorities, Jews and Roma. “I can only say that it won’t be allowed on the Croatian territory,” Milanovic concluded.

HCSP president Josip Miljak told media he would respect the ban, but vowed to sue the “bolshevik” government to the European court for human rights in Strasbourg. The ban was “final defeat of democracy in Croatia”, he said.

The government “still hasn’t banned the arrival of tourists to Zagreb”, Miljak said, vowing his followers and guests would “gather as tourists and make a stroll through Zagreb”.

Croatia will become a member of the European Union next year, but Brussels has warned Zagreb it must improve its human rights record and is carefully scrutinizing its moves.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Kosovo’s Demographic Time-Bomb

The Irish Times Dublin

The continent’s youngest state has the highest unemployment rate. With no chances to travel and few opportunities at home, is Kosovo’s burgeoning youth generation ripe for revolt.

Mary Fitzgerald

At all hours of the day, Pristina’s artists, writers and dreamers gather in the snug confines of Dit e Nat, a book-filled cafe whose name means Day and Night in Albanian. Among them is Astrit Ismaili, a 20-year-old conceptual artist recently returned from a six-month residency in New York. “I was lucky. I got an award to go to the US,” he says. “Most people in Kosovo never get the chance to leave, because of the difficulties getting visas. It’s sad that the talent and ambitions of youth here are much bigger than our reality allows.”

Ismaili’s work explores themes of identity and sexuality through the prism of a society still coming to terms with the aftermath of the war that helped birth Kosovo as an independent state. It can be provocative — one project involved Ismaili posing almost nude against the Pristina skyline — and he knows he is pushing boundaries in what remains a largely conservative place. “If you don’t have the opportunity to experience things outside Kosovo, it can be suffocating here.”

Suffocating is also a word used by an unemployed graduate who gives his name as Dren. Nursing a macchiato at a crowded cafe with a view of the iconic bright-yellow Newborn monument — unveiled when Kosovo unilaterally declared independence in 2008 — Dren gestures around him. “Pristina is full of cafes like this . . . packed with young people like me with nothing else to do but drink coffee all day,” he says bitterly. “We have no work, no prospects and no way out. This is no country for young people.”

Kosovo is, however, a country of young people. Its two million inhabitants make up the youngest population in Europe: every second person is under 25. More than half of the ministers in Kosovo’s government are under 40. The country’s president, a former police commander named Atifete Jahjaga, was just 36 when she was elected last year. And, as officials like to stress when discussing the challenges faced by Kosovo, the state, which celebrated its fourth birthday in February, is the second-youngest in the world after South Sudan.

“You cannot find a single case in history where, within three or four years of independence, the major issues of development in a country were addressed,” says Kosovo’s deputy prime minister, Edita Tahiri. “I would say to our young people, give us time.”

But some charge that the government, which paid Saatchi Saatchi about €5 million to come up with a glossy international advertising campaign trumpeting Kosovo’s “Young Europeans”, is not taking the youth bulge seriously enough. Two years ago, the Kosovo Stability Initiative, a Pristina-based think tank, published, in partnership with Unicef, a report that estimated youth unemployment at 73 per cent.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: 2 Dead in Clashes Over Toll Raise

On Libyan border, demonstrators against army

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, APRIL 11 — Two people died and four were injured in clashes between inhabitants of a town on the border between Egypt and Libya and army forces. The clashes broke out last night in Salloum after the decision to increase the toll heavy vehicles have to pay to cross the border. According to al Ahram online, the toll was raised from 450 to 600 Egyptian pounds, around 75 euros. One of the two victims, the online newspaper writes, is a 14-year-old boy. His relatives have not given their permission for a burial and have asked for an investigation. The violence started when armed forces started shooting in the air to disperse demonstrators who were blocking the crossing.

According to some Egyptian media, the protesters have set fire to the military intelligence headquarters and have invited people to take initiatives of non-cooperation starting today.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Devil We Don’t Know, Part 1

The “Arab Spring.” The mainstream media clung to this phrase last year in their giddy haste to promote what they saw as a flowering of freedom-loving, democratic uprisings across the Arab world, for which they were eager to credit President Obama’s famed Cairo speech as partial inspiration. Instead, it unfolded with freedom-hating Islamic fundamentalists seizing political dominance, and the Arab Spring came to look more a Muslim Winter. What went wrong? Bestselling writer and speaker Nonie Darwish is author of the compelling autobiography Now They Call Me Infidel, about growing up in Egypt and her break from Islam, and Cruel and Usual Punishment, an exposé of the stark reality of sharia. Her new book, The Devil We Don’t Know: The Dark Side of Revolutions in the Middle East, explains what really lies behind the Arab Spring movement, and it exposes Islam as the belief system that will inevitably doom those revolutions. This is the first of a two-part interview. Part two will appear tomorrow on FrontPage Magazine.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israeli Minister Offers to Meet Grass on ‘Neutral’ Territory

Günter Grass has compared Israel’s travel ban on him to the methods of East Germany’s Stasi secret police. But Israeli Interior Minister Eli Yishai isn’t budging, saying the decision to declare the German author persona non grata was “better late than never.” He also offered to meet Grass in a “neutral” state.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Palestinians Snub Israel Talks Offer

An offer by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resume direct peace talks without preconditions has been rejected by the Palestinians, who insist Israel must halt settlement construction first.

Israel’s latest offer for direct peace talks has been spurned by the Palestinians, who insist Jerusalem first stop building settlements and release prisoners, according to Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat.

A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas also said on Thursday that Abbas is ready for talks only if Israel halts settlement construction and accepts its 1967 boundaries as the basis for negotiations. Otherwise, Nabil Abu Rdeneh said, any negotiations will “waste time.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Palestine in UNESCO — Ending the State of Confusion

Palestine’s continuing membership of UNESCO has become far more tenuous and now faces increased scrutiny following a decision by the Office Of The Prosecutor (OTP) of the International Criminal Court (ICC) that Palestine is not a State.

Only States can be admitted as members of UNESCO under Clause II Paragraph 2 of UNESCO’s Constitution.

The OTP decision now casts grave doubt on Palestine legally continuing to remain a member of UNESCO.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Qatar: Ad for Qatari Domestic Help Triggers Protests

Insult for emirate’s inhabitants, job too demeaning

(ANSAmed)- DOHA, APRIL 12 — Asking for a citizen of Qatar as domestic help is considered to be an offence and an insult to tradition and the social status women have in the country. This becomes evident from the news reported today by newspapers in Doha about an employment agency that has been heavily criticised for publishing an advertisement for a domestic help, a Qatari citizen. Many citizens have shown their outrage about this initiative, and a candidate for the local elections, Fatima Al Kuwari, has even asked to open an inquiry. Professors, commentators and many other members of civil society have voiced their opinion on the issue in the emirate. “This advertisement is an insult to the dignity of citizens and their social status,” journalist Faisal Al Marzooqi wrote in newspaper Al Arab. “This ad goes against Qatar’s values and traditions. I am certain that no woman in Qatar will respond to this announcement and if someone should do so, we should investigate why and give her all the financial support she needs,” said Abdul Azeez Al Mulla, professor in Qatar.

The citizens of Qatar have no economic problems: they are the wealthiest in the world with a per-head GDP of more than 102,000 USD in 2011. Work seems to be no problem either because of the country’s unemployment rate of just 0.6% in 2011. The government has launched a programme in an attempt to increase the number of Qatari citizens that are hired in the country. Only 20% of Qatar’s population has the country’s passport. The employment agency has offered an apology, admitting that it has made a “mistake”. The agency explained that they were looking for a woman with a residence permit for Qatar, not a Qatari citizen. Still, the press points out, many people are asking for the withdrawal of the agency’s licence.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria: Lebanese Soldiers Defect, Join Rebels

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, APRIL 11 — Two soldiers from the Lebanese Army have defected and joined the rebels of the Free Syrian Army (FSA). The unprecedented news appeared this morning in the Beirut daily As-Safir, which quoted “well informed” sources close to the two soldiers.

The incident occurred on the Lebanese border of Wadi Khaled, where some of the inhabitants have long held both Syrian and Lebanese citizenship. In the Wadi Khaled border posts, some Lebanese soldiers are deployed that actually live over the border.

Two of the latter, according to the Beirut daily, defected on April 1 while on leave and “did not come back” to their divisions. The Lebanese Army has interrogated the family members of the two soldiers and, a few days later, the commanding officer received a text message on his cell phone: “Our greetings from the Syrian city of Qseir”. Qseir is a town of 40,000 inhabitants in the Homs region bordering Wadi Khaled. “I and my fellow soldier have joined the Free Army and we are fighting against the Syrian regime,” was the second part of the message, according to the newspaper.

As-Safir noted that the Lebanese authorities immediately informed their Syrian counterparts of the defection.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria’s Minorities Unite Against Assad

Syria’s minority groups, until now artificially divided, have united against the Assad regime. If wisely managed, this provisional union could lead to a lasting alliance.

Syria is a diverse country. Located on the border between the Arab and Turkish cultures, the country has seen many different population groups settle there over the millennia.

Most have been followers of Islam, a diverse religion that unites them, but at the same time, also divides them. About three-quarters of Syrians are Sunni Muslims, while about one tenth, including the ruling Assad family, belong to the Shiite Alawites. And then there are the religions linked to Islam, which include Druze, Ismailism, Alevi and Twelver Shiitism, which together make up about 7 percent.

Along with the Muslims, there are also the Christians. They, too, are a mixed group: Greek, Roman Catholic and Syrian Orthodox branches, Maronites, Melkites, Armenian Apostolics and members of the Chaldean Catholic Church. They make up about 15 percent of the roughly 21 million Syrians.

Aside from religious differences, there are also the ethnic minorities: Kurds, Turkmen, Circassians and Armenians, among others. In addition, the last few decades have seen roughly 600,000 Palestinian and Iraqi refugees enter the country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: China Lands 1 Bln USD Wind Power Deal

(ANSAmed) — ISTANBUL, APRIL 12 — By 2023, Turkey is aiming to get 30% of its energy from renewable sources and, in addition to lowering its environmental impact, wants to reduce its dependence on other nations for energy. And so — as Green Chip Stocks website reports — Istanbul’s Agaoglu Group, a construction, tourism, and energy company, is working with China’s Sinovel Wind Group Co. to build a 600-megawatt wind farm. The farm will be worth 1 billion USD and Sinovel will supply, among other things, the turbines and generators. Terms of the deal have not yet been released. Chinese companies like Sinovel are expanding abroad for business, as competition within China is stiff. Just last year Sinovel signed an agreement with Public Power Corp., a Greek company. And as for Turkey, Agaoglu chairman Ali Agaoglu believes that the nation must move forward in clean energy investments at a faster pace in order to reach the 2023 goal of 30%. At the end of last year, Turkey had a total of 1,799 megawatts in wind energy. Agaoglu wants 1,000 megawatts of power in the next three years, and in March the company was dealing with eight investors for a total of 147 megawatts of wind. Agaoglu has licenses for 700 megawatts of wind power that it hopes to set into motion soon.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UAE: Peace Convention Begins Today

DUBAI — The second edition of the Dubai International Peace Convention begins today with the objective of sharing ideas and solutions that help cultivate a peaceful world in which the concepts of equality and moderation urged by the Islamic religion are respected. This event, being held under the patronage of His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, envisions that it will enhance religious understanding within an environment characterised by mutual respect. This humanitarian drive will be fuelled by tolerance and benefit all world’s religions, not just Islam.

The convention will host a group of internationally-respected figures who have upheld the Islamic faith through their participation in various lectures, inter-faith dialogues and activities. They are all united under one goal: to encourage pure thought that is not tainted by any fallacies, mistrust or misconceptions of any kind. This is, therefore, an opportunity to spread liberal thoughts and proposals. Among the internationally known names at this conference are Sheikh Abdul Rahman Sudais, Grand Imam of the Grand Mosque; and Sheikh Mashary, guest of honour at the convention. They will lead worshipers in prayer tomorrow. The convention will conclude on April 14.

The other speakers include Dr Zakir Naik, one of the most prominent scholars of Islam and Comparative Religion. He will be joined by great orators like Sheikh Yusuf Estes, Sheikh Abdur Raheem Green, Sheikh Tawfiq Chowdhury, Sheikh Mohammad Sharif, Sheikh Abdul Bari Yahya, Sheikh Hussein Yee, and acclaimed lawyer Mayan Kutty Mather, as well as other leading humanitarians and thinkers.

[…]

[JP note: A bizarre phantasmagoria of the mad, the bad and the ugly. The convention will undoubtedly conclude that only a Pax Islamica can save the world from itself.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UAE: Iranian President’s Visit to Island Raises Tension

‘Flagrant violation of sovereignty, shows Tehran’s falsity’

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI — The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has spoken out harshly against the surprise visit by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad yesterday to the Abu Musa island, raising the level of the already tense relations between the Islamic republic of Iran and its Arab neighbours amid the tug-of-war between Tehran and the international community over Iran’s disputed nuclear ambitions. “This was a flagrant violation of UAE sovereignty and its territories,” said UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah Bin Zayed in a statement released by the press agency WAM, calling it an act “of provocation”. Along with two other small islands (Greater and Lesser Tunb) Abu Musa is part of a tiny, rocky archipelago measuring just over 24 square kilometres but rich in energy resources and strategically located at the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 40% of the world’s oil transits.

Beyond the UAE-Iran dispute, Ahmadinejad’s visit (the first ever by an Iranian head of state to the archipelago) has much larger significance considering Tehran’s repeated threats to seal the Strait of Hormuz in response to harsher international sanctions due to its programme for nuclear energy for non-military uses, which the international community instead believes has military ends.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Leading Muslim Public Figure Killed in Moscow

A leading Muslim public figure has been killed in Moscow, RIA Novosti reported citing a police source. Metin Mekhtiev, 33, the former head of international department of the Islamic Cultural Center of Russia, was found dead early on Tuesday, April 10 near downtown Moscow’s Belorussky train terminal, the source said. “He had stab wounds on the neck and face,” he added. According to preliminary data, Mekhtiev — an Azerbaijani national — was killed as he was was waiting for the arrival of his wife and two-month-old son. Mekhtiev was also active in social work with students and youths from the Caucasus region, the Aze.az website said. The head of Moscow’s Islamic Cultural Centre, Abdul-Wahid Niyazov, slammed the murder as “brutal, barbaric and medieval.” He also said a gang of five young people, including a young woman, had attacked Mekhtiev. Police have given no details on a possible motive, but bloggers have speculated on a link to far-right nationalists. Russia has seen a dramatic rise in nationalist sentiments since the break-up of the Soviet Union. Racial violence led to the deaths of 21 people of “non-Slavic appearance” in 2011, a decline from 42 in 2010, according to the Sova organization, which monitors race-hate attacks in Russia.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Punks Against Putin Face Prison Sentence

Human rights activists are calling for the release of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot. The three feminists are facing up to seven years in prison following a performance against Putin in a Moscow cathedral.

In Russia, Vladimir Putin is not to be messed with. Especially not when a protest against the prime minister and future president happens to take place in one of the country’s most important Russian Orthodox cathedrals.

It’s a lesson that Maria Alyokhina, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Yekaterina Samusevich have recently had to learn.

The three members of the feminist punk band Pussy Riot have been in prison since the beginning of March. They face the possibility of up to seven years jail time — all because of a punk performance against Putin at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow on February 21, 2012. They were later accused of trying to denounce the close ties between Russian politics and the Orthodox Church.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Russians Want Dialogue Between Kremlin and Protestors

Protests in Russia over recent elections have impressed the international community. But will they also have a lasting effect on Russian society? That was just one question a DW-Trend poll has sought to answer.

A vast majority of Russian citizens, or 89 percent, is familiar with the national protests against election fraud and in favor of greater democracy, a DW study for April has found. The Ukrainian polling firm IFAK, which DW hired to carry out the inquiry, had surveyed a representative sample of 1,000 people between the ages of 18 and 65 from all over Russia.

As to the protest movement itself, it’s being supported by a large segment of the population and not only by a small minority, as the Kremlin had claimed. According to the poll, 32 percent of Russians support the protests, while 44 percent do not. As such, there is no clear majority opinion. About a quarter of the population remains undecided on the issue.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Drug-Resistant Malaria Spreads Across Thailand

MALARIA parasites in west Thailand are becoming resistant to artemisinins — the world’s most effective antimalarial drugs. The march of increasingly drug-resistant malaria across the country has sparked fears that it could reach Africa, where 90 per cent of all malaria deaths occur.

Increasing resistance to artemisinins was first identified in Cambodia in 2006, and is now common along its border with eastern Thailand.

Nicholas White of Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand, and colleagues looked for signs of resistance in 3200 patients from clinics on Thailand’s western border. They did so by measuring how long it takes for the number of malaria parasites in a person’s blood to halve. With artemisinin treatment, this should take around 2 hours. In Cambodia, it now takes around 5.5 hours.

On Thailand’s western border, this figure rose from 2.6 hours in 2001 to 3.7 hours in 2010. The percentage of infections that clear very slowly — 6.2 hours or more — soared from 0.6 per cent of all patients in 2001 to 20 per cent in 2010. “If it carries on, we will lose the use of these drugs,” says White.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India: the Baby Killed Because it Was a Girl

Three-month-old Afreen gives up fight for life after being ‘brutalised by her own father’ for not being born a boy

For about a week, she tried hard to hold on and fight hard. But allegedly brutalised by her father for being born a girl, she stood little chance.

Baby Neha Afreen died after a cardiac arrest in a government hospital in Bangalore on Wednesday morning.

The three-month-old baby was admitted to the Vani Vilas Hospital on Thursday night, April 5, with a severe head injury, dislocated neck and bite and burn marks on her body.

Her father Umar Farooq, a car painter, is accused of inflicting the injuries on her because he wanted a male child.

Though Afreen had showed signs of recovery on Tuesday, her condition deteriorated by evening because of repeated convulsions.

‘She was in semi-comatose state since Tuesday evening. We had put her on life support system. Unfortunately, she could not make it,’ said Dr Some Gowda, medical superintendent of the hospital.

The hospital authorities were awaiting a team of doctors from the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences for assistance because the baby had suffered internal head injuries.

But Afreen could no longer fight. She had hurried respiration of 30-40 per minute against the normal 20-25 and also pathycardia, or increased heart rate.

She breathed her last at 11.10 am shortly after a cardiac arrest.

The baby’s mother, 19-year-old Reshma Banu, was inconsolable when the doctors broke the news to her. Afreen was her only child and she had been in a state of shock since Thursday.

Reshma claims that her 37-year-old drunkard husband used to beat her up since Afreen was born.

Last Thursday, he came home drunk in the evening and abused her again for giving birth to a girl.

When Reshma went off to sleep, Farooq is accused of stuffing clothes into Afreen’s mouth to muffle her cries and hitting her with a blunt object.

Reshma, who woke up in the middle of the night, saw the baby suffering convulsions.

She informed her husband, who appeared uninterested. When the baby vomited blood, Farooq fled.

With the help of her neighbours, Reshma hospitalised Afreen. It’s alleged Farooq had assaulted the child twice in the past but Reshma did not complain because she wanted to save the marriage.

Once, he had bitten the baby. On another occasion, Reshma found cigarette burn marks on her forehead and back.

Reshma was initially afraid of approaching the police. The hospital authorities informed the Child Welfare Committee, which prevailed upon her to lodge a complaint against her husband.

Farooq, who went absconding after the alleged assault of his own daughter, was arrested on Sunday and is now in judicial custody till April 21. He will now face murder charges.

The Karnataka state commission for protection of child rights demanded that Afreen’s death be treated as a murder case because the attack on the baby was intentional.

The state human rights commission has sent a notice to Bangalore city police commissioner B. G. Jyothi Prakash Mirji to personally oversee the case and report in two weeks.

National Commission for Protection of Child Rights chairperson Shantha Sinha demanded speedy action against the father.

Killing of the female foetus and the girl child is rampant in India where even the educated and the rich are known to prefer male child.

According to the 2011 Census report, the sex ratio in India stands at 914 females per 1,000 males.

A Unicef report said sex selective abortion by unethical medical professionals has grown into a Rs 1,000-crore industry.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



India: Hang Baby’s Dad, Say City’s Muslim Leaders

Jumma Masjid Imam wishes the man could be stoned so that ‘he knows the pain of burning a young child with a cigarette’

‘I wish we could stone him to death,” said Imam Abdul Khader Shah of Jumma Masjid, Bangalore’s oldest mosque, of the man who brutally killed his three-month-old daughter for not being a boy. When news of Baby Afreen’s death broke out on Wednesday, so great was the anger in the city that even the Imam could not stop his emotional reaction when speaking to Bangalore Mirror. Mincing no words about Umar Farooq, the religious leader said, “He is what we call a zaalim, the most cruel of them all, to kill an innocent child. According to Sharia Law, death by stoning (sansar) is permitted only for adulterers. But I wish we were allowed to stone him to death. He should know the pain of burning a young child with a cigarette when a stone hits him. As the Sharia Law stands, he can be whipped. And this should be carried out so that nobody dares to hurt a child again. Children are God’s gift and we have to accept them irrespective of gender. This man not only killed a child, but also ruined the lives of two women. How long can we stay silent and watch women being treated this way,” the Imam asked.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Muslim Militants Attack Christians, Several Injured

CALCUTTA, INDIA (BosNewsLife) — Christians in India’s eastern West Bengal state were recovering of their injuries Thursday, April 12, after Muslim militants broke up a prayer meeting and beat up believers, including women, local police and Christians said. The March 30 attack in the village of Nutangram in Murshidabad district involved “about 100 Muslim radicals” led by Muslim leader Mohammed Aanu Shaike, local Christians explained.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indian Court Sentences Gujarat Rioters to Life

A court in India has sentenced 18 people to life imprisonment for the murder of Muslims in religious riots in Gujarat state 10 years ago. Five others were given seven years and another 23 were acquitted earlier. The group were found guilty of burning 23 Muslims to death in a house where they had taken shelter from rioting mobs in the village of Ode.

More than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, died when riots erupted after a train fire killed 60 Hindu pilgrims in 2002. It was one of India’s worst outbreaks of religious violence in recent years. Muslims were blamed for starting the train fire, and Hindu mobs eager for revenge went on the rampage through Muslim neighbourhoods in towns and villages across Gujarat in three days of violence following the incident. A lawyer for the convicted said they would appeal in a higher court.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: British PM Warns of Islamic Extremism on Asian Trip

The Prime Minister has called for democracy and Islam to work hand in hand against extremism, during a landmark speech in Indonesia. David Cameron said the world’s largest Muslim country is proof that the religion is compatible with democracy. But he warned that Islamic extremists must not be allowed to pervert fledgling democracies and persecute minorities. Delivering the speech, Mr Cameron insisted the shift away from authoritarianism made by the world’s most populous Muslim state was an example to those caught up in the Arab Spring. But he also highlighted the dangers facing new democracies such as Egypt, where Islamic political parties have significant support. “Let me be absolutely clear: I am not talking about Islam. Islam is a religion observed peacefully and devoutly by over a billion people,” he told students at Al Azhar university in Jakarta. “And let me also be clear: extremism is not only found among Muslims. But there is a problem across the globe with Islamist extremism which is a political ideology supported by a minority. And this total rejection of debate and democratic consent means they believe that democracy and Islam are incompatible.” Mr Cameron explained that Britain has suffered from extremism and terror, and that Indonesia has become a model country in fighting the problem.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Muslims ‘Must Embrace Democracy’ Says David Cameron

Muslims must embrace democracy and respect the rights of Christians around the world, David Cameron will say.

Speaking in Indonesia, the world’s largest Islamic country, the Prime Minister will urge young Muslims to abandon “the dead-end choice of dictatorship and extremism” by forcing their countries to hold elections. He will claim it would be “the greatest defeat that Al Qaeda could ever suffer,” if more rebel and follow the lead of the young Muslims who sparked the Arab Spring. Mr Cameron will express his concern for the rights of millions of Christians, especially in Egypt, where the Coptic minority say they are facing increasing persecution. In a strong rebuke to Egypt’s powerful Muslim Brotherhood party, Mr Cameron will demand it does not “deny the rights of religious minorities who do not share their specific religious views”. Egypt’s Coptic community, which accounts for 10 per cent of the country’s 80 million population, has been subjected to a continuous campaign of sectarian attacks since the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak last February. Thirteen were killed last May and another 10 two months before in attacks by suspected Islamists.

Addressing students at Al Azhar University, Mr Cameron will use Indonesia as an example of how Islam and democracy can go hand in hand. The country became a democracy in 1998 after years of a military dictatorship. It has successfully fought extremism since a bomb in Bali killed more than 200 in 2002. While praising Indonesia’s efforts to modernise, he will argue that there are still four big “opponents who threaten our shared interests” — authoritarian leaders, corrupt elites, extremists and tribalists. He will say democracy has the ability to defeat these “dangerous foes”, such as the murderous authoritarian regime in Syria, even though they will “do everything in their power to defeat us”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Modi’s Clearance in the Gujarat Riots Case Angers Indian Muslims

A special panel of the Indian Supreme Court probing the deadly 2002 Gujarat riots says there is no evidence that Gujarat’s Chief Minister Narendra Modi had a role in the massacre.

Zakia Jafri, wife of the slain Indian minister Ehsaan Jafri, who was killed in the western Indian state of Gujarat over a decade ago, said she was shocked when the Metropolitan Magistrate M.S. Bhatt read out the findings of the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) report on the Gujarat bloodbath. The report gave Gujarat’s Chief Minister Narendra Modi a clean chit, saying there was no evidence to implicate Modi and 61 others accused of playing a role in the riots.

On 27 February, 2002, a Muslim mob allegedly set fire to the Sabarmati Express train. The train had been carrying Hindu pilgrims returning from Ayodhya, where 10 years before Hindu nationalists had destroyed the centuries-old Babri Mosque. Then the whole state went up in flames as Hindu extremists allegedly took their revenge on Muslims, killing some 1,000 people, mainly Muslims, in retaliatory attacks. The killing only died down several days later when the army was called in.

Right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) leader Narendra Modi, who was also chief minister of Gujarat at the time, was accused of ordering the police not to intervene.

“I am heartbroken, but I am not going to give up. I will fight for justice as long as I am alive. In the court of the Lord, justice can be delayed but cannot be denied,” Zakia told DW.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Court Shows Displeasure Over Police Official

Islamabad, 12 April (AKI/Dawn) — While hearing a case related to the law and order situation in Balochistan, Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry showed his displeasure over the absence of senior police official in the Supreme Court.

A three-member bench headed by the chief justice was hearing the case here on Thursday.

Chaudhry had summoned Inspector General (IG) Balochistan and relevant Superintendent Police (SP) in the court earlier today on an immediate notice.

“If the police officials failed to comply with the court’s order, they will be sent to jail,” he had warned.

He censured the law enforcement agencies for their incompetency in maintaining peace in the province and remarked that the courts are being kept uninformed about the factual details.

“Balochistan is on fire but the officials are mere spectators to it,” Chaudhry remarked.

While talking about the issue of ministers involved in kidnapping for ransom, the chief justice said if Balochistan Home Minister is falsely accusing some ministers for kidnapping cases then the home minister should be arrested.

Seven people have been killed since we came from Quetta,” he observed.

In another relevant development, three people who had been recovered from Kuchlak area were presented before the court.

They narrated their ordeal before the bench and said: “We were abducted from Quetta at night; we were blindfolded and then kept at some unknown location for about 40 days.”

The court issued release orders for the three recovered people and directed the police to safely escort them to their homes.

The court also ordered the police to inform the court before arresting them in future.

The court later summoned Inspector General (IG) Balochistan and relevant Superintendent Police (SP) and a Station House Officer tomorrow.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Policy: Bold Strategies for Indian Science

For a nation of its talent and education, India deserves higher scientific standing. It needs clear and honest leadership, not more money, says Gautam R. Desiraju.

When an Indian prime minister publicly admits that India has fallen behind China, it is news. Manmohan Singh’s statement last January at the Indian Science Congress in Bhubaneswar that this is so with respect to scientific research, and that “India’s relative position in the world of science has been declining”, has rung alarm bells. Singh was not springing anything new on Indian scientists; many of us will admit that things are not well. Recognizing the problem is the first step towards reversing this slide.

At present, India has a trickle-down strategy, in which elite institutions are supported in the hope that good science there will energize the masses, and a bottom-up approach, in which the general public is targeted with schemes to popularize science.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China’s Stem-Cell Rules Go Unheeded

Health ministry’s attempt at regulation has had little effect.

Three months after the Chinese health ministry ramped up its efforts to enforce a ban on the clinical use of unapproved stem-cell treatments, a Nature investigation reveals that businesses around the country are still charging patients thousands of dollars for these unproven therapies.

The clinics operate openly, with websites promoting the treatments for serious disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, diabetes and autism, and attract thousands of medical tourists from overseas. They advertise case studies of individual patients who they say have benefited from the treatments, and some have clinics in major hospital complexes, giving them an air of mainstream acceptance. Stem-cell experts contacted by Nature insist that such therapies are not ready for the clinic and say that some may even endanger patients’ health. But the Chinese government is struggling to enforce its ban.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New Sony Chief Reboots Business Strategy, Cuts Jobs and Costs

Change has become the buzzword at the Japanese electronics giant, after its new CEO Kazuo Hirai announced a major restructuring drive aimed at staunching massive losses. Layoffs are part of Sony’s survival strategy. Japan’s electronics maker Sony would cut about 10,000 jobs and shed lossmaking businesses to regain profitability, Chief Executive Kazuo Hirai announced Thursday.

After taking over as Sony CEO from Howard Stringer this month, Hirai said he was prepared to take “painful steps,” aimed at cutting fixed costs in the company’s ailing TV business by 60 percent over the business year starting in March 2013. In addition, operating costs are to be reduced by 30 percent under the restructuring program, costing Sony about $926 million (712 million euros) in the current fiscal year, he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket: Reports

North Korea has launched its controversial rocket carrying a weather satellite, South Korea’s Defence Ministry and US officials said.

A spokesman for the Defence Ministry in Seoul told reporters at a briefing that the launch at taken place from North Korea’s Sohae Satellite Launching Station at 7.39am local time and that South Korea and the United States were checking whether it had been a success.

The launch has drawn international criticism and threats to shoot the rocket down as well as sabotaged a food aid deal with the United States.

The Unha-3 rocket took off from a new launch site on the west coast of North Korea, near the Chinese border, and if successful will enhance Pyongyang’s ability to build an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead, critics say.

The three-stage rocket’s flight path will take it over the sea between the Korean peninsula and China, where the first stage is due to splash down. A second stage is due to land in waters off the Philippines.

The launch had been timed to coincide with the 100th birthday celebrations of the isolated and impoverished state’s founder, Kim Il-sung, and came after a food aid deal with the United States had hinted at an easing of tensions on the world’s most militarised border.

North Korea’s government has said the action was part of celebrations and was not a long-range missile test. South Korean President Lee Myung Bak called an emergency Cabinet meeting in response

[Return to headlines]



North Korean Rocket Launch Fails

A North Korean rocket broke apart shortly after being launched from its base today, according to U.S., Japanese and South Korean officials.

Japan’s defense ministry said the rocket flew for just over a minute.

A South Korean defense ministry spokesman said, “The missile separated into several pieces and fell.”

The ministry said the rocket traveled about 70 miles into the air, then split into four pieces and fell. Major parts fell into the North Korean side of the sea and debris fell into the Gunsan Sea off the southwest coast of South Korea.

There were no immediate reports of debris falling onto land.

U.S. officials told The Times that the rocket did not travel as far as a long-range missile tested by North Korea in 2009. The Kwangmyongsong-2 rocket launched in 2009 was said to have traveled about 2,000 miles.

[Return to headlines]



Philippines Withdraws Warship From China Standoff

The Philippines has pulled back its biggest warship from a tense standoff with Chinese vessels. The two countries are trying to avoid an escalation in the conflict over disputed territory in the South China Sea.

Manila withdrew the warship and instead deployed a coast guard vessel to the area, said Philippines Foreign Minister Albert Del Rosario on Thursday, adding that China had sent a ship from Beijing’s fisheries bureau.

“We’re watching developments and at the same time we’re pursuing the diplomatic track,” Del Rosario said. “We’re moving forward but it’s still a work in progress.”

Diplomats were apparently trying to negotiate a pragmatic solution to the standoff that would allow both sides to save face.

The conflict began on Sunday when a Philippine Navy plane spotted eight Chinese fishing boots anchored in a lagoon at the Scarborough Shoal, which lies off the coast of the northwestern tip of the Philippine province.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



South China Sea: Common Stance Against Beijing’s Imperialism

Hanoi backs Manila, hoping for a multilateral approach in settling disputes with China. The Chinese Navy has been holding Vietnamese fishermen as hostages for weeks demanding ransom money for their release. Off the coast of the Filipino island of Luzon, the Filipino Navy is confronting Chinese vessels.

Hanoi (AsiaNews) — Hanoi backs Manila, hoping for a multilateral approach to settling conflicts with Beijing in the South China Sea, an area that is at the centre of fierce dispute over resources. This is one of the outcomes of a recent summit in Cambodia by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Mr. Benigno Aquino, president of the Philippines, suggested that the ten-nation association “maintain a common stance” vis-à-vis China, which favours instead bilateral deals with the various stakeholders. Meanwhile Filipino and Chinese warships remain engaged in a naval confrontation off the island of Luzon, a situation that can only increase tensions in the area.

Vietnam accuses the Chinese of holding 21 Vietnamese fishermen it captured inside Vietnamese territorial waters, demanding a US$ 11,000 ransom for each. Vietnam’s appeal for their release has been ignored.

L?c, a fisherman from Lý Son Island, said that people are very angry with the “cruel Chinese”. He insists that the Paracel Islands belong to Viet Nam.

Lê th? H?u, 31, said her husband Nguy?n L?i, 34, was arrested by China’s Navy. “I am worried for the fishermen,” she added, “because they are often beaten by Chinese naval forces.”

The confrontation over resources in the sea now involves India. In the past week, Beijing warned New Delhi that “India should not explore and exploit [resources] in the South East Asia.”

The statement follows a series of agreements signed by the Indian and Vietnamese governments, which grants Indian oil companies exploration rights in Vietnamese territorial waters. In response, New Delhi informed Beijing that the affected area is under Vietnam’s exclusive jurisdiction.

Meanwhile, a high-profile confrontation between Filipino and Chinese warships continue, involving the Filipino Navy’s flagship vessel.

On Sunday, the ship caught eight Chinese fishing boats in Filipino territorial waters, about 120 nautical miles off the coast of Luzon Island. Two Chinese maritime surveillance ships sailed to the disputed area on Tuesday and blocked efforts by the Filipino ship to arrest the fishermen.

On Wednesday, the Chinese embassy in Manila released a statement afternoon insisting the area belonged to China, and ordering the Filipino warship to leave immediately.

The Philippines says it has sovereign rights over areas of the sea within its 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone, and that its position is supported by international law.

Among Asia-Pacific nations, China has the most extensive territorial claims in the South China Sea.

Regional hegemony would be strategically important for Beijing because it would allow it to control the region’s trade and natural resources, such as oil and natural gas.

Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have challenged China’s expansionist aims, backed by the United States.

In the past few months, a number of incidents have occurred involving warships and fishing vessels from different nations.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



The Mysterious Fall of China’s Bo Xilai

A political scandal has rocked China: Bo Xilai, former party secretary in Chongqing, has lost his position in the Politburo. Before a change of power this fall, the Communist Party is trying to show a united front.

On Tuesday at precisely 11 p.m. Beijing time, a statement from China’s official news agency Xinhua confirmed the rumors that had been circulating online for days: Bo Xilai, who until mid-February had been Communist Party secretary of Chongqing, China’s largest city, had lost his seat in the Politburo and the Central Committee of China’s Communist Party. Bo had been the charismatic hope of the so-called New Left, the son of a famous revolutionary veteran and figurehead of the upper caste of “princelings,”

With the news, Bo’s meteoric political rise came to an abrupt end. His wife, Gu Kailai, is under investigation for the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood, who was found dead last November in a Chongqing hotel room. According to Xinhua, the two had a business disagreement. The official diagnosis of Heywood’s death was alcohol poisoning, but the body was quickly cremated without an autopsy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


UK: Afghan Refugee Who Said Raping Woman Was Part of ‘Cultural Differences’ Is Jailed for 14 Years

An Afghan man who fled from the Taliban to begin a new life in Australia will spend the next 14 years behind bars after a judge rejected his claim that cultural differences had led to him raping a woman.

Esmatullah Sharifi, 30, was told by Judge Mark Dean in Melbourne that his background as a traumatised Muslim refugee was no excuse for the rape of a drunken and vulnerable teenager.

The judge noted that a psychologist had told the Victoria County Court in Melbourne that Sharifi, who arrived in Australia in 2001, had an ‘unclear concept of what constitutes consent in sexual relationships’.

Rejecting that argument, the judge said Sharifi’s background and flight from the Taliban was not an excuse for violence, telling the Afghan: ‘You well knew the victim was not consenting to the act of sexual penetration you performed.’

It was not the first time that Sharifi had appeared in court on a rape charge — in 2009 he was jailed for a minimum of seven years for the abduction and sexual assault of a woman on Christmas Eve, 2008 — five days after he had raped the teenager.

Already serving seven years imprisonment for that offence, he was now charged with raping the 18-year-old who he had found alone, intoxicated and sitting on the pavement near a nightclub after she had had a disagreement with her friends.

Sharifi, the judge said, had driven from his home that night in December looking for a victim.

He sat down beside the teenager, began talking to her and offered to drive her to a hotel where her friends had moved on to.

But when he drove off in a different direction, the young woman became concerned and texted her friends — until Sharifi took her phone and drove to a dark street.

The teenager cried and asked if he planned to kill her. He replied by putting his hand around her neck and forcing her to remove her clothes before raping her.

‘Your offending is of the utmost seriousness,’ said Judge Dean.

‘You preyed upon a young vulnerable stranger who was alone and intoxicated at night. Your brutal conduct must be denounced by this court.’

Sharifi, who pleaded guilty to rape, will serve a sentence that includes his jailing for the second sexual attack. It was DNA from that second offence that led to him being charged with the earlier rape of the teenager.

With a maximum sentence of 14 years set, he will have to serve a minimum of 11 years and will be eligible for parole in seven years and eight months.

He is likely to be deported back to Afghanistan when he has served his sentence.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Despair is Sometimes the Only Possible Response

There are times when the only appropriate response to events is despair. Yes, this week the European Court of Human Rights approved the extradition to the US of five terrorist suspects. But it’s mystifying how anyone can take cheer. The idea that as a free country we should have such decisions placed in the hands of foreign judges who make their rulings on the basis of a fundamentally flawed convention is so patently unsatisfactory that I cannot, I’m afraid, bring myself to react with anything other than anger to the whole farce.

This is the same court, of course, which has also ruled that Abu Qatada cannot be deported to Jordan. So when it comes to praise for the ECHR’s judgment over Abu Hamza and his colleagues, I say “thanks but no thanks”.

Indeed, any smidgeon of relief brought on by this week’s ECHR ruling is dwarfed by the immigration court victory of Raed Salah. Or, to be more precise, by the reasoning of the judge responsible for Salah’s win, Mr Justice Ockelton, and the outpouring of bile that followed the decision. Central to Sheikh Salah’s case has been his outright denial that his words in a 2007 sermon about children’s blood being used to bake “holy bread” was a reference to the blood libel. The judge found that Salah’s claims were “wholly unpersuasive”. As the judgment put it “We do not find this comment could be taken to be anything other than a reference to the blood libel against Jews.” And yet in the judge’s reasoning, this mattered not a jot. Salah is a welcome visitor to the country.

Decadent doesn’t even come close to describing a state of affairs in which an Islamic preacher can make reference to the blood libel but the judiciary tells him that such remarks are irrelevant to his fitness to be granted entry. According to the judgment, such views are “not at the heart of the appellant’s message” and “it is not easy to see that any reasonable observer would associate the appellant with them in any general sense”. Clearly in Mr Justice Ockelton’s mind it’s unreasonable to associate a man who preaches a sermon based on the blood libel with, er, the blood libel. Go figure.

In the end, Salah himself is an irrelevance. Rabble rousers like him are ten a penny. The importance of his case is symbolic, because it is of a piece with so much else. When the hate preacher Yusuf al-Qaradawi was invited to City Hall by Ken Livingstone, what was his party’s response? To reselect him as its mayoral candidate. When anti-Israel campaigners went on the rampage, destroying the property of a company they claimed has ties to Israel, what was the response of the criminal justice system? Judge Bathurst-Norman did not merely acquit but praised the men. And when Michael Gove earmarked extra funds to protect Jewish children from violent racist attacks, how did a supposedly progressive newspaper — the Guardian — react? By attacking, on entirely fabricated sleaze charges, the role of the Community Security Trust, the organisation responsible for protecting Jews.

As if in an unbroken thread, the CST is under fire again, this time on the back of the Salah appeal judgment, with Mr Justice Ockelton saying that the Home Secretary was misled.

His words have given free rein to a barrage of conspiracists, who are not merely implying but trumpeting the idea that CST — in other words, the Jews — pushed a deceitful agenda to get a perfectly upstanding citizen removed from the UK because he dared to criticise Israel. Yet it wasn’t the CST that pushed the Home Office into anything. It was the Home Office that asked CST for information about Salah. And it was CST who provided the Home Office with the original copy of the disputed 2002 poem in Arabic and English translation. As CST says: “Nobody else provided this information either to the government or to the immigration tribunal, despite the fact that we obtained it all from public sources.” But this is Jews we are talking about, so the default reaction of so many is to push the idea of a conspiracy, whatever the facts.

Despair is, initially at least, an impotent reaction. It doesn’t offer a plan of action. It doesn’t change anything. But until we react appropriately to what is going on around us, we don’t have a chance of changing anything. And I challenge anyone not to despair about the events of this week.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: PM Retreats on Kicking Out Foreign Criminals Including Burglars and Violent Thieves

David Cameron has abandoned a pledge to deport thousands of foreign criminals, including burglars, violent thugs and thieves.

The Tory leader had promised in Opposition to change immigration rules so prisoners from outside the EU were automatically sent home — even those serving short jail terms.

Currently around 7,000 foreign offenders a year escape deportation because they have been handed a sentence of less than 12 months.

But the Government has admitted it is only tightening the rules so that drug dealers serving less than a year are automatically deported.

It means other offenders, including violent thugs and benefit fraudsters, will still not be kicked out. The revelation comes after MPs criticised the UK Border Agency — responsible for processing foreign criminals and illegal immigrants — for not doing enough to kick out ex-prisoners.

Its report showed just 40 per cent of foreign criminals released from prison in a border scandal six years ago have been sent home.

In 2006, 1,013 foreign nationals were let out without being considered for deportation. By November last year, just 397 had been deported and more than 50 had still not been found.

Mr Cameron’s pledge came four years ago after a leaked internal prisons memo showed immigration officials had ‘no interest’ in deporting short sentence prisoners.

In response, a Tory policy document, called Prisons With A Purpose, published in 2007, said: ‘We will accelerate the deportation of foreign national prisoners before the end of their sentences and extend automatic deportation to non-EU prisoners serving less than a year.’

The Lib Dems have also pledged in the past to toughen up the rules.

It is estimated extending deportation to ‘all eligible foreign nationals’ would mean an extra 7,000 would face proceedings every year. In 2010, 5,342 foreign criminals were sent home, compared with 5,530 in 2009.

In a Parliamentary written answer, the Home Office said the 12 months or less policy remains in force.

Immigration Minister Damian Green added that an exception is made if a judge recommends an offender for deportation, or if the criminal has a string of convictions within the past five years.

In addition, drug offenders face automatic deportation for any crime other than possession, even for short sentences.

Tory MP Priti Patel, who asked the question, said: ‘The Government should make every effort to ensure all foreign criminals are deported. They are a huge drain on the criminal justice system.’

Ministers recently toughened rules on sending home European Economic Area nationals.

They are deported if they have served a custodial sentence of 12 months or more for drugs, violence or sex crimes and of two years for all other offences.

Home Secretary Theresa May has expressed her determination to stop foreign criminals using human rights laws to remain in the country.

In 2010 nearly 400 won appeals against deportation using Article 8, the right to a private and family life.

In the past decade, the number of foreign nationals in prison in England and Wales has nearly doubled to 10,866 in last December.

A UK Border Agency spokesman said: ‘Those who come to the UK must abide by our laws. We will always seek to deport any foreign criminal sentenced to more than 12 months as quickly as possible.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: The Sheikh, The Minister and the Shambles

by Marcus Dysch

From start to finish Raed Salah’s deportation has been an utter shambles. The latest ruling — this time from the Upper Immigration Tribunal — arguably only deepens the sense that the authorities have lost control of the case. For Mr Ockelton and his colleagues to have ruled that the blood libel was invoked and admitted that Jews would be offended by Sheikh Salah’s comments, but ultimately found in his favour, only adds to the confusion. What is certain is that this result is truly embarrassing for Theresa May, the Home Office and the UK Border Agency. Once upon a time a minister defeated in this way, and after so many catastrophic errors, would have honourably offered the Prime Minister their resignation.

This result is bound to have implications for the government’s Prevent counter-extremism strategy. At the very least, the next time the Home Secretary is asked to bar a similarly controversial figure she is sure to think back to Sheikh Salah. As the legal wrangling and mud-slinging erupted around him, Sheikh Salah quietly sat it out, waiting for his day in court. YouTube videos show him preparing dinner in the garden of the north west London home at which he was effectively under house arrest, seemingly oblivious to the shockwaves his arrival in Britain had caused. His supporters will see the evidence put before the tribunal as proof of their belief that the government is engaged in a seedy conspiracy, and will use it as further fodder for their misplaced attacks on CST. In reality, Sheikh Salah’s distorted victory is simply the inevitable result of a compilation of cock-ups.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Distant Galaxies Confirm Accelerating Growth of Universe, Dark Energy

The pesky reality that the universe’s expansion is accelerating — an observation that prompted astronomers to invoke an unknown entity called dark energy to explain it — has been further confirmed by new measurements.

Scientists have used cosmic magnifying glasses called gravitational lenses to observe super-bright distant galaxies, giving a measure of how quickly the universe is blowing up like a giant balloon. They found, in agreement with previous measurements, that the universe’s expansion is indeed speeding up over time.

The first measurement of this phenomenon, based on exploding stars called supernovae, was made in the 1990s.

“The accelerated cosmic expansion is one of the central problems in modern cosmology,” Masamune Oguri, of the University of Tokyo’s Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe, said in a statement. “In 2011 the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to the discovery of the accelerated expansion of the universe using observations of distant supernovae. A caution is that this method using supernovae is built on several assumptions, and therefore independent checks of the result are important in order to draw any robust conclusion.”

Scientists still don’t have much of an idea why the universe is not only expanding doing so ever-faster. The gravity of all the mass in the universe would be expected to pull everything back inward, so scientists call whatever force is counteracting gravity “dark energy.”

“Our new result using gravitational lensing not only provides additional strong evidence for the accelerated cosmic expansion, but also is useful for accurate measurements of the expansion speed, which is essential for investigating the nature of dark energy,” Oguri said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120411

Financial Crisis
» 10 Wealthy Italians Have as Much as 3 Mln Poor Ones
» Deal on Taxation of Greek Money in Switzerland Soon
» ECB Says Can Tackle Symptoms But Not Cure Crisis
» Emerging Asia Maintains Boom Despite Western Woes
» Euro-Armageddon is Still Coming, And It’s the Result of Europe’s Insane, One-Size-Fits-None Economic Policy
» European Nations Must be ‘Prudent’ In Comments on Spain: PM
» European Markets Dump Italian and Spanish Assets
» Italy: Nerves Calm Slightly on Italian Bonds
» Italy: Monti’s Mission Hanging on a Thread
» Markets Wary Despite Extra Round of Spanish Cuts
» MEP Cries Foul on Greek Pay-Out to Political Parties
» Nokia Sinks on Profit Warning
» Portuguese Banks Borrow Record Amount From ECB
» Spain: Catalan Municipality Votes Yes on Cannabis Fields
» Spain Can Cope Without Bailout: EU
» UK: IMF Warns of £750bn Pensions Time Bomb
 
USA
» 19 Things That the Talking Heads on Television Are Being Strangely Silent About
» Apple Sued Over Ebook Pricing
» Apple Rolls Past $600-Billion Mark in Tuesday Trading
» Astonishing Video of California Man So Distracted by Sending a Text He Walks Into a Bear
» Attack of the Killer Fungi: Rising Threat Worries Scientists
» Bad Amendments of the 20th Century
» Can Pro-American Right Unite to Defeat Anti-American Left?
» Cops Can Request a Copy of Your Complete Facebook Activity
» NAFTA Partners Take Steps to Boost Trilateral Relationship
» Obama Receives Brazil’s Ex-Terrorist President
» Obama-Romney Race Gets Underway
» Obama Looks to Make Romney the Villain
» Obama Administration Proposes New Effort to Curb Antibiotic Use on US Farms
» Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us
» Trayvon Martin: Disinformation, Fake Reporting Fuelling the Illusion of an ‘American Race War’
» Wounded Romney Set to Take on Obama
» You Can Keep the Change, Part 1
» Zimmerman’s Fla Arrest Follows Puzzling Disappearance; Experts Say He Should Stop Talking
 
Canada
» Royal Canadian Mint to Create Digital Currency
 
Europe and the EU
» Austria: Klimt Up Close
» Bossi Hands in His “Irrevocable” Resignation to the Federal Council; The Party to be Run by a Triumvirate
» Brussels Transport Strike Extended After Fatal Attack
» Bucharest Still Angry About Schengen Refusal
» Central Europe: Fortunately: We Still Have Strudel
» Cinema Confronts the Fear of Islam
» Denmark: “We Need a Real Press!”
» Dutch School Kids Copy US Gang Culture
» France: 300 Women Fined Under Full-Face Veil Ban
» France: Arab Nudes Defy Taboos in Paris Show
» France: Disneyland Paris Turns 20, With Mixed Results
» German Car Makers Race to New Records in March
» Germany: ‘A Koran in Every Home’ Project Makes Waves
» Italy: Lega: Bossi to Maroni, Clean-Up Already Underway
» Italy: Bossi Considers Running Again
» Italy: Probe Into Northern League Finances Opened in Genoa
» Italy: No-TAV Protesters Occupy the Turin-Bardonecchia Highway
» McDonald’s Looks to Lure French With ‘McBaguette’
» Netherlands: Rijksmuseum Distances Itself From Its Islam Cartoon
» Netherlands: Thousands of Volunteers Prop Up Police Forces
» Northern League to Stay Until Padania is Free, Bossi Says
» Norway: Breivik’s Strategy: Secure a Jail Term
» Real Estate: Huge Slump in Property Sales in Cyprus
» Swedes Face Toilet Paper Shortage in Wake of Strike Threat
» Swiss Magazine Under Fire for ‘Racist’ Roma Cover
» Switzerland: Magazine Sued for Racial Incitement
» UK: David Cameron ‘Must Retreat’ On Charities, Senior Tory MPs Warn
» UK: How Dare a Foreign Court Tell us What to Do?
» UK: The Honey Trap: How the Demise of Britain’s Bees Could Cost US £1.8billion a Year
» UK: The Brave Agent Who Exposed Hamza Only to be Betrayed by MI5
» UK: Woman Burglar With 207 Convictions is Finally Jailed… But She Laughs at Two-Year Sentence and Shouts: ‘Cushty’
 
North Africa
» Libya: Inquiry Threatens European Oil Firms
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Stakelbeck: Israel a Safe Haven for Christians Amid Muslim Persecution
» Territories: Netanyahu Studying Outpost Legalisation
 
Middle East
» Iran Cuts Oil Exports to Germany
» Siemens Allegedly Sold Surveillance Gear to Syria
» Syria: Damascus Accuses Turkey of Arming and Sending Rebels
 
Russia
» Russian MPs’ Walkout Mars Putin Unity Call
» Ukraine: Tymoshenko Calls Murder Allegations ‘Absurd’
 
Caucasus
» Russia Kills Nine Rebels in North Caucasus: Report
 
South Asia
» Airbus Gets Multi-Billion-Dollar Order From Indonesia
» India Says EU Tax a ‘Deal Breaker’ For Climate Talks
» Suu Kyi Meets With Myanmar President
 
Far East
» 42,000-Year-Old Baby Mammoth on Show in Hong Kong
» North Korea Gives Current and Former Leaders New Titles
» Philippines, China Look for Diplomatic Solution to Naval Standoff
 
Australia — Pacific
» Serial Rapist’s Afghan Ethnicity No Excuse, Says Judge
» South Africa, Australia to Share SKA?
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» 159 Rhinos Poached in S. Africa This Year: Minister
» Fighting Rages on Sudanese Border
» S. African Newspaper Launches Tabloid Aimed at Blacks
 
Immigration
» Anger as Swiss Visa Rules Are Relaxed
» Belgium Must Shut Down Anti-Immigrant Website: NGOs
» Finland: Higher Threshold for Some Family Reunification
» Germany: Fear of Honor Killings: Immigrants Flee Families to Find Themselves
» Greece: Parliament Approves Reception Centres
» ‘Pay Foreign Convicts to Quit Switzerland’
» UK: Only 40% of Border Scandal Foreign Criminals Have Been Deported in the Last Six Years
 
Culture Wars
» Agenda 21, The End of Western Civilization, Part 4
» California Declares War on Family Homes to ‘Save the Planet’
» UK: Mosque in Gay-Hate Row Opens a New Fee-Paying School Where Pupils Will Memorise the Koran and Speak Arabic
» UK: Tenfold Increase in Illegitimate Babies in Century Since Titanic, ONS Says
 
General
» Ehrlich, Hansen, Lovelock: We Must Build “An Entirely New Kind of Global Society”

Financial Crisis


10 Wealthy Italians Have as Much as 3 Mln Poor Ones

The young ever poorer, wealth only accumulated; Bank of Italy

(ANSAmed) — ROME — In Italy the ten richest individuals have as much wealth as the 3 million poorest ones, according to a survey carried out by the Italian central bank analysing wealth and wealth disparities in Italy. The amount of assets and wealth held by the ten richest individuals in Italy is worth about 50 billion euros, according to the latest rankings drawn up by Forbes last month.

The following are Italy’s “Uncle Scrooges”: 1) Michele Ferrero: the owner of the group involved in the production of sweets boasts assets of 14.2 billion euros and is the richest person in the country, 23rd in the world. 2) Leonardo Del Vecchio: the founder of the eyewear giant Luxottica is in 74th place worldwide, with a fortune totalling 8.6 billion euros. 3) Giorgio Armani: the designer has brought the world of fashion into the rankings of the wealthiest in Italy. Armani holds assets worth 5.4 billion. 4) Miuccia Prada: also of the fashion world, Forbes considers her the 79th most powerful woman in the world. Founder Mario’s granddaughter has assets worth 5.1 billion euros. 5) Paolo and Gianfelice Rocca: the Rocca brothers inherited 10% of Techint Financial, which controls Tenaris, active in energy engineering. They are worth 6 billion and 4.5 billion euros. 6) Silvio Berlusconi: the former prime minister and founder of Mediaset and Fininvest is “only” sixth, with 4.4 billion in assets. 7) Patrizio Bertelli: Miuccia Prada’s husband and managing director of the group, he has 2.77 billion euros in assets. 8) Stefano Pessina: former nuclear engineer and owner of Alliance Unichem, merged with the British pharmaceuticals giant Boots in 2006. He holds assets worth 1.95 billion. 9) Benetton: the Venetian family and owner of the clothing brand of the same name is present in its entirety: Carlo, Gilberto, Giuliana and Luciano boast assets worth 1.5 billion each. 10) Mario Moretti Polegato: the top-ranked member of Geox, despite the decline in share prices, is among the wealthiest Italians, with 1.35 billion in assets.

In Italy the young are ever poorer and wealth in general consists ever more of assets accumulated in the past and ever less from income. Over the past few years wealth distribution has been inverted between age groups: today — unlike in the past — the elderly are richer than the young, who find themselves unable to accumulate. The data from the survey show a generational conflict in terms of income but also concludes that the level of disparity is on a similar level to that seen in other European countries, though in Italy the ten wealthiest individuals have wealth more or less the equivalent to 3 million of the poorest Italians. In 2010 the overall wealth of households was at about 8.638 trillion euros, over 7.5 times the value of 1965 measured at 2010 prices, with an annual growth of 4.6%, but with a reduction compared with 2009 values with 8.767 trillion.

As concerns per capita, wealth has gone from 21.875 euros in 1965 to 142.481 in 2010, substantial growth which stopped abruptly after 2007, when the value reached almost 150,000 euros per person. The loss in three years was almost 5%. Between 1965 and 2010, the ratio between wealth and GDP almost doubled (from 2.7 to 5.6), according to the survey, underscoring that over this 50-year period wealth had grown more than production; wealth coming from the past is ever more sizeable than that which it is possible to earn through daily labours. A significant data shows the change in wealth between age categories: while in 1987 young households (under age 34) were at average levels (on the basis of 100, the level was 82.5), beginning in 2000 these households saw their condition grow much worse (61.7 in 2008), while the opposite happened for the elderly (from 65.5 to 100.2). Also changing was the distribution between social classes: between 1987 and 2008 net household wealth of the working class went from 61.9% to 44%, and all other categories declined though maintaining a fairly high level, except for pensioners who saw an increase from 61.6 to 97.8, although the figure was flat in 2008. As concerns territorial distribution, there was a clear worsening for conditions in the South (from 80.2 to 69.6) and an improvement for all the other geographical areas.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Deal on Taxation of Greek Money in Switzerland Soon

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 6 — Greece’s government said an agreement with Switzerland on the taxation of Greek deposits may be signed before the coming elections, in about a month’s time, as Reporter.Gr wrote. Finance Minister Philippos Sachinidis said on TV talks would begin in coming days, while the ministry was conducting cross-checks to identify transfers of money that was not taxed in Greece. He expressed reservations regarding the size of Greek deposits abroad. Sachinidis said there was no current consideration to fully compensate the private smallholders of Greek bonds after the haircut (PSI). “There are many legal problems… PSI is still developing. We must protect the country against legal complications,” he said. Regarding the competitiveness of the Greek economy, Sachinidis said it was a chronic problem of the country and that, “driving salaries as low as Bulgaria’s will not solve the problem”. Finally, he expressed the view that, “if all goes well, we anticipate the country will return to growth in 2013”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



ECB Says Can Tackle Symptoms But Not Cure Crisis

As fresh concerns over Spain and Italy rattled the markets Wednesday, the European Central Bank insisted it can only treat the symptoms of the eurozone debt crisis, but not cure it.

“The ECB has addressed the immediate symptoms but monetary policy cannot cure the underlying causes,” said ECB executive board member Benoit Coeure.

After three months of relative calm, the sovereign debt crisis returned with a vengeance this week, with stock markets plunging and borrowing costs for Spain and Italy jumping as doubts grow over their ability to control their finances.

In Italy, borrowing costs — which have been on the decline in recent months — doubled in a closely-watched auction of short-term debt Wednesday while Spanish 10-year bonds were flirting with rates around 6.0 percent, a level many consider unsustainable for the long term.

Talking to a conference in Paris, ECB board member Coeure insisted that the rise in Spanish bond yields did not reflect Spain’s economic fundamentals.

And seeing that the political will was there in Madrid, he saw no reason why the situation in Spain would not normalise, he argued.

Both Germany and France similarly felt that market fears over Spain’s finances was “excessive,” insisting that Madrid was pursuing the proper reforms.

The ECB’s Coeure said that taking the eurozone as a whole, “the situation in the financial markets has reached a turning point but recent market developments have highlighted that it remains fragile.”

Given the signs of fresh tension, there have been calls for the ECB to come to the rescue.

The central bank has acted as firefighter from the very beginning of the crisis, taking a series of what it calls “non-standard” measures to prevent a collapse of the single currency.

On top of conventional monetary policy moves such as cutting interest rates to historic lows, it has also bought up the bonds of debt-stricken countries.

And most recently, it pumped more than 1.0 trillion euros into the banking system via two so-called long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) in a bid to avert a dangerous credit squeeze.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Emerging Asia Maintains Boom Despite Western Woes

The emerging economies of Asia are seen shifting toward more sustainable growth based on domestic demand instead of exports, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has said. But rising inequalities urgently need to be fixed.

Despite a slowdown in economic expansion, Asia’s emerging economies would continue to grow by a robust 6.9 percent this year, supported by rising domestic consumption, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a regional report published Wednesday.

The bank surveyed 45 newly industrializing countries except Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore South Korea and Taiwan, saying that growth in these emerging economies will “cool somewhat” before “edging higher” to 7.3 percent in 2013.

Continued uncertainties in the eurozone and a further decline in global trade would pose the biggest threats to the growth outlook, ADB Chief Economist Changyong Rhee said in a statement.

“At the same time, Asian economies are gradually diversifying into new markets, private consumption is trending up and the region has limited direct financial exposure to the eurozone, which should help sustain its momentum,” he added.

Growth in China — the world’s second largest economy — is seen slowing by the bank to 8.5 percent this year and 8.7 percent in 2013 compared with 9.2 percent in 2011.

The region’s other emerging giant, India, is expected to grow by 7.5 percent in 2012, while southeast Asia’s economies are forecast to expand 5.2 percent — up from 4.6 percent in 2011.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro-Armageddon is Still Coming, And It’s the Result of Europe’s Insane, One-Size-Fits-None Economic Policy

By Daniel Knowles

Austerity is not helping — it is pushing Spain ever further into recession, as any undergraduate economist could have predicted.

And the thing is, this is entirely the result of Europe’s insane, one-size-fits-none economic policy. Before the start of the economic crisis in 2007, Spain had a government budget surplus of 2.2 per cent of GDP — so the problem is not Spanish government overspending. Rather the country was importing vast amounts of capital — just as every country in southern Europe was. For Germany to run its absurd 5 per cent of GDP export surplus, someone else had to run an import deficit, and so Spain stepped up, just as Ireland did, and Greece did, and Italy did.

All that money inflated southern European wages and prices until they popped. The problem with the eurozone is fundamentally one of competitiveness. In short, Germany has too much of it; its wages are too low and its current account surplus is consequently too big. Since all things are relative, the result is that Spanish, Italian, Greek and Irish wages are all too high. Within the euro, either German wages must go up, or Spanish ones down. The Germans won’t budge, and so the Spanish must beat down wages with unemployment instead.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Nations Must be ‘Prudent’ In Comments on Spain: PM

(MADRID) — European Union countries must be “prudent” when making comments about Spain’s economic problems, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said Wednesday, following criticism from France and Italy.

“We all have our problems and we are working to find a solution to ours and also to help the eurozone. We expect that other countries should do the same, that they be prudent in their statements,” he said.

Rajoy did not specify exactly who he was referring to in his comments to lawmakers from his conservative Popular Party, saying only that he was talking about “statements made in the European Union on the part of certain leaders”.

In recent days both French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti have made critical comments about Spain’s handling of its debt crisis.

Late last month Monti said the European Union was worried about “contagion” from Spain’s debt crisis. He later apologised.

Last week Sarkozy warned French voters Thursday they should re-elect him as president to pursue his cost-cutting plans or face the kind of debt crises that have gripped Spain and Greece.

Spain’s bulging deficit, fragile banks as well as a slide into recession at a time of soaring unemployment, have sparked fresh concern on the markets about the sustainability of its rising sovereign debt.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Markets Dump Italian and Spanish Assets

Following a couple of relatively calm months, fears of a double-dip recession grew Tuesday when investors dumped Italian and Spanish bonds over renewed fears about the impact of austerity measures. Italian stocks fell almost 5%, to their lowest since November, and Spanish stocks closed at their lowest since March 2009.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Nerves Calm Slightly on Italian Bonds

Spread back below 400 ahead of key auction

(ANSA) — Rome, April 11 — Sovereign-debt fears calmed slightly on Wednesday as the spread between Italian and German 10-year bonds dropped to 375.3 points after breaking the 400 mark a day earlier. The yield, another key gauge of market confidence, went down to 5.53% at the close of trading as investors eyed a key three-year bond auction Thursday where Italy plans to offer up to five billion euros in State paper. The Milan bourse earned 1.6% and closed at 14,689 points after big banking losses pulled it down 4.98% Tuesday, the worst in Europe.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti’s Mission Hanging on a Thread

La Stampa, 11 April 2012

“Markets slump, spread skyrockets”: La Stampa resumes Tuesday’s financial scare which saw stocks plunge all across Europe. Italy was at the crest of the panic wave, with Milan losing almost 5 per cent and the spread between its bonds and Germany’s benchmark bund crossing the 400 point threshold, with Italian 10-year bonds selling at 5.66% against the latter’s 1.65%.

PM Mario Monti attempted to dispel fears and blamed Spain’s enduring economic troubles and weak international growth. According to the Turin daily, he has also privately lashed out at the Italian entrepreneurs’ association, which has shaken the government by criticising its labour reform for being too watered down and compliant to trade union demands. Writing in La Stampa, Bill Emmot, former editor in chief of The Economist, says –

It would be wrong to pay too much attention to daily or weekly market movements, as they have more to do with animal psychology. […] But behind them lies a substantial truth: neither Europe nor Italy’s sovereign debt problems have been solved. If recession in Italy or Spain is slightly worst than expected, they will fall short of their deficit reduction targets. That will call into question the issue of political will. […] Monti’s reforms have been huge compared to those of previous governments, but not are not adequate to the task he faces. He started a modest liberalisation program, gave a mild stimulus to the forces of competitivity, and launched a labour reform that will not make history. No bond buyer could get the feeling that Italy’s growth perspectives have been radically transformed.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Markets Wary Despite Extra Round of Spanish Cuts

BRUSSELS — The EU has welcomed Spain’s plan to cut another €10 billion off its yearly budget, but the measure failed to stop speculation the country could be next in line for a bail-out.

Olivier Bailly, a European Commission spokesman, on Tuesday (10 April) said Brussels “welcomes” the move because it “confirms both the Spanish government’s determination to implement the necessary reforms, and furthermore the Spanish government’s commitment to respect the 5.3 percent (of GDP) deficit (limit agreed) for 2012.”

He approved the move despite the fact the new cuts are mainly to hit education and healthcare.

The €10 billion savings are to come on top of €27 billion of cuts promised on 30 March. But Spain’s financial credibility has taken a battering in recent months, with the new centre-right government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy forced to admit the country’s economic situation is worse than previously thought.

Markets on Tuesday pushed the costs of 10-year Spanish bonds to almost 6 percent, prompting press to ask whether Madrid will need a Greek-type bail-out.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



MEP Cries Foul on Greek Pay-Out to Political Parties

BRUSSELS — The leader of the Liberal group in the EU parliament, Belgian MEP Guy Verhofstadt, has asked the European Commission to justify letting Greece dish out €29 million to its top political parties.

The Greek parliament on Monday (9 April) narrrowly passed the measure by 155 votes out of 300.

The money is to go to the five parties which made the parliamentary threshhold in the last elections in 2009: the centre-left Pasok, the centre-right New Democracy, the far-right Laos and the far-left Syriza and KKE factions.

Pasok interior minister Tassos Yiannitsis said the funds will be used for campaigning in upcoming elections in May and for unpaid wages and other debts, such as to the state social security fund, the IKA.

The move caused controversy in Greece, which is currently slashing public sector wages and jobs in line with EU-demanded austerity measures.

Inside Pasok itself, MP Anna Delara said: “Given the unprecedented economic crisis the country is experiencing, the parties should be asking for their funding to be reduced drastically.” Another senior Pasok MP, deputy defence minister Yiannis Ragousis, abstained from the vote and tendered his resignation.

The leader of New Democracy, Antonis Samaras, did not turn up for the vote. Laos and Syriza voted against the measure, while KKE MPs voted only that they were “present” at the decision-making process.

The smaller parties which do not qualify for the cash — including Verhofstadt’s Liberal group ally, the Democratic Alliance — also complained.

For his part, Verhofstadt in an open letter on Tuesday asked EU commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and economic affairs commissioner Olli Rehn whether EU institutions — which monitor how Greece spends its money under the terms of the Greek bail-outs — agreed the move.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Nokia Sinks on Profit Warning

Nokia Corp. Wednesday warned that intense competition, particularly in India, the Middle East, Africa and China would hit its first quarter performance, sending its shares plunging. Chief Executive Stephen Elop said the profit warning shows that the business is still in transition.

“Within our Smart Devices business unit, we have established early momentum with [the Lumia brand of mobile phones using Windows software] and we are increasing our investments in Lumia to achieve market success,” he said.

Mr. Elop announced last year that the company would ditch its own smartphone software Symbian and join forces with Microsoft Corp. to build a new family of phones using Microsoft’s Windows operating system. The strategy overhaul aims to recover ground Nokia has lost to rivals like Apple Inc. with its iPhone and phones based on Google Inc.’s Android software.

Nokia shares were down 18% in recent trade.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portuguese Banks Borrow Record Amount From ECB

Banks in bailed-out Portugal borrowed a record amount from the European Central Bank in March, against a backdrop of rising debt in a sharply slowing economy, official data showed on Monday.

The banks’ ECB borrowings jumped to 56.3 billion euros ($73 billion) last month from 47.5 billion euros at end-February, the Bank of Portugal said.

The previous record of 49.1 billion euros came in August 2010 as the eurozone debt crisis worsened after the EU and International Monetary Fund had to rescue Greece in May that year.

The ECB began providing easy funding for the eurozone banks as the crisis deepened following that bailout and it has continued to offer money on generous terms so as to ease their liquidity problems.

Other figures meanwhile from the Bank of Portugal showed that corporate bad debt hit 8.28 billion euros in February while sour loans to households totalled 4.87 billion euros.

After Ireland in late 2010, Portugal itself needed an EU-IMF bailout in May 2011, adopting a series of tough austerity measures in return for the aid.

The measures have hit activity badly, however, and last month the Bank of Portugal said the economy would now shrink 3.4 percent this year, worse than its previous estimate for a contraction of 3.1 percent.

The economy shrank 1.6 percent last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Catalan Municipality Votes Yes on Cannabis Fields

Referendum on measures to tackle the current economic crisis

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, APRIL 11 — The people of the small rural Catalan village of Rasquera which counts 900 souls, have pronounced themselves as a majority in a referendum in favour of a cannabis cultivation project within a plan of measures to tackle the current economic crisis. The “Yes” as reported by El Pais online, has won with 56% of the votes. The left wing council which governs Rasquera, a town which survives mainly through work in the fields and the production of olive oil, has a public debt of 1.3 million euro and intends to accept the offer from the ABCDA (Barcelona Association for Cannabis and Personal usage) a club whose therapeutic and entertainment purposes counts five thousand members who organise the individual consumption of cannabis allowed by the Spanish government in a collective way. The ABCDA has proposed to pay the municipality thirty-six thousand euro for the permission to cultivate cannabis for non commercial purposes and inject 550,000 euro a year for the rental and management of the land.

The project should create 50 new jobs in the town. The initiative is being examined by the Catalan prosecutor’s office, as law number 368 of the Spanish penal code prohibits cultivation, elaboration and the trafficking of drugs. This particular case would be instead dealing with cultivation for personal usage.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain Can Cope Without Bailout: EU

(BRUSSELS) — Spain does not need a bailout or outside financial help to recapitalise its banks, the European Commission said Wednesday despite surging borrowing costs fuelling fears Madrid may need help.

Spain has unveiled a tough austerity budget to fight off eurozone debt contagion, but the rate demanded by investors to lend to Madrid surged to the worrisome 6.0 percent level on Wednesday before retreating to 5.9 percent.

When asked if the commission still stands by its assessment that Spain does not need a bailout to recapitalise struggling banks, spokesman Olivier Bailly told a news briefing: “Yes we do.”

The European Union’s executive arm again applauded the Spanish government’s efforts to reduce its public deficit and debt, including a “very substantial” reform of the labour market.

The measures are “very demanding and difficult” but necessary, Bailly said, adding that Brussels is waiting for the budgets of Spain’s autonomous regions by the end of April to fully assess the country’s efforts.

Spain has vowed to cut its public deficit — the shortfall between revenue and spending — to 5.3 percent of GDP in 2012 and 3.0 percent in 2013 after allowing it to run over target to 8.5 percent last year.

After Greece, Ireland and Portugal received bailouts, analysts have warned that Spain could be next in line as it battles to overcome the crisis amid a recession and the eurozone’s highest unemployment rate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: IMF Warns of £750bn Pensions Time Bomb

Britain’s ageing population is threatening a pensions time bomb that could cost as much as £750billion, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

The IMF said yesterday that even a slightly faster than expected increase in life expectancy could impose a huge new financial burden on Western economies such as Britain. “The time to act is now,” it said. Governments and the financial sector have consistently underestimated how quickly average lifespans will rise, IMF researchers found. They believe it has been routinely understated by about three years, which could render public finances unsustainable, they warned.

For Britain, the IMF calculated that on the “not unreasonable” assumption that the entire cost would fall on taxpayers, the country’s public debt would rise from 76 per cent of gross domestic product to as much as 135 per cent. In today’s money, that additional cost would be about £750?billion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


19 Things That the Talking Heads on Television Are Being Strangely Silent About

If the talking heads on television don’t tell us about something that happens, does it make that event any less real? Of course the answer to that question is quite obvious, but unfortunately way too many Americans allow their realities to be defined by what they hear from the mainstream media.

Way too many people use phrases such as “if that was true I would have heard about it on television” to deflect conversations that are starting to become uncomfortable. Critical thinking is a skill that is in short supply in America today, and most Americans seem content to let their televisions do their thinking for them. Sadly, the pretty people on television do not spend a lot of time talking about the things that are truly important. Instead, they love to talk about the latest celebrity scandal and they love to divide people into groups and get them fighting with one another. In this day and age, it is absolutely critical that we all learn to think for ourselves. The talking heads on television are concerned with keeping their bosses happy and with keeping the ratings up. Most of them are not really concerned about what happens to you. They just want you to keep watching them so that they can continue to earn their inflated salaries.

Unfortunately, most Americans seem perfectly content with the “infotainment” that they are getting from the major news networks, so major changes to the mainstream media are not likely to happen any time soon.

For those wanting something different, you will have to seek out alternative sources of news (such as this website) that are willing to discuss the truly earth shattering events that are continually taking place all over the globe.

So what are some of the things that the mainstream media has been ignoring?

The following are 19 things that the talking heads on television have been strangely silent about…

#1 Strange Things Happening On The Sun

A lot of really weird things have been happening on the sun lately. For example, recently there was a tornado on the sun that was five times larger than the earth. The following is how this solar tornado was described by a recent Wired article [url].

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Apple Sued Over Ebook Pricing

Apple colluded over ebook pricing with publishers including HarperCollins, Macmillan, Penguin, Simon & Schuster and Hachette, a US lawsuit alleges.

The United States government sued Apple and the publishers in a New York district court, claiming the publishers colluded to fix ebook prices, rather than allowing retailers to set them. Simon & Schuster, Hachette and HarperCollins settled their suits today, two people familiar with the matter said, but Apple and Macmillan have refused to engage in negotiations and deny they colluded to raise prices for ebooks. The two firms will argue that pricing agreements between Apple and publishers enhanced competition in the ebook industry, which was dominated by Amazon.com.

The US Justice Department is probing how Apple changed the way publishers charged for ebooks on the iPad, Bloomberg reported. The Justice Department said it would announce an “unspecified” antitrust settlement today. Penguin Group is also reported to be preparing to fight the US Justice Department in court if necessary.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Apple Rolls Past $600-Billion Mark in Tuesday Trading

US consumer electronics giant Apple is now worth over $600 billion. Already the world’s most valuable company, it reached a new all-time high in early trade on Tuesday, and an end to the rise is not in sight.

Apple continued its success story on Tuesday by crashing through the $600-billion (459 billion-euro) barrier for the first time in its history.

Company shares hit $644 a piece in early trading, up 1.2 percent from Monday’s close. Apple stocks have thus risen by a staggering 59 percent since the start of the year. Analysts have interpreted the continued rally as a sign that stocks have been undervalued relative to the company’s even more enormous profits.

The most recent increase in share value has been fueled by reports of another successful quarter and announcements that Apple will start putting its $97.6-billion cash hoard to use this summer by paying a dividend and buying back a considerable amount of shares.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Astonishing Video of California Man So Distracted by Sending a Text He Walks Into a Bear

Texting while walking down the street can be dangerous — traffic, lamp posts and even pot holes can lead to accidents.

But for one California man the danger was even bigger.

TV helicopter crews in California managed to capture an oblivious phone user walking into the path of a 500lb black bear.

The homeowner calmly walks towards the giant animal, engrossed in his mobile.

However, just feet before he reaches it, he notices the huge bear — and turns and runs in the nick of time.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Attack of the Killer Fungi: Rising Threat Worries Scientists

An unprecedented number of diseases caused by fungi have been causing some of the most severe die-offs and extinctions ever witnessed in wild species and jeopardizing crops to boot, scientists now report.

Fungi are wiping out amphibians on several continents, decimating bats in eastern North America, contributing to the disappearance of bees dubbed colony collapse disorder, and killing corals and sea turtles.

They are even threatening humans, if indirectly, by attacking crops. Fungi and fungilike organisms called oomycetes can cause significant losses to rice, wheat, maize, potatoes and soybeans, according to the researchers who write that the problems “vary regionally but pose a current and growing threat to food security.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bad Amendments of the 20th Century

At the dawn of the 20th Century, the U.S. Constitution had been unchanged for more than 40 years since the amendments of 1865-1870 that prohibited slavery. But then the country panicked. Fearful of the shift from an agrarian to industrialized society and the movement of people from the country to the city, the United States 100 years ago experienced a crisis of confidence that led to something called progressivism. Progressivism was the belief that the government could and should mandate something called the public good as opposed to traditional values of limited government and individual responsibility.

One of the ways that this manifested itself was the creation of the Federal Reserve System in which the federal government would retain some quasi-ownership of the nation’s banks, and would retain the right to intervene into economic affairs as a matter of public policy, but really political influence. All these things began under Republican Theodore Roosevelt and Democrat President Woodrow Wilson, the first progressive president who ushered in Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy Carter and finally Barack Hussein Obama, and the long national nightmare of progressive (socialistic) politics.

Let the history lesson begin:

Amendment 16 — Income Taxes, Feb. 2, 1913.

This gave Congress the authority to collect taxes on income. There are several historians who question whether this amendment was actually legally adopted. But that’s another story.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Can Pro-American Right Unite to Defeat Anti-American Left?

Almost sixty-percent of GOP primary voters voted for someone other than Mitt Romney, making Romney the likely nominee, but with the support of only about forty-percent of primary voters. That’s the bad new…

The good news is that many of those primary voters were democrats, independents, communists and libertarians who crossed party lines to disrupt the GOP nomination process — not Republicans or Conservatives. Due to the stupidity of the Republican Party and their suicidal open primary process in which anyone, and I do mean anyone, democrat, liberal, progressive communist, illegal alien… ANYONE can vote in the GOP primary.

[…]

Leftist anti-American communist thugs know that this is war. Whites may not be at war with blacks, but many blacks sure are at war with whites. Christians and Jews may not be at war with Radical Islam and atheists, but atheists and Radical Islam sure is at war with both Christians and Jews. The ninety-percent of Americans who don’t belong to labor unions may not be at war with labor unions, but the labor unions certainly are at war with all free-market Americans, especially taxpayers. Don’t forget that the unions now control the voting booths.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cops Can Request a Copy of Your Complete Facebook Activity

If police officers were to file a subpoena for your Facebook information, they would receive a printout of the data from the social network. This printout would be so detailed, complete and creepy that you should strive to be a good law-abiding citizen, just to prevent it from ever existing.

We have just learned about the true nature of Facebook’s responses to subpoenas thanks to documents uncovered by the Boston Phoenix, an alternative weekly.

While researching a story about a man dubbed the “Craigslist Killer,” reporters at the Phoenix had access to “a huge trove of case files released by the Boston Police Department.” And in the process of sifting through all of those documents, they discovered the Boston Police’s subpoena of the suspect’s Facebook information— as well as the data provided by the social network.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



NAFTA Partners Take Steps to Boost Trilateral Relationship

While bilateral initiatives have dominated North American issues over the last couple of years, the trilateral relationship has suffered. With a series of high-level meetings, the U.S., Canada and Mexico are taking steps to boost the NAFTA partnership. First, the defense ministers met to discuss shared continental security threats.

This was followed by a leaders summit which pledged to deepen trade, regulatory, energy and security cooperation. The recent meetings have caused some to once again take notice of the incremental efforts to merge all three countries into a North American Union.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Receives Brazil’s Ex-Terrorist President

Would Obama receive Bin Laden in the White House if the terrorist had been elected President of Saudi Arabia?

Of course not. But this week, he is hosting this week a terrorist who is just as anti-American as Bin laden was, the head of a government that employs former terrorists who committed crimes against American citizens. Her name is Dilma Rousseff, President of Brazil.

Dilma was part of a terrorist communist organization known as VAR-Palmares, whose goal was the establishment of a Marxist dictatorship in Brazil, funded and controlled by Fidel Castro.

Dilma confessed to keeping machine guns and plastic bombs under her bed for use by her buddies. Among other crimes, her organization robbed banks, exploded bombs on the street and killed people in cold blood. Most of the terrorists are now employed as ministers, heads of large state companies or influential politicians.

They also killed foreigners such as Major Edward Ernest Tito Otto Maximilian Von Westernhagen and a 19-year-old British sailor named David Cuthberg, besides dozens of Brazilians.

But their most heinous crime was perhaps the murder of American Captain Charles Rodney Chandler. Hero of the Vietnam War, he came to Brazil to study Sociology and Politics at the Alvares Penteado Foundation, Sao Paulo.

[Return to headlines]



Obama-Romney Race Gets Underway

With Rick Santorum’s departure from the Republican primaries, Mitt Romney is the main challenger to U.S. President Barack Obama. Now it’s Romney’s turn to play his trump card.

It is hard to imagine any situation by the end of August other than Mitt Romney becoming the Republican nominee for the U.S. presidency. For weeks, the former governor of Massachusetts has gained delegates’ votes in the primaries, along with the support of Republican Party leaders. Rivals Rick Santorum, the former Senator of Pennsylvania, Newt Gingrich, the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Ron Paul, the Texas Congressman, have lagged far behind.

More than any other, the arch-conservative Santorum dealt Romney one setback after another during the campaign. Santorum forced the moderate Romney to adopt increasingly conservative views in order to compete for Santorum’s supporters. The campaign took on an especially negative tone and was full of personal attacks. None of this worked to Romney’s advantage as he tried to win over centrist voters but lost plenty of sympathy points.

In a direct comparison between Romney and U.S. President Barack Obama, Obama currently comes ahead in almost every respect. A majority of respondents to the latest opinion poll by the Washington Post and ABC News said Obama comes off as more likable and arouses more enthusiasm. The majority also said Obama is more consistent on his views, cares more about women’s rights, is a safer bet in the international arena, supports the middle class and understands the financial problems of average people.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Looks to Make Romney the Villain

“And this election will probably have the biggest contrast that we’ve seen maybe since the Johnson-Goldwater election — maybe before that.”

— President Obama talking to donors at a fundraiser in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.

President Obama will continue today in his opening salvo against presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney, attacking tax policies that allow investors, including the very rich, like Romney, to pay a 15 percent tax rate on income from their portfolios.

Obama has been holding up billionaire Nebraska investor and big Democratic donor Warren Buffett as the role model for the super-rich, as Buffett advocates the idea of raising the tax rate for top earners.

From a policy prospective, this is part of an overall Obama effort to promote “fairness” by increasing taxes on top incomes. Aside from increasing taxes on investment revenue, Obama seeks to reduce deductions for charitable donations by high earners and, most centrally, to raise income taxes for individuals earning more than $200,000 and families taking more than $250,000.

The millionaires tax would only raise a bit more than $1 billion a year, but Obama hopes that if he can win re-election campaigning for that, he will have won a mandate for a tax proposal aimed at increasing the burden on the top quartile of earners.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Administration Proposes New Effort to Curb Antibiotic Use on US Farms

The National Pork Producers Council questioned the guidance’s rationale and said it would disproportionately hurt small and rural farmers who don’t have easy access to veterinarians to oversee their use of antibiotics.

“The guidance could eliminate antibiotic uses that are extremely important to the health of animals,” council President R.C. Hunt said in a statement. “FDA did not provide compelling evidence nor did it state that antibiotics use in livestock production is unsafe.”

           — Hat tip: Van Grungy [Return to headlines]



Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us

Privacy is eroding fast as technology offers government increasing ways to track and spy on citizens. The Washington Post reported there are 3,984 federal, state and local organizations working on domestic counterterrorism. Most collect information on people in the US. (Source)

Here are thirteen examples of how some of the biggest government agencies and programs track people.

One. The National Security Agency (NSA) collects hundreds of millions of emails, texts and phone calls every day and has the ability to collect and sift through billions more. WIRED just reported NSA is building an immense new data center which will intercept, analyze and store even more electronic communications from satellites and cables across the nation and the world. Though NSA is not supposed to focus on US citizens, it does. (Source)

Two. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) National Security Branch Analysis Center (NSAC) has more than 1.5 billion government and private sector records about US citizens collected from commercial databases, government information, and criminal probes. (Source)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Trayvon Martin: Disinformation, Fake Reporting Fuelling the Illusion of an ‘American Race War’

In the wake of the Trayvon Martin shooting and the ensuing media circus, a new beast has reared its ugly head — this time in the form of media disinformation and race-baiting reports threatening to propel America in the direction of a new race war.

On Saturday April 7th, journalist Michael Miller’s Miami New Times blog clumsily ran with a report entitled,”Armed Neo-Nazis Now Patrolling Sanford, Say They Are “Prepared” for Post-Trayvon Martin”.

The Miami New Times report claims that National Socialist Movement’s mascot, Jeff Schoep, dubbed “The Hollywood Nazi” because of his adherence to TV stereotypes, is leading armed Neo-Nazi patrols of Sanford, Florida to protect white residents from black violence. But there’s only one problem — it isn’t actually happening. Infowars.com contacted the Sanford Police Department on Sunday, looking for confirmation on the Miami News Times story, but according to the department’s office of public information, “We can confirm there have been no reports of any Neo-Nazi, or armed Neo-Nazi patrols in Sanford.”

The Miami New Times have since updated their article to retract their earlier reports of armed Neo-Nazi patrols in Sanford.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Wounded Romney Set to Take on Obama

Rick Santorum has withdrawn from the Republican primary race, putting an end to a race that left many observers scratching their heads. It was a bruising battle for presumed nominee Mitt Romney, leaving him weakened as President Barack Obama goes on the attack.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



You Can Keep the Change, Part 1

Ultimately, what background training was used by President Obama to deceive the masses who love their freedoms and rights to elect a man to the Office of the President of the United States, whose obvious goal is to deny them their freedoms and rights? Simply speaking, the easiest way to describe President Obama’s background is to research the man who has become the driving force in his life. Of course, this man is not the man that most people would expect. It is not the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, even though he has definitely influenced President Obama. The man who has influenced President Obama more than anyone else was Saul Alinsky, a Marxist community organizer.

[…]

Now, since it is obvious that President Obama was influenced by Saul Alinsky, it is very important to know more about the man who influenced President Obama, in order for all Americans to get into the psyche of the President who may ultimately destroy America from within. Of course, the best method to learn about Saul Alinsky is to discuss parts of his 1971 book entitled Rules for Radicals. In fact, the opening page dedication should present the crux and truth of the matter. It reads, “Lest we forget at least an over-the-shoulder acknowledgment to the very first radical: from all our legends, mythology, and history… the first radical known to man who rebelled against the establishment and did it so effectively that he at least won his own kingdom — Lucifer.” (1) Therefore, as written in John 8:32, “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” As a result, based just on the dedication, the rest of Rules for Radicals must proclaim an ideology that would be harmful if applied to a nation’s political structure. Sadly, this Marxist book has become America’s new political guide. Prayerfully, the next political guide will not be the Communist Manifesto.

Why did Mr. Alinsky write Rules for Radicals? According to the Prologue, it was written for the following reason:

[…]

Of course, most American do not want capitalism to be replaced by socialism and or communism. But, once the process of power has gained control of a community or a government, it might just be too late. As Mr. Alinsky stated in Rules for Radicals,

“From the moment the organizer enters a community he lives, dreams… only one thing and that is to build the mass power base of what he calls the army. Until he has developed that mass power base, he confronts no major issues… Until he has those means and power instruments, his ‘tactics’ are very different from power tactics. Therefore, every move revolves around one central point: how many recruits will this bring into the organization, whether by means of local organizations, churches, service groups, labor unions, corner gangs, or as individuals.” (1)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Zimmerman’s Fla Arrest Follows Puzzling Disappearance; Experts Say He Should Stop Talking

PMAP SANFORD, Fla. — The neighborhood watch volunteer who shot Trayvon Martin to death had been out of touch and, his ex-lawyer says, “a little bit over the edge” before his arrest on a second-degree murder charge.

As George Zimmerman turned himself in Wednesday in the Feb. 26 shooting of the unarmed black teen, experts offered this advice: Stop talking.

“My advice to the client would be, ‘Save it for the trial. It can’t help you.’“ said Roy Kahn, a Miami defense attorney.

The 28-year-old Sanford man was in custody in Florida after a puzzling disappearance that had his lawyers expressing concern for his health and announcing they couldn’t represent him anymore. Zimmerman had called special prosecutor Angela Corey, his former lawyers said, had an off-the-record chat with a Fox News Channel host and put up a website asking supporters for money.

“It would not be in a client’s best interest to give any statement before it’s his time to testify at trial,” Kahn said. “For him to give a statement, since he already has given an interview to the police, any additional statement at the State Attorney’s Office would just create the possibility of him creating conflict with his previous statements.”

Zimmerman’s new attorney, Mark O’Mara, said after his client’s arrest Wednesday that Zimmerman “is very concerned about the charges, but he is OK.”

“I’m not concerned about his mental well-being,” O’Mara said.

Former lawyers Craig Sonner and Hal Uhrig on Tuesday portrayed Zimmerman as erratic, said he hadn’t returned their calls and texts and was buckling under the pressure that has built in the month since the shooting.

Jack Schafer, a professor at Western Illinois University and a former FBI behavioral analyst, said Zimmerman’s behavior shouldn’t cause undue concern. After all, Schafer said, he wasn’t charged with any crime and was free to go wherever he wanted after he spoke to authorities after the shooting.

“If I were him, I’d go somewhere in hiding,” said Schafer. “His life is at risk, not by jurisprudence, but by angry people who are rushing to judgment.”

Leslie Garfield, a Pace University law professor in New York, said Zimmerman’s behavior over the last 48 hours should not affect his prosecution.

“Whatever else goes on behind the scenes before charges aren’t really a factor,” she said. “All that should matter is what his intentions were at the time of the shooting.”…

[Return to headlines]

Canada


Royal Canadian Mint to Create Digital Currency

The Royal Canadian Mint wants to get rid of pocket change — and it’s enlisting hacker-types for help.

Less than a week after the government announced the penny’s impending death, the Mint quietly unveiled its digital currency called MintChip.

Still in the research and development phase, MintChip will ultimately let people pay each other directly using smartphones, USB sticks, computers, tablets and clouds. The digital currency will be anonymous and good for small transactions — just like cash, the Mint says.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Austria: Klimt Up Close

Paintings by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt are among the most expensive in the world, up there with Picasso and co. During the 150th anniversary of his birth, admirers get a close-up view of his famous Beethoven Frieze.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bossi Hands in His “Irrevocable” Resignation to the Federal Council; The Party to be Run by a Triumvirate

“I’m resigning for the good of the movement and the activists; my priority is the good of the Northern League, but they’re sorely mistaken if they think I intend to disappear.

MILAN — Exactly 20 years on from the 1992 elections, the Northern League’s first real political victory, Umberto Bossi has resigned. The investigations into the Northern League treasurer, Francesco Belsito, being carried out by the public prosecutor’s offices of Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria, caused the party leader to stand down, and he resigned as party secretary during the federal council meeting on Thursday. His “irrevocable” decision was accepted by the federal council, who will replace the secretary with three prince regents, entrusted with the interim running of the movement.

THE TRIUMVIRATE — There will in fact be a triumvirate at the head of the party, composed of the coordinator of the national branch offices, Roberto Calderoli; the former interior minister, Roberto Maroni (who is meeting Bossi in via Bellerio in Milan on Friday for a private talk); and the MP from Veneto, Emanuela Dal Lago. “I’m resigning for the good of the movement and the activists. My priority is the good of the Northern League, and continuing the battle”. These are the words with which Umberto Bossi left his post as party leader. The council nevertheless rewarded him for his service, appointing him party chairman in place of Angelo Alessandri. This appointment will allow him to continue to take part in the meetings of the federal council. Bossi commented that “If you make a mistake, you have to pay for it, regardless of who you are”. Later, in an interview with the editor of LaPadania Stefania Piazzo, Bossi pointed out that “Nobody asked me to resign. I decided to myself, because I was in the way, but the fact that I resigned doesn’t mean I’m disappearing from the scene. They are sorely mistaken. I’m staying in the Northern League, whether as a grassroots activist or secretary, I will always be ready to fight for the cause”. He continued: “As from tomorrow, they can call me an activist, or not even that; just a supporter”. As far as regards the investigations, Bossi’s views are clear: “this is clearly a manoeuvre to attack me and the Northern League”. And as far as regards the conflict with Maroni, he clarified: “It’s not true that Maroni’s a traitor”…

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Brussels Transport Strike Extended After Fatal Attack

Brussels public transport workers decided Tuesday to extend their strike by at least two more days, keeping buses, trams and metros idle for almost a week after a colleague was fatally beaten. The work stoppage, which was on its fourth day, will continue until at least Thursday, the same day as the funeral for a supervisor who died after being punched in the face following an accident between a bus and a car.

The government announced Monday plans to deploy 400 extra police officers in Brussels and recruit 50 agents for the public transport system following Saturday’s assault, but it will take months to materialise. But unions demanded quicker action to stem what they see as an alarming number of attacks on public transport workers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bucharest Still Angry About Schengen Refusal

The new Dutch ambassador to Romania has been waiting for months to present his credentials to President Traian Basescu but so far, the Romanian leader has not found time to receive the Dutch diplomat.

Because he has been unable to present his credentials, Matthijs van Bonzel is not officially allowed to call himself ambassador. The situation is so unusual that the Dutch Labour party has asked Deputy Foreign Minister Ben Knapen for an explanation. The chair of the Romanian-Dutch Chamber of Commerce in Bucharest has also raised the issue with Dutch politicians.

Diplomats speculate that the cold shoulder from Bucharest is due to the Dutch refusal to allow Romania to join the Schengen Area, a treaty zone comprising the territories of 26 European countries that have abolished internal border controls. The Hague claims that Bucharest isn’t ready to join the area but the Romanian government claims that they have fulfilled all the criteria laid down in the treaty. Bucharest says the Dutch minority cabinet has been hijacked by its parliamentary backer, the right-wing Freedom Party.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Central Europe: Fortunately: We Still Have Strudel

Ekonom Prague

In the wake of the fall of communism, in 1991, Prague, Warsaw, Budapest and Bratislava formed the ‘ Visegrád’ Group. Inspired by a 14th Century alliance of the same countries aimed at fostering trade with Western Europe, the modern Visegrád Group’s objective is to foster integration into Western Europe and to give the group political heft. But some twenty years later, each country appears to be following a different piper.

Tomáš Krejcí

Thinking about what might, today, unite the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary, only one idea came to mind: with only a few variations, a few layers of flavoured puff pastry dough wrapped around apples, cinnamon and raisins. That’s the secret of grandmothers in Prague, Bratislava, Warsaw and Pest.

Only a few people are today capable of finding on the map the exact location [Visegrád, in Hungary] where, in 1335, the kings of Poland, Bohemia and Hungary met. Twenty-one years ago, the Visegrád Group [Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia] was inaugurated in great pomp. The member states shared a past, a pro-western European outlook and the aspiration to a sense of security guaranteed by joining NATO.

Czech children no longer understand Slovak

Although the four countries have, since then, joined the West’s structures, it seems, over time, always more difficult to find their common denominator. Many supranational firms make no difference between the West and the East of Europe. It can happen that Prague will have to submit to London or that Istanbul takes control of Budapest. The banks have settled their regional headquarters in Vienna.

Poland claims, by right, to be equal to France in terms of size and importance. Back home [in the Czech Republic], we are looking to the other side of the English Channel. As for the [Slovak] dream of a new Switzerland, it is fading because, among other reasons, in the deep forests of the Alps you do not risk running into a Gorilla [a recent major Slovak political scandal].

The Hungarian economy’s current difficulties do not favour optimism about the prospects for financial markets in the neighbouring countries.

Central Europe’s identity is becoming more and more diluted in the well-known melting pot of global culture. Those who are nostalgic for the days when German was the region’s lingua franca are forced to note that today, in the ski resorts, Austrians, Hungarians and Slovakians order “two small beers” [in English in the original].

Today, Czech children no longer understand Slovak; the language is no longer being used in the Czech media. And you [Czech readers], when exactly was the last time you went to see the latest Polish or Hungarian film to come out?

One of the aims of the meeting of the three kings at Visegrád, in 1335, was to create an anti-Habsburg coalition. The actual Euro-American Visegrád Group has no common foe. If it came to discretely disappear, no one would notice. We can only hope that strudel, at least, will stand the test of time.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Cinema Confronts the Fear of Islam

The Toulouse killings have reignited the debate on integration of Muslims in Europe. The issue is also being tackled by contemporary film-makers.

“In recent years, in France, the climate has deteriorated badly. Religions — and in particular Islam — are stigmatised and exploited for the sake of winning votes”, Adi, who was born in France into an Algerian immigrant family, told swissinfo.ch.

“At one time people used to ask me what nationality I was. Today they just want to know if I am Muslim.” Used as a bugbear by some political parties and media, transformed from a private matter into a public problem, the Muslim religion has become for many immigrants a place they can find their identity.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: “We Need a Real Press!”

CT-Interview with Lars Hedegaard on Mohammed cartoons, Denmark as a role model and one Million Euros

As a small country, Denmark is not very influential within the European Union. But ever since then there appeared the Mohammed cartoons, the country became the focus of international attention. Citizen Times Editor in Chief Felix Strüning spoke with the Dane Lars Hedegaard, president of the International Free Press Society, on developments in his country, the chances of a peaceful solution to the problem of Islam and what he would do with one million Euros.

Citizen Times: Mr. Hedegaard, six years ago, the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Postenpublished the famous twelve Mohammed cartoons. Kurt Westergaard, one of the artists, still needs police protection. So, how is the mood in the Danish population right now?

Lars Hedegaard: There are some indications that parts of the public are getting tired and would dearly like to return to a state of “normality”. In early March the leading PC-paperPolitiken even claimed that the debate over Islam and immigration is over — which is exactly what the paper would like to happen.

However, we will probably never get back to the cosy and warm welfare state we knew just a few decades ago. And it has little or nothing to do with what Danes do or say. As one of the world’s leading Islam scholars Bernard Lewis pointed out back in 2006, the fact that Islamic states and fanatics all over the world would raise hell over a few drawings indicates that they already consider Denmark to be a part of the dar al-Islam, i.e. that part of the world where sharia law reigns.

They consider us to be a conquered country and those of us who refuse to accept this new state of affairs are considered as rebels against the theocratic order they want to impose. For the time being, people may be tired of discussing Islam and the demographic changes that are taking place in our country. But this debate is bound to return with a vengeance as more and more people realise what is happening to our country.

Citizen Times: In October 2011, the Danish Government changed after ten years of successful politics under Rasmussen. Do you already feel differences under the current leftwing and socialist government?

Lars Hedegaard: Yes, certain changes are obvious. Before the election the winning left-wing parties claimed that they would not deviate from the immigration policies introduced by the former centre-right government. They broke that promise — as they have broken practically every promise they made.

So now we are back to practically unfettered immigration. At the same time the Socialist government has made it more lucrative for immigrants to be on welfare rather than working.

Citizen Times: You are the president of International Free Press Society (IFPS) and connected to politicians like Geert Wilders, activists like Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff and Organizations like the U.S. based MEF of Daniel Pipes. What is your key role and how does the IFPS function?

Lars Hedegaard: The IFPS is actually a small group of people acting in an advisory capacity for those seeking our advice. We also keep in touch with like-minded people all over the Western world, i.e. people who will stand up for freedom and especially freedom of expression. My main job is to be President of the Danish Free Press Society, which has existed for more than eight years. It is a membership-based organisation with an elected Board of Directors and our sole purpose is the defence of free speech. Other than that our members are free to voice any opinion they hold — as long as they do not advocate violence or anything totalitarian. We welcome people of all religions and political persuasions.

Citizen Times: More generally, how can we improve the situation with Muslim migration in Europe?

Lars Hedegaard: The basic task is to make people understand what Islam is all about. That it is not a religion in our traditional sense of the word. It is more akin to a political ideology that is totally alien and antagonistic to the tenets of Western civilisation. Until we understand this basic fact, we will have no idea how to help Muslim immigrants to integrate and eventually assimilate to the nations that have let them in.

Citizen Times: Was the latest Danish immigration policy an example for the European Union?

Lars Hedegaard: No. The immigration policies of the former government were widely believed to have been very restrictive. That was not the case. Long-term they hardly made a dent in the rapid demographic transformation of our society, which is leading to the creation of immigrant enclaves more or less outside mainstream Danish society…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Dutch School Kids Copy US Gang Culture

Primary schoolchildren in a suburb of the southern Dutch city of Den Bosch are imitating the violent practices of the North and Central American gang MS-13, parents have been warned. School heads and social workers described in a letter to parents how schoolchildren were copying MS-13’s initiation ritual, in which a group of children beat up a would-be gang member for 13 seconds, or force them to steal something.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: 300 Women Fined Under Full-Face Veil Ban

One year after France introduced a law banning women from wearing full-face veils in public, officials report that around 300 have been fined. The ban on wearing the niqab in any public place was introduced on April 11th 2011.

It is illegal for any woman to wear the veil except when they are at home, worshipping in a religious place or travelling as a passenger in a private car.

Wearing the veil can lead to a fine of €150 ($200) and forced attendance at a citizenship class.

Interior ministry officials reported that “in one year there have been 354 police checks and 299 fines issued,” reported Le Parisien newspaper.

At the time of the law being passed, officials estimated that around 2,000 women were wearing the full-face veil.

In January, interior minister Claude Guéant told parliament that “the number of women wearing the veil has fallen by half” since the law was introduced.

The law remains controversial, with several groups continuing to oppose it.

Rachid Nekkaz of the group “Touche pas à ma Constitution” (Don’t Touch my Constitution) claims that 367 women have been fined and questioned in police stations for “between one and a half and three hours.”

Two-thirds of the women questioned are divorced or single, according to Nekkaz. He believes this proves the women are not wearing the veil “by force of a husband.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Arab Nudes Defy Taboos in Paris Show

The naked body in Arab art is the theme of a new Paris exhibit meant to broaden views of Arab culture, spotlighting the many artists willing to break taboos and depict nudity in all its forms.

“The Body Uncovered” at Paris’ Arab World Institute aims to “challenge the stereotypes usually associated with the Arab world that reduce it to the single image of religious fanaticism,” said the institute’s chairman Renaud Muselier.

“It is intended instead to echo the reality of an Arab art scene that despite the conservative climate, exists, dares to overcome taboos and manages to find a place in the global contemporary art scene,” he explains in the show catalogue.

Until July 15 the institute bordering the River Seine will display 200 works by 70 modern and contemporary Arab artists, many of them women, which address eroticism, the sensuality of dance, violence, the exploitation of women and homosexuality through sculpture, collage, painting, photography and video.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Disneyland Paris Turns 20, With Mixed Results

Disneyland Paris fetes its 20th anniversary Thursday, but while Mickey Mouse now draws nearly twice as many visitors as the Louvre’s Mona Lisa, his fantasy park is not yet out of the financial woods.

French theme parks in general have done well amid Europe’s debt crisis, offering a fairly low-cost escape for families, and Disney reported a record 15.7 million visitors in its fiscal year that ended on September 30 2011.

That compared with 8.4 million visitors to the Louvre art museum, and 6.6 million to Paris’ iconic Eiffel Tower.

“It’s magic, we’re in France, but it feels like we’re in another country altogether,” a Belgian tourist named Christelle told AFP.

Britons Jojo and Jake added: “We’re students so we work very hard most of the time so it’s really nice to come away and do something really childish but really fun.”

But Disney, which bet heavily on a site east of Paris prone to damp, chilly winters, posted a net loss of 55.6 million euros ($72.8 billion) despite a modest increase in sales to 1.3 billion euros.

The sprawling park, served by high-speed trains and home to 57 attractions, boasts Big Thunder Mountain and Space Mountain Mission 2, but also lies beneath a debt mountain that amounted to 1.87 billion euros last year.

Disney says it will pay off that debt by 2024.

It also highlights employment opportunities for minorities that have had trouble even getting job interviews elsewhere in France.

Mourad Adli, a 40-year-old Algerian is cited as an example, starting as a pop-corn vendor when the park opened and now the head of its 60 restaurants.

A French intellectual slammed Disneyland Paris as a “Cultural Chernobyl” 20 years ago, a tag that has not stopped it from drawing more than 250 million visitors in the meantime, making it Europe’s leading tourist destination.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Car Makers Race to New Records in March

Driven by a seemingly insatiable global demand for German cars, luxury auto maker BMW has seen the best quarter in company history, while its mainstream rival VW has sold more cars than ever in a single month.

Germany’s top-of-the-range auto maker BMW sold 425,528 cars worldwide in the first quarter of 2012 — a rise of 11.2 percent compared with a year earlier, the company said Wednesday.

Powered by growth in key markets Germany, the United States and China, the period marked the best quarter in the company’s history.

Sales of 185,728 vehicles in March had also been the highest ever recorded for a single month, the Munich-based firm said, breaking the previous sales record of 165.855 cars set in June 2011.

Sales in China surged 36.8 percent compared with the first quarter of 2011, in addition to a rise of 16.6 percent in the United States and 2.0 percent for Germany.

The company said it hoped to grow stronger than the overall market in 2012, targeting more record sales of its BMW, Rolls-Royce and Mini brand cars.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: ‘A Koran in Every Home’ Project Makes Waves

A project by Salafist Muslims to give away 25 million German-language Korans across the country — by post and in town centres, has been slammed by a conservative politician calling it a disturbance of the religious peace.

“Wherever possible, this aggressive action must be stopped,” Günter Krings, a top member of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union parliamentary party, told Die Welt daily newspaper on Wednesday.

“Although there is in principle nothing against the distribution of religious texts,” he said, Die Welt reported he added that the radical Salafists were disturbing the religious peace with their aggressive methods.

The newspaper said that German intelligence services rated the campaign’s initiator Ibrahim Abou Nagie as a dangerous Salafist preacher.

His aim is to give away 25 million free German-language copies of the Koran to non-Muslims — his campaign is called “Read! In the name of your Lord who created you.” Additional copies are also being distributed in Austria and Switzerland.

The Cologne-based preacher says the aim is to try to save people from eternal hell.

The project is being funded by Muslims who buy one Koran, which then funds the production of a second one to be given away and also by donations from wealthy people in Bahrain.

Die Welt said the first copies have already been given out — and that Abu Nagie claims to have given away more than 300,000 German-language Korans across the country already. People are also invited to order a free copy to be delivered by post.

The Easter weekend was the spark for a new phase, the paper said, with what it termed a “frontal offensive against the non- and other-believers”. Others might describe it as setting up stands in 35 town centres across the country and handing out free copies of the Koran.

The paper does admit that the version of the Koran is a moderate one — a translation by Mohammed Ibn Ahmad Rassoul with comments from the German convert Frank von Bubenheim and has been rated by intelligence agencies as not problematic.

Yet the Berlin state office for the protection of the constitution said, “Salafistism is strongly radicalising and is promoted by its followers as supposedly the only true Islam.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega: Bossi to Maroni, Clean-Up Already Underway

(AGI) Rome — Umberto Bossi said, “The clean-up is already underway and we already have the person to do it.” The former number one of the Lega Nord was speaking in reply to comments made by Roberto Maroni yesterday. The ‘Senatur’ made his reply to the Lega’s newspaper ‘Padania’, which opened with the headline: ‘Against the attack that aims to divide. Bossi: everyone united. The clean-up is already underway and we already have the person to do it’. The former interior minister spoke yesterday both in an interview with ‘Padania’ and on his Facebook page, to demand a clean-up within the party, after the legal earthquake that shook the Lega Nord and led to the resignation of Bossi

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi Considers Running Again

Resigned League leader denounces ‘plot’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 6 — Umberto Bossi said Friday he has not ruled out running again after stepping down as the leader of the scandal-hit Northern League.

“We haven’t decided yet,” he said. “I’ll tell you later”. The firebrand politician resigned Thursday after he and his family were linked to probes into alleged fraud by the former treasurer of the party, Francesco Belsito.

Bossi repeated Friday that he believes the investigation is part of a plot against his party, a highly vocal opponent of Premier Mario Monti’s administration.

“This all seems organized to me. We’re enemies of Rome, an overbearing thief of Italy, a state that will never succeed at democracy,” he said. Bossi said that the new party treasurer, Stefano Stefani, “must look into the whole dark affair, even if it leads to people with ties to the mafia”.

A police warrant to search the League’s offices in Milan on Tuesday said prosecutors suspected party money was misspent on the former minister’s children.

The search was authorised after prosecutors in Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria launched probes into the activities of Belsito, who resigned as party treasurer on Tuesday.

On the same day, the League’s administrative secretary Nadia Dagrada told prosecutors that the party had received money under the table, which police said they had suspected from wiretapped conversations. This week’s developments come after a senior League member, Davide Boni, the Lombardy regional assembly president, was put under investigation for alleged corruption and bribery last month.

Bossi has denied any wrongdoing.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Probe Into Northern League Finances Opened in Genoa

Investigators examine Ligurian regional secretary’s bank account

(ANSA) — Genoa, April 10 — Prosecutors in Genoa opened an investigation on Tuesday into alleged fraud by the populist party the Northern League, already being probed in Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria.

Investigators are looking into deposits into the account of the Northern League’s regional secretary for Liguria, Francesco Bruzzone, by former treasurer Francesco Belsito amounting to 40,000 euros.

Party leader Umberto Bossi resigned last Thursday after he and his family were linked to alleged fraud by Belsito.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: No-TAV Protesters Occupy the Turin-Bardonecchia Highway

(AGI) Turin — The A32 Turin-Bardonecchia highway is closed in both directions of traffic. Approximately 150 students of the ‘Kollettivo Giovani’ of the No-Tav Movement marched out of Bussoleno and walked up onto the highway at the Chianocco exit.

At the moment, the highway is is closed in both directions of traffic. In the meantime, more protesters are flowing in from Giaglione while in the Maddalena construction site land-owners are convened in a meeting to discuss the details of the temporary occupation of their land.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



McDonald’s Looks to Lure French With ‘McBaguette’

The French branch of US fast food giant McDonald’s said Tuesday it was to introduce a “McBaguette” sandwich in a bid to cater to local tastes.

Often derided in food-mad France for its mass-production approach, the chain has worked to adapt with sandwiches featuring local ingredients such as goat’s cheese and pepper sauce, alongside its traditional burgers and chips.

The McBaguette will be launched as a test product on April 18 for six weeks in the chain’s 1,230 French restaurants, Nawfal Trabelsi, McDonald’s France’s vice president for marketing, told journalists.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Rijksmuseum Distances Itself From Its Islam Cartoon

AMSTERDAM, 12/04/12 — The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam is distancing itself “from the significance” of a cartoon from 1683 which it is currently exhibiting. A furore arose in Turkish media.

The print shows the Ottoman sultan lying sick in bed after losing a pitched battle by Vienna. A remarkable detail is that the royal commode is beside the bed with the Koran next to it as toilet paper. Such prints were popular in Europe after the Ottoman defeat in the siege of Vienna.

Wim Pijbes, director of the Rijksmuseum, has meanwhile placed an explanatory text beside the print. This says that such a print is part of the full picture

that the museum wants to give of 400 years of Turkish — Dutch relations, but that “this does not mean that the Rijksmuseum endorses the meaning of the print.” Pijbels says the text was necessary to prevent escalation.

The print is part of the exhibition ‘Ottomania: The Turkish world through Western eyes’. “After reports in the Turkish media came to our ears, we did make contact with the Turkish ambassador. He pointed out the ‘sensitivities’ that are linked with such a print, but he did not ask us to remove the print.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Thousands of Volunteers Prop Up Police Forces

Fourteen of the 25 Dutch police forces use members of the public as volunteers to carry out police tasks, RTL news reports.

Thousands of ordinary people volunteer for police tasks and some wear police uniforms and take part in surveillance or minor detective work, RTL says.

The projects are aimed at ‘improving safety’ and private individuals will play an even greater role when the new national police force is established, sources told the broadcaster.

Patrols

In the Haaglanden police region, for example, the local force wants to have 550 volunteers on its books by the end of the year. They will take over 120,000 hours-worth of tasks from the regular force, including patrols and minor detective work.

Without volunteers ‘we would be able to do substantially less,’ acting police chief Paul van Musscher told RTL news.

In Limburg, volunteers have walkie talkies they can use to alert the police if they spot vandals or burglars and ‘suspicious types’.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Northern League to Stay Until Padania is Free, Bossi Says

(AGI) Bergamo — Former Northern League leader Umberto Bossi claims once again the “only opposition party” was set up.

Speaking at the rally in Bergamo, he said “we will stay on until Padania, northern Italy, is set free. We are ready to battle free our rights and our land. What matters tonight is to take an oath of loyalty, the party leaders must work to prevent any further division in future. Maroni is not a traitor, Maroni is not Macbeth”, Bossi said. “We must stop being divided, being against each other. The Northern League is united. There is no magic circle. We must get going again and buck the archenemy, namely Roman centralism”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik’s Strategy: Secure a Jail Term

How to defend a mass-murderer whose guilt is not in question? Anders Behring Breivik’s defence will take the unusual approach of trying to prove he is criminally responsible and should be sent to prison.

The 33-year-old right-wing extremist who killed 77 people in twin attacks last July has said he does not want his lawyers to try to get him a light

sentence, but rather wants them to focus on arguing that he is of sound mind.

Their strategy received a boost this week when a second psychiatric examination concluded Tuesday that Breivik was not psychotic at the time of the massacre, contrary to the findings in an initial probe late last year.

“Breivik is very clear on this point: he believes his message would be delegitimized, as he says, if he is declared criminally insane,” one of his

lawyers, Vibeke Hein Baera, told AFP.

The confessed killer had told the first two psychiatric experts who examined him that the carnage had been “just a formality” aimed at drawing

attention to his “manifesto” — a more than 1,500-page Islamophobic rant published shortly before the attacks.

By concluding that he suffered from “paranoid schizophrenia” the two experts not only sparked a heated debate in Norway but also dealt a blow to the killer’s ambition to spread his ideas as a serious ideology and not the rantings of a crazy person.

In a letter to Norwegian media last week, Breivik acknowledged that the first expert conclusion was “the ultimate humiliation,” and insisted that

being sent to a psychiatric hospital instead of prison would be “a fate worse than death.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Real Estate: Huge Slump in Property Sales in Cyprus

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, APRIL 10 — The Cyprus Property News reports a dramatic fall in overseas demand for property in Cyprus, with just five properties sold in the south-east Famagusta region to overseas buyers last month. The figures show that home sales are enduring their worst slump in years.

According to the report, as Famagusta Gazette writes, during the first three months of 2012, overseas sales have fallen more than a quarter compared with the corresponding period last year. Of the 563 contracts of sale deposited at Land Registries across Cyprus last month, 129 (23%) were in favour of overseas buyers.

The report adds that although both Larnaca and Paphos saw a small increase in sales last month, these were more that offset by falling sales in Famagusta, Nicosia and Limassol. Domestic demand for property remains subdued with overall sales falling again in March, with just 434 contracts of sale deposited last month compared with the 465 deposited in March last year. The first three months have seen a 14% rise in sales compared with the same period last year, due to an almost doubling of sales in January. But there are signs that the decline in sales is getting smaller and sales may be about to reach their worst point. Beleaguered property investors in Cyprus, many of them British continue to demand their title deeds, which in most cases have not been issued.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swedes Face Toilet Paper Shortage in Wake of Strike Threat

The threat of a toilet paper shortage looming large over Sweden on Wednesday after a labour union warned it would block deliveries from several Swedish toilet paper factories in a show of solidarity with another union group negotiating for higher pay.

“We’re going to block goods from leaving factories in Lilla Edet, Marestad, Pauliström, and Nyboholm,” Matts Jutterström of the Pappers labour union told the labour trade publication Dagens Arbete.

The action, which is set to go in effect on April 23rd, could wipe out toilet paper and paper towel supplies in stores across Sweden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss Magazine Under Fire for ‘Racist’ Roma Cover

A Swiss magazine has sparked a storm of criticism with a cover story warning against criminal gangs that features a photograph of a Roma child holding a gun. Now a German organization representing Roma and Sinti has filed a criminal complaint against the publication.

It’s a striking image, but is it racist? The conservative Swiss magazine Weltwoche has unleashed a storm of criticism after publishing a photograph on the front page of its current issue of a Roma child pointing a pistol at the camera above the headline: “The Roma Are Coming: Robberies in Switzerland.” The article deals with what is allegedly a growing problem of crime committed by Roma gangs in the country. “They come, steal and leave,” reads the article, which was published last Thursday.

The cover has sparked widespread outrage, which has now reached Germany too. The Central Council of German Sinti and Roma announced on Tuesday that they had filed a criminal complaint for racial incitement and libel against the magazine with the public prosecutor in Heidelberg. The council also announced it was taking steps to stop the issue being sold in Germany.

The weekly’s cover encourages the racist stereotyping of a minority, said the council’s leader Romani Rose in a statement, adding that it places Sinti and Roma under general suspicion. He said it was similar to propaganda from the Nazi era, as it created the impression that criminality was caused by an individual’s ethnic origin. The Nazis persecuted and murdered around 500,000 Sinti and Roma during the Holocaust.

The Central Council has also complained to Switzerland’s Federal Commission against Racism (EKR). EKR President Martine Brunschwig Graf announced earlier this week that the commission would investigate the Weltwoche article.

In a video message published on its website on Monday, Weltwoche defended itself against the criticism. Deputy editor in chief Philipp Gut, who is one of the co-authors of the article, said that although the article had triggered a storm of indignation, it had also met with approval. He said that growing “crime tourism” in Switzerland, largely perpetrated by Roma gangs from Eastern Europe, was a reality, calling it a “current and serious problem.” The photograph of the child symbolized “the fact that Roma gangs misuse their children for criminal purposes,” Gut also told the Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung.

Several criminal complaints have already been filed against Weltwoche in Switzerland, Austria and Germany. One of the people who has filed a complaint, Austrian journalist Klaus Kamolz, told the Swiss news agency SDA that he wanted to send a “symbolic signal” against the “blanket condemnation of Roma as criminals.” Peter Studer, a former president of the Swiss Press Council, said it was an “outrageous picture” with “racist overtones.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Magazine Sued for Racial Incitement

Die Weltwoche, a Zurich-based news weekly, has triggered outrage among some people in Switzerland, Germany and Austria with its latest cover and lead article.

The cover of the magazine, which has ties to the rightwing Swiss People’s Party, shows a Roma child who looks about four years old pointing a gun at the camera (see link). The headline says: “The Roma are coming: Plundering in Switzerland”.

One of those lodging a legal complaint is an Austrian journalist who says he wants to send a “symbolic signal” against what he sees as Weltwoche’s “sweeping generalisation and tarring of Roma as criminals”.

A woman in Basel has also lodged a complaint, accusing Weltwoche of breaching Swiss anti-racism laws.

Peter Studer, president of the Swiss Press Council between 2001 and 2007, said it was an “outrageous picture with racist tones”.

The deputy editor of Weltwoche, who co-wrote the lead article, said he couldn’t understand what all the fuss was about, adding that the real scandal was that none of the people complaining had spoken out against the abuse of Roma children by gangs for criminal purposes.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



UK: David Cameron ‘Must Retreat’ On Charities, Senior Tory MPs Warn

David Cameron must back down over plans to cap tax breaks on donations to charity or risk undermining Britain’s culture of philanthropy, senior Tory MPs have warned.

The Prime Minister promised to listen “very sympathetically” to charities concerned that philanthropic giving will decline after the Government criticised wealthy individuals who benefit from tax relief on donations.

Mr Cameron, speaking on a visit to Indonesia, said he wanted to “get the balance right” between encouraging charities and cracking down on tax avoiders, and indicated that there could be differing tax treatment for charities registered in Britain and abroad.

Higher rate taxpayers giving to a charity can reclaim more than half of the tax. From April, the maximum amount that can be reclaimed will be £50,000 per year or a quarter of the individual’s income.

Conor Burns, ministerial aide to the Northern Ireland Secretary, Owen Paterson, urged him go further and make a “quick review and retreat”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: How Dare a Foreign Court Tell us What to Do?

Abu Hamza can now be taken to the United States.

Thank you for giving us permission, our worshipful unelected masters in Strasbourg on the European Human Rights Court!

We Britons are so happy! When can we come to the pleasant air of France and polish your shoes?

Or have we gone mad?

Britain — the country that not so long ago had the greatest Empire that the world has ever seen, or is ever likely to see — now has to wait for the permission of a foreign court to extradite evil villains that threaten its own people.

Why?

For God’s sake, Why can’t our Government see how embarrassing this is for our people and our extraordinary history?

Have we now conceded that we are a third rate banana republic donkey state that can’t breathe, move or wink without an international body telling us so?

This is a court that has some judges that do not even have proper legal training, who are from former Soviet countries that have poor law schools, and from states that are not entirely free from the corruption of the judicial office.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Honey Trap: How the Demise of Britain’s Bees Could Cost US £1.8billion a Year

Losing bees would cost Britain £1.8bn to foot the costs of hand-pollinating plants, a study has found.

Researchers at the University of Reading say the decline in their numbers would be disastrous for crops and drive up food prices.

Simon Potts, professor of biodiversity, and his team tested teams hand-pollinating all Britain’s major crops.

They worked out how many hours it would take them to cover all the crops in Britain and what they would be paid for their time at the minimum wage.

Using humans with paintbrushes to pollinate crops including apples, pears, strawberries, oildseed rape, field beans, courgettes, peaches and plums would cost £1.8bn — the equivalent of 60,000 teachers or nurses.

The shocking figure comes just a week after two studies last week found pesticides are stopping bees finding their way home.

Numbers of honeybees in managed hives have fallen by half since the 1980s and wild honeybees are nearly extinct. Bumblebees are in slower decline but some species have already been wiped out.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Brave Agent Who Exposed Hamza Only to be Betrayed by MI5

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

At the Fourth Feathers Youth Club, a run-down building near London’s Baker Street, the Islamic cleric Abu Qatada banged his stick on the wooden floor as he preached a hate-filled speech against the British people.

Sixty Muslim men and boys at the Friday lunchtime prayers listened to the inflammatory sermon of Bin Laden’s right-hand man in Britain, before praying in deep devotion to Allah.

But kneeling among them that day in April 2000 was an undercover spy, Reda Hassaine, working for the British Government. He had been monitoring Abu Qatada’s evil activities for six years — and his cover was about to be blown.

Hassaine had reported to Scotland Yard’s Special Branch and the homeland secret service, MI5, that Abu Qatada and his sidekick, the hook-handed cleric Abu Hamza, were inciting terror attacks in London.

He had seen both men collect thousands of pounds from their congregations to pay to send young British Muslims abroad to train as suicide bombers and then return here.

He had warned his secret service minders that the clerics wanted nothing short of a takeover of the West and its Christian way of life, using any kind of atrocity necessary.

But the Daily Mail can reveal that the secret agent’s vital information was ignored because of a little-known deal described as a ‘covenant of security’ forged between the security agencies and radical Islamists in the UK.

The unwritten, if cynical, pact allowed radical clerics to orchestrate and encourage Islamist attacks abroad. Their brainwashing of young home-grown Muslims here was tolerated by the secret services in the hope there would be no attacks on targets in Britain.

[…]

Minutes after observing prayers in the Fourth Feathers Club that day in 2000, Hassaine was beaten up by Qatada’s henchmen. Hassaine recalled: ‘A sidekick of Qatada had learned I was a spy and pointed me out after the sermon that day. At that point, Qatada began to recite a special prayer of jihad, to encourage the killing of anyone who threatens Islam. I immediately sensed I was in trouble.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Woman Burglar With 207 Convictions is Finally Jailed… But She Laughs at Two-Year Sentence and Shouts: ‘Cushty’

A woman thief who preyed on the elderly was finally locked up yesterday — after amassing 207 convictions.

Despite her extraordinary criminal record, Caroline Pattinson, 34, had been spared prison on countless occasions.

But after targeting a 72-year-old grandmother in her home the heroin addict was at last sentenced to two-and-a-half years in jail.

Pattinson, however, laughed it off. As she was led away from the dock she turned to the court and shouted: ‘Cushty, easily done.’

The serial offender, who has at least one child in care, began offending when she was just 14.

But in another illustration of soft justice, the one-woman crimewave was repeatedly handed community orders and suspended sentences, instead of time behind bars. It is believed she has only ever served time in prison while on remand.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Libya: Inquiry Threatens European Oil Firms

Corriere della Sera, The Wall Street Journal Europe

Libya’s National Transitional Council has launched an inquiry into oil contracts signed with foreign companies during the last years of the Gaddafi era, Corriere della Sera reports. The investigation focuses on alleged corruption of Libyan officials from 2008 and 2011, and involves, among others, two of Europe’s largest energy firms, Italy’s ENI and France’s Total.

The inquiry comes in the week after the US Securities and Exchange Commission opened a similar procedure. If convicted, companies could face massive fines and see their current and future contracts with the new government declared null and void. According to the Wall Street Journal, the investigation “casts a cloud on the companies’ ambitions to expand their foothold in the country with the largest oil reserves in Africa”.

ENI, in particular, was the biggest operator in Libya under the rule of Muammar Gaddafi and quickly recovered its lead after the regime change, with a current output share of about 14 per cent. The company was planning to invest over $30 billion (€22.9 billion) to double that figure over the next decade.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Stakelbeck: Israel a Safe Haven for Christians Amid Muslim Persecution

While Christians are being persecuted throughout the Muslim Middle East, they are finding safe haven in Israel. It’s a story the mainstream media won’t discuss.

Click the link above to watch my latest report.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



Territories: Netanyahu Studying Outpost Legalisation

In three villages of Bruchin, Rachelim and Sansana

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, APRIL 4 — The Israeli Prime Minister, Benyamin Netanyahu, has ordered the government’s legal consultant, Yehuda Weinstein, to examine once more the status of three Israeli military outposts in the West Bank, with the aim of finally legalising the positions. Reports suggest that the three areas in question are Bruchin (in the north of the West Bank, set up in 2000 and populated by 10 families), Rachelim (north of the West Bank, set up in 1991 and populated by 50 families) and Sansana (southern West Bank, created in 2000, where 50 families live). The areas were created amid efforts from settlers, who in subsequent years received delayed and partial recognition from the Construction and Defence Ministries and are now awaiting definitive legalisation.

Netanyahu has also asked Weinstein to check if it is possible to avoid the demolition, ruled by the Supreme Court — of four buildings constructed illegally in the Beit El settlement close to Ramallah. Last month, the government tried in vain to reach a deal to avoid the demolition, again in spite of a Supreme Court ruling, of the most populous settler outpost in the West Bank, that of Migron (created in 1999, close to Ramallah). But the appeal presented by the government was rejected by judges and Migron now has to be definitively cleared by June.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran Cuts Oil Exports to Germany

Iran has stopped oil imports to Germany and reduced its consumption of EU products as the European Union moves towards a total embargo on Iranian oil, Iranian media reported on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Siemens Allegedly Sold Surveillance Gear to Syria

German engineering giant Siemens and a spinoff company allegedly sold surveillance technology to the Syrian regime, according to a German television report. The government could be using the equipment to crack down on opposition supporters, human rights activists warn.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria: Damascus Accuses Turkey of Arming and Sending Rebels

(ANSAmed) — MOSCOW, APRIL 10 — In Moscow today, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Al-Mouallem has accused Turkey of training and arming rebel forces as well as sending militants into Syria. “Turkey backs in all possible ways the actions of illegal Syrian groups, by supplying them with arms, by allowing for the creation of training camps and by fostering their illegal penetration into Syrian territory,” said Walid Al-Mouallem, underlining that this goes against the Annan paln.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Russian MPs’ Walkout Mars Putin Unity Call

Russian opposition deputies walked out of parliament in an unprecedented protest on Wednesday, overshadowing a speech by Vladimir Putin urging his compatriots to unite after a tense election contest.

After winning the March presidential election despite an outburst of protests against his rule, Putin outlined in a keynote address his vision for Russia’s future as a top five global economy with a growing population.

But in a sign his upcoming six year Kremlin mandate may not be as unchallenged as his past 12 years in charge, an entire opposition faction walked out of the session in protest at one of Putin’s comments.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ukraine: Tymoshenko Calls Murder Allegations ‘Absurd’

KIEV — Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, serving a seven-year jail sentence on abuse-of-office charges, on Monday dismissed new allegations against her of involvement in the murder of a lawmaker almost 16 years ago. She said they were “absurd” and clearly politically driven.

Ukrainian prosecutors are investigating her possible involvement in the 1996 killing of Yevhen Shcherban, a powerful businessman and politician who died in a hail of bullets as he emerged from a plane in Donetsk. The attackers, disguised as airport mechanics, also killed his wife and several bystanders.

His killing followed several other murders in Donetsk, including a football stadium bombing that killed the owner of the Shakhtar Donetsk club and led to a realignment of political and business alliances in the key steel- and coal-producing region.

Both Tymoshenko and her rival, President Viktor Yanukovych, were already big players in the turbulent region, which seethed with intrigue and where fortunes were made and lost in murky dealings.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Russia Kills Nine Rebels in North Caucasus: Report

Russian security forces have killed nine suspected Islamist rebels in two separate operations in its troubled Northern Caucasus region, the Interfax news agency said on Tuesday.

Five militants were killed during a raid by security forces overnight on the apartment where they were held up in the town of Mineralnye Vody, a security source told the agency.

In the second incident around the village of Achikulak, security forces opened fire on a car which had fired on them during a document check. Four militants were killed in the exchange of fire.

There were no reports of casualties among the security forces.

Both clashes took place in the Stavropol region which is officially part of the Russian Northern Caucasus but lies just to the north of the troubled mainly Muslim Russian republics that are regularly the scene of Islamist unrest.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Airbus Gets Multi-Billion-Dollar Order From Indonesia

European aircraft manufacturer Airbus will build 11 more long-haul passenger jets for Indonesia. The deal, worth almost two billion euros ($2.5 billion), will help the company overcome its current shortage of orders.

Indonesia’s flag carrier Garuda will purchase 11 A330 jets for long-distance travel from Europe’s leading plane producer, Airbus. The deal seems more than welcome for the multinational company, which has only secured firm orders for 90 planes in the first quarter of 2012, compared with more than 400 for US rival Boeing.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India Says EU Tax a ‘Deal Breaker’ For Climate Talks

(NEW DELHI) — India’s environment minister said Wednesday that a European Union scheme to tax airlines for carbon emissions was “a deal breaker” ahead of global climate change talks, a warning rejected by the EU.

“I shall stick my neck out and say, for the environment ministry, yes the unilateral measure by the EU… is a deal breaker for the talks,” Jayanthi Natarajan said in New Delhi.

“I strongly believe that as far as climate change discussions are concerned, this is unacceptable,” said the environment minister, who is India’s negotiating leader at global climate change talks.

Natarajan, speaking at a function organised by the Energy Resources Institute, said she had written a letter to EU Commissioner for Climate Change Connie Hedegaard demanding a reversal of the carbon tax on airlines.

Her statements were the toughest by India so far on the EU plan.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, dismissed the minister’s warning and stressed that the system in place since January 1 seeks to encourage others to do the same in their countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Suu Kyi Meets With Myanmar President

Myanmar opposition leader and former political prisoner Aung Sang Suu Kyi has met with President Thein Sein to discuss ways of democratizing the country. The meeting precedes Suu Kyi’s historic entry into parliament. Myanmar’s opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, met with President Thein Sein on Wednesday for the first time since being elected to parliament earlier this month.

The pair met at Thein Sein’s official residence in the capital, Naypyidaw. Following the meeting, Suu Kyi told the AFP news agency that she was “satisfied,” but declined to reveal any details of the discussion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


42,000-Year-Old Baby Mammoth on Show in Hong Kong

The world’s best-preserved mammoth, buried about 42,000 years ago, will go on display in Hong Kong this week, the organiser of its first exhibition in Asia said Wednesday.

Discovered in the permafrost of Russia’s Yamal Peninsula in 2007 by a reindeer herder, the female baby mammoth named Lyuba remained almost fully intact with organs and eyelashes preserved.

Only her toenails, part of her tail, right ear and fur were missing.

Traces of her mother’s milk were even found in Lyuba’s stomach, said the IFC mall, the city’s posh harbourfront shopping centre, which will showcase the animal for a month from Thursday.

Lyuba, which means “love” in Russian, has previously toured North America.

Scientists have said they believe the ice-age mammal was only a few months old when she probably drowned in a mudslide, which “pickled” her in near-perfect condition.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Gives Current and Former Leaders New Titles

North Korea has officially given a new post to its leader, Kim Jong-un, further elevating his position. His late father was also honored with a posthumous title.

North Korea has appointed its new leader, Kim Jong-un, as first secretary of the ruling Workers’ Party — a title that appears to be a new top party post.

At the same time, it declared his father, the late leader Kim Jong-il, to be the party’s “eternal” general secretary.

The announcements were made at a special party conference in Pyongyang, one of two political gatherings this week that are expected to formally install the young Kim as the country’s supreme leader.

Kim Jong-un, who is thought to be 28, took over power from his father in December last year after the latter’s death on December 17. He has already been officially appointed supreme commander of the Korean People’s Army.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Philippines, China Look for Diplomatic Solution to Naval Standoff

The Philippines has said that Beijing and Manila will find a diplomatic solution to a naval standoff in the South China Sea. The two countries are at odds over possession of a small shoal and other landmasses in the sea.

Manila said its largest warship was in a tense standoff with two Chinese surveillance vessels on Wednesday. The incident took place at the disputed Scarborough Shoal, a rock formation in the South China Sea.

Philippine Foreign Minister Albert Del Rosario summoned the Chinese ambassador in Manila, Ma Keqing, early on Wednesday, telling her the Navy would enforce Philippine laws.

“The ambassador of China took the view that they have full sovereignty over the Scarborough Shoal,” said Del Rosario. Despite the impasse, he said, “We resolved to seek a diplomatic solution to the issue.”

The Philippine Foreign Ministry said that on Sunday, a navy plane spotted eight Chinese fishing vessels anchored in a lagoon at the shoal, which lies off the coast of the northwestern Philippine province of Zambales.

The Philippine military then sent its largest warship, the BRP Gregorio del Pilar, to the area.

The dispute is only the most recent in a region where maritime boundaries often appear to be blurred. Last year, the Philippines accused China of allowing vessels to intrude into other contested stretches of sea. They include the Spratly Islands, which — as well as being claimed by China — are also subject to claims by Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. The islands are thought to be rich in oil and gas.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Serial Rapist’s Afghan Ethnicity No Excuse, Says Judge

A JUDGE has today rejected an Afghan refugee’s claim that he raped an intoxicated and vulnerable teenager because of cultural differences.

Esmatullah Sharifi, 30, was appearing in the County Court for the second time in less than three years on a charge of rape and Judge Mark Dean said his background as a traumatised Muslim refugee was no excuse.

The judge said a psychologist told the court Sharifi, who came to Australia in 2001 on a temporary protection visa, had “an unclear concept of what constitutes consent in sexual relationships” in Australia

But the judge said Sharifi’s background and flight from the Taliban in Afghanistan could not excuse an extreme act of violence.

“You well knew the victim was not consenting to the act of sexual penetration you performed,” Judge Dean said.

Sentencing Sharifi for the rape of the 18-year-old woman, Judge Dean said that he had driven from his home in Tullamarine to Frankston looking for a victim.

The woman was alone, intoxicated and sitting on the footpath near the 21st Century nightclub after she had a disagreement with her friends.

Sharifi sat down beside her, started talking to her and offered to drive her to a hotel in Mornington where here friends had gone.

Judge Dean said Sharifi drove in a different direction and the victim became concerned and texted her friends but he took her phone and found a dark street where he stopped.

As she cried and asked if he planned to kill her Sharifi put his hand around her neck and forced her to remove her clothes before raping her.

“Your offending is of the utmost seriousness,” Judge Dean said in his County Court sentence.

“You preyed upon a young vulnerable stranger who was alone and intoxicated at night. Your brutal conduct must be denounced by this court.”

Sharifi pleaded guilty to one count of rape committed on December 19, 2008…

           — Hat tip: Salome [Return to headlines]



South Africa, Australia to Share SKA?

A decision on the site of the Square Kilometre Array has been delayed to allow a scientific working group to explore ways of maximising investments already made by rival bidders South Africa and Australia-New Zealand — raising the possibility that the hosting of the world’s biggest radio telescope could be shared.

South Africa, allied with eight other African countries, is competing against Australia (allied with New Zealand) to host the €1.5-billion Square Kilometre Array (SKA), an instrument 50-100 times more sensitive and 10 000 times faster than any radio imaging telescope yet built.

The international SKA organisation members met in Amsterdam, the Netherlands on Tuesday to discuss a report and recommendation by an advisory committee on which site was thought to be technically superior, along with commentary made by the SKA board of directors at a meeting in Manchester, England last month.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


159 Rhinos Poached in S. Africa This Year: Minister

Almost 160 rhinos were poached in South Africa in the first three months of this year as trade in the animals’ horns drives up the illegal killings, a minister said Wednesday. “The toll of rhinos poached in South Africa for 2012 has reached the alarming figure of 159, in the midst of the increased anti-poaching effort,” said Water and Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa.

“The Kruger National Park continues to bear the brunt of these losses, with the rhinos poached in the park having reached a staggering total of 95,” said Molewa at a media event at the iconic reserve. “This is no longer an environmental management problem only, but it has become a matter in which we have involved all law-enforcement agencies.”

The animals’ distinctive horns are hacked off to be smuggled to the lucrative Asian black market, where the fingernail-like substance is falsely believed to have powerful healing properties. Last year, a record 448 were poached.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fighting Rages on Sudanese Border

Sudan and South Sudan are engaged in border clashes in an important oil-production area. Observers fear a relapse into all-out war. Sudan says fierce fighting is continuing for a second day on its border with South Sudan as the two neighbors wrangle over a disputed oil field.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



S. African Newspaper Launches Tabloid Aimed at Blacks

South Africa’s historic The Star newspaper launched an edition targeting blacks on Monday, hoping to cash in on the country’s growing middle class. Star Africa is the latest offering of the 125-year-old Star, part of the Irish Independent newspaper group. It is “an intelligent approach to tabloid journalism”, editor Makhudu Sefara said. “Our approach is one that says Africa is not about the texture of your hair, it’s about your approach and relation to the content,” Sefara told AFP.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Anger as Swiss Visa Rules Are Relaxed

Switzerland has suddenly relaxed visa requirements for workers from 33 countries, including many Balkan nations, in a move that has angered anti-immigrant opposition politicians. The liberalization of the visa regime by the Federal Department for Justice and Police (FDJP) would affect 33 non-EU countries whose citizens want to work or participate in training in Switzerland for a maximum of three months, newspaper Tages Anzieger reported.

“The FDJP plans obviously represent a serious change in practice. It is unthinkable that they are secretly trying to wave them through,” National Councillor for the Swiss People’s Party, Hans Fehr, told the newspaper. Although visas for entry under such circumstances would no longer be required, work permits would.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgium Must Shut Down Anti-Immigrant Website: NGOs

A network of European anti-racism groups urged the Belgian government on Wednesday to shut down a far-right website inciting people to denounce crimes committed by illegal immigrants.

The European Network Against Racism (ENAR) charged that the website set up by the Vlaams Belang (Flemish Interest) party “recalls Gestapo practices” and represents a call for hatred and violence.

“We call on the Belgian government to disable this website and to strongly condemn actions inciting to hatred directed at specific groups,” said ENAR chairman Chibo Onyeji.

“This is crucial to ensure that Europe remains — also for our children and grandchildren — an inclusive place for all, where everyone can participate on an equal basis,” he said.

The website allows people to file anonymous tip-offs of alleged social security fraud, work on the black market and more serious crimes.

“This website is thoughtless, but more dangerously, it deliberately targets groups on the basis of their national or ethnic origin. Anybody could be targeted because he/she is black or looks North African,” ENAR said in a statement.

Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter said Tuesday that the website was necessary because of the presence of “tens of thousands of illegal immigrants” in Belgian cities and the problems that they cause.

A similar website caused a furore when it was set up by the far-right Freedom Party (PVV) in the neighbouring Netherlands, but Prime Minister Mark Rutte, whose coalition government has PVV backing, refused to condemn it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Finland: Higher Threshold for Some Family Reunification

Regulations governing the reunification of some families may be tightened up. A report by the Interior Ministry says it is possible that in future, people resident on the grounds of humanitarian protection may have to prove sufficient income to support their families before being joined by spouses and children.

[Return to headlines]



Germany: Fear of Honor Killings: Immigrants Flee Families to Find Themselves

Hundreds of young female immigrants are hiding from their families in Germany after fleeing oppression, physical violence and even death threats. Charities and social workers help the women get new identities and build independent lives for themselves, but the risk of revenge from honor-obsessed relatives remains.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Parliament Approves Reception Centres

Clashes in Amigdalesa where the centre will be built

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — With 117 votes in favour and 37 against, the Greek Parliament has approved the draft law proposed by the Citizens Protection Ministry on the creation of 30 reception centres for irregular immigrants in Greece, and the conditions on the basis of which the clandestine migrants will be kept. “Social peace,” said Citizens Protection Minister Michalis Chrisochoidis in speaking at the assembly, “is in danger.” Voting against the law were deputies from the Greek Communist Party (KKE) as well as those from Syriza (left), Laos (fare right), the Democratic Left and Greek Independents (right).

While discussion was underway on the draft law in Parliament, minor incidents occurred between police and the inhabitants of Amigdalesa, the area in which the first centre for immigrants will be built.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Pay Foreign Convicts to Quit Switzerland’

Foreign-born offenders in Geneva will in future be offered 4,000 francs ($4,634) to leave the country, as part of a plan to reduce the burden on Switzerland’s prisons.

Frustrated by seeing the same North African offenders going through the courts time and again, Geneva has responded by launching a new plan which offers offenders a chance to return to their home countries rather than languish in a Swiss prison.

The move is also aimed at reducing the significant prison bill, which amounts to approximately 450 francs ($491) a day per inmate, newspaper Tages Anzeiger reported. Instead of serving a prison sentence, small crime offenders will be able to choose to return instead to their homelands.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Only 40% of Border Scandal Foreign Criminals Have Been Deported in the Last Six Years

Barely 40 per cent of the foreign criminals released from prison in a border scandal six years ago have been deported, a report reveals today.

In 2006, the Labour government was rocked by revelations that more than 1,000 foreign nationals had been let out without being considered for deportation.

By November last year, fewer than 400 had been removed from the country or deported, and more than 50 have still not been found. Hundreds more remain here despite their cases having been concluded.

[…]

In many cases, criminals use human rights laws to challenge their removal, or officials struggle to secure passports from their home countries, which do not want to take them back.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Agenda 21, The End of Western Civilization, Part 4

[Comment: Part 4 of an excellent series on Agenda 21.]

ICLEI, Unelected Councils and other NGO vehicles promoting Agenda 21/Sustainable Development and the New World Order.

America, as well as the rest of the entire world, is being deluged with schemes to do away with individual freedom, property rights and the Constitution. I do not exaggerate about the extent of the evils that are trying to control every aspect of our lives and to eliminate many of us. Lately I keep hearing (and often thinking myself) that it is too late to stop this train wreck; the global elite have taken us so far down the road toward global government that to return to a republican form of government here in the U.S. might be impossible. The elite have been doing this through ICLEI, Visioning plans and other unelected councils controlled by NGOs (non-governmental organizations) connected to the United Nations.

There are so many various schemes and layers of schemes to relieve us of our freedoms that it would take volumes to try to describe all of them and new ones are being invented almost daily.

This article will attempt to explain ICLEI and how unelected councils have invaded our towns, cities, counties, states and our lives — and how they are destroying each of those entities as they become entrenched.

ICLEI

ICLEI is the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, now known as Local Governments for Sustainability. As we expose what each of these NGOs is doing to attack us, they change their names in the hope of sneaking in under the radar of communities and towns that haven’t been exposed to them yet. It only works for a little while, then they need to change their names again and again as the rocks are lifted and sunlight shines on these evil entities.

ICLEI, a non-profit, private foundation, is based in Bonn, Germany and their nefarious ploy ostensibly is to assist local entities, usually cities and towns, to reduce their carbon footprints. As their website puts it:

ICLEI supports local governments in finding and implementing local solutions to global challenges by (in their words):

  • helping local governments to establishing plans of action to meet their locally defined, concrete, measurable targets
  • working toward meeting these targets through the implementation of projects and by offering tools that help local governments to reach their goals
  • evaluating local and cumulative progress toward sustainable development and making the commitments and actions of local governments known on a global level
  • working in partnership with regional, national and international organizations and institutions to ensure an international framework that supports local action

What that means is that when an entity joins ICLEI they agree to set certain targets (defined by ICLEI and measured by tools sold to them by ICLEI).

ICLEI was one of the groups instrumental in creating Agenda 21. Their whole scheme is to get communities to regulate everything that affects the environment which, of course, is everything including our exhalations.

ICLEI is now operating in more than 600 cities in all 50 states. They are shooting for 1,000 member cities in the US alone in the next three years.

ICLEI’s vice chair, Harvey Rubin, made the telling statement, “Individual rights will have to take a backseat to the collective.” If what I described above doesn’t convince you that this NGO at least is trying to take away our rights and freedoms, his statement should bring it home.

[…]

Comprehensive Development Plans, promoted by one or more NGO in city after city across the nation, are enforcing schemes to “cut their carbon footprint” by controlling energy use. One of the most popular tools now to control energy use is the energy audit and building review. They establish quotas for electrical use, and for heating and cooling pumps, and water use. The use of Smart Meters is meant not only to control our use but to track what we do in our homes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



California Declares War on Family Homes to ‘Save the Planet’

The state of California has declared war on detached family homes, with laws passed to mitigate car use and carbon dioxide emissions now leading to policies that mandate up to 30 homes be built on a single acre of land, fulfilling the goal of climate change alarmists to pack people into densely populated prison cities.

“Metropolitan area governments are adopting plans that would require most new housing to be built at 20 or more to the acre, which is at least five times the traditional quarter acre per house. State and regional planners also seek to radically restructure urban areas, forcing much of the new hyperdensity development into narrowly confined corridors,” reports the Wall Street Journal.

In some areas of Los Angeles County and five other Southern California counties, 30 housing units per acre are being mandated, all under the auspices of laws passed in the name of cutting car use and limiting CO2 emissions, including the 2006 Global Warming Solutions Act and the 2008 Sustainable Communities and Climate Protection Act.

The rules on restricted development are driving up house prices and driving down standards of living. Even if you believe the justification of lowering greenhouse gases, the regulations won’t even achieve that, with greater traffic congestion merely confined to overpopulated cities as additional houses continue to use cars.

Transportation consultant Wendell Cox told the WSJ that the whole process represented an effort to make the construction of detached houses “illegal”.

This is all part of the United Nations’ Agenda 21 project which demands that member nations adopt “sustainable development” policies that are little more than a disguise for the reintroduction of neo-feudalism and only serve to reduce living standards and quality of life.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Mosque in Gay-Hate Row Opens a New Fee-Paying School Where Pupils Will Memorise the Koran and Speak Arabic

A mosque where clerics were filmed allegedly preaching hate against homosexuals and non-Muslims is opening a fee-paying school.

Pupils will be expected to memorise the Koran and wear traditional Pakistani uniforms when it opens in Birmingham this September, with fees of £3,500 a year.

Arabic will be the ‘key language’ taught to the annual intake of 20 students, aged 11 to 16, at Green Lane Masjid Independent Boys School.

Pupils will also follow the national GCSE curriculum in traditional subjects such as the sciences and geography.

Its refurbished £1.5million two-storey building is next to the main mosque in Small Heath.

In 2008 a Channel 4 TV documentary, titled Undercover Mosque, showed secret footage of Islamic scholars at Green Lane Masjid allegedly peddling hate against homosexuals and non-Muslims.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Tenfold Increase in Illegitimate Babies in Century Since Titanic, ONS Says

Ten times more babies are born out of wedlock today than 100 years ago as middle-class couples decide to co-habit rather than marry, while the divorce rate is 170 times higher than it was a century ago, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has said.

The ONS released the statistics to show how much society has changed in the centenary since the sinking of the Titanic. Its figures showed that just under 38,000 illegitimate babies were born in England and Wales in 1911, the year before the Titanic set sail. This is out of a total of 881,138 babies born that year.

By 2010 the number of children in England and Wales born outside marriage had reached 338,790, an almost ten-fold increase, the ONS said. This amounts to just under half of the 723,165 babies born that year.

Meanwhile the number of divorces rose from 702 to 119,589 between 1911 and 2010. Some experts said that the figures provide a “fascinating insight” into how life in this country has changed. Others said that they demonstrate the gradual moral decline of society.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Ehrlich, Hansen, Lovelock: We Must Build “An Entirely New Kind of Global Society”

The United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) has recently published a collection of “key messages” written by the usual suspects, including eugenicist Paul Ehrlich, climate dictator James Lovelock and NASA’s own terror-endorsing James Hansen.

In the statement titled “Environment and Development Challenges: The Imperative to Act”meant to inspire the UN and its upcoming 2012 Earth Summit, the fiends call for a global implementation of population policies. To effectively implement these policies the authors propose rights being infringed upon in order to address what they call “the population issue”:

“The population issue should be urgently addressed by education and empowerment of women, including in the work-force and in rights, ownership and inheritance; health care of children and the elderly; and making modern contraception accessible to all.”, they write.

We of course know perfectly well what they mean by “health care of children and the elderly”. We have recently seen the terrible results of health care for children in the eugenicists’ model-state of China.

[…]

This is just one out of many dehumanizing proposals from the mind of Paul Ehrlich. Also remember this when you read his proposals for a global society necessary to “address population issues” (also out of Ecoscience):

“… Perhaps those agencies, combined with UNEP and the United Nations population agencies, might eventually be developed into a Planetary Regime— sort of an international superagency for population, resources, and environment. Such a comprehensive Planetary Regime could control the development, administration, conservation, and distribution of all natural resources, renewable or nonrenewable, at least insofar as international implications exist.”

Here is your global society in a nutshell.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120410

Financial Crisis
» EU: Italy and Spain Compete for Investors
» Far-Flung Demand Bolsters German Exports
» Italy: ‘17,000 Northern Businesses Went Bust Since 2009’
» JPMorgan Trader Iksil Fuels Prop-Trading Debate With Bets
 
USA
» Alaska Expedition to Study Northern Lights From the Inside
» Hate Preacher Abu Hamza Facing Up to 50 Years Behind Bars in the U.S. After Losing Extradition Appeal
» Home Buyers Find Safety in Disused US Missile Sites
» NASA Jumbo Jet Arrives to Ferry Shuttle Discovery to Smithsonian
» Obama Administration Corruption in Solyndra Deal Confirmed
» Portrait of a Failed “Messiah”
» Santorum Suspends His Campaign, 2 Advisers Say
» State Department Barred Inspection
» Statism Needs Division
» Who Cares About John Derbyshire?
 
Europe and the EU
» European Zoos Welcome Panda Breeding Discovery
» Flemish Far Right Party Launches Racist Website
» France: 13 Salafis Before Judge for Indictment
» France 2012: Sarkozy Attacks in Paris, Freeze EU Check
» Italy: Journalist and Writer Miriam Mafai Dies
» Italy: Bossi’s Son Renzo Resigns as Lombardy Councillor
» Italy: Northern League Must Have Clean Up, ‘Look in All Drawers’
» Italy: Lega: Formigoni Welcomes Resignation of Renzo Bossi
» Italy: Berlusconi Plan to Give Away TV Frequencies Scrapped — Report
» Italy: Bossi Junior Steps Down, Rosy Mauro Urged to Follow Suit
» Italy: Bossi Jr Driver: ‘I Handed Over Lega Money for His Expenses’
» Italy: Public Prosecutor Acquires Video of Payment to Renzo Bossi
» Netherlands: Handshake Muslim Loses Court Case
» Norway Killer Breivik is Sane: Psychiatric Report
» Norway: Oslo Braces for ‘World’s Deadliest Shooter’ Trial
» Norway’s Mass Killer Breivik ‘Declared Sane’
» Norway: Breivik ‘Regrets Not Going Further’: Lawyer
» Norway: Breivik Trial: Facts and Figures
» Norway Gunman Anders Behring Breivik ‘Pleased’ Probe Finds Him Sane
» Norwegian Killer Deemed Sane After All
» Sweden: Obama’s Anti-Semitism Expert to Meet Reepalu
» There’s More to Nuclear Fusion Than ITER
» UK: Abu Hamza US Extradition Backed by European Court
» UK: Blackpool Council Grants Free Parking for Muslims, But Everyone Else Has to Pay
» UK: Hate Preachers Return to Quaker Venue
 
North Africa
» Court Suspends Egypt’s Constitutional Assembly
» Jihadists Say French Paper ‘Liberation’ Is Enemy of Islam
 
Middle East
» 100 Vigilantes to ‘Cleanse Kubbar Island of Women’ — Girls Warned Against Going There
» Iraq Progresses Toward a Future Built on Oil Wealth
» Kofi Annan Will Seek Tehran’s Support for Syria Peace Plan
» Syria Accuses Turkey of Arming Rebels
» Turkey-Greece: Simit (Or Koulouri) Pretzel in Dispute
 
South Asia
» Asian Terrorism Poses an Increasing Threat to Global Security
» India: Red Academics Carry On
 
Far East
» China: Nike and Zara Accused of “Environmental Pollution”
» Pyongyang Puts Washington to the Test
» Report: Sony to Cut 10,000 Jobs Worldwide Through March 2013
» Sony Expects Record Annual Loss
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» 100 Boko Harams Took Control of Gao in Northern Mali
 
Immigration
» Greece: “Absolutely Nothing” Done, Says Minister
» Italy, Libya Sign Anti-Migrant Pact
» UK: Key Events in Battle to Extradite Abu Hamza
» UK: Palestinian Ambassador Thanks Memo for Sheikh Raed Support
» UK: Theresa May Humiliated by Judge Over Attempted Deportation of Palestinian Activist
» UK: The ECHR is Right About Abu Hamza, But Britain Still Needs to Leave
» UK: What Today’s Abu Hamza Ruling Means
 
Culture Wars
» France: Imam Blesses Union Between Two Gay Muslims

Financial Crisis


EU: Italy and Spain Compete for Investors

Rome, 10 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Competition between Italy and Spain for international investors’ funds will heat up this quarter as domestic buying stoked by the European Central Bank fades.

Italian and Spanish bonds slumped last week after demand dropped at a Spanish bond sale and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said his country is in “extreme difficulty.” The decline reversed a first-quarter rally sparked by more than 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of ECB loans to the region’s banks via its longer-term refinancing operation. Spain’s 10-year yield spread to German bunds widened to the most in four months, while Italy’s reached a six-week high.

“Spain and Italy are coming back down to earth after an incredible first quarter,” said Luca Jellinek, head of European interest-rate strategy at Credit Agricole SA in London. “The LTRO bought some time, but not a massive amount of time. Now the second quarter will be harder than the first unless policy moves convince foreign investors to come back in.”

Italian 10-year bonds fell for a fourth week, with the yield advancing 40 basis points to 5.51 percent. The yield difference over bunds widened to 378 basis points, compared with an average of 381 basis points in the first quarter. Spain’s 10- year yield spread to Germany reached 410 basis points last week after averaging 333 basis points in the first three months.

Recycled Cash

Yields dropped in the first three months of the year, suggesting Europe’s lenders were recycling ECB cash into regional bonds. Investors made 13 percent, including reinvested interest, on Italy’s bonds in the period between the ECB announcing the loans on Dec. 8 and the end of the first quarter. Spanish debt returned 6 percent.

“The two LTROs are a window of opportunity for governments to undertake fiscal consolidation and structural reforms,” ECB President Mario Draghi said in Frankfurt on April 4. “National policy makers need to fully meet their responsibility.”

Credit Agricole calculates that the ECB’s support, including loans to banks and direct purchases, prompted purchases of more than 250 billion euros of Spanish and Italian government securities between the third quarter of 2011 and the first quarter of this year. That’s more than the 216 billion euros of debt sold by the two nations during the same period.

Spain sold 2.59 billion euros of bonds on April 4, just above the minimum amount it planned for the auction and below the 3.5 billion-euro maximum target. The sale followed auctions on March 27 where both Spain and Italy failed to raise their maximum target amount.

Fading Effect

“The positive effect from the LTRO is fading and so the market is focusing on what the political developments will be,” said Werner Fey, a fund manager at Frankfurt Trust Investment GmbH, which oversees 6.5 billion euros of fixed-income assets. “The Spanish auction was not very well received and there’s a risk that forthcoming auctions could be difficult for other peripheral countries.”

Spain has to repay 44.3 billion euros of bonds in the second quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, while Italy has 87.8 billion euros to refinance.

Spain has already met 44 percent of its total financing needs for this year, according to UBS AG estimates. Italy has sold 28 percent of its requirement while France has issued 32 percent and Germany 25 percent, the calculations show. Most of the Spanish and Italian bonds were bought by local investors, the data shows.

Charity at Home

“Foreign investors have been reducing their holdings, there’s been a significant shift toward relying on domestic investors,” said Gianluca Ziglio, an interest-rate strategist at UBS in London. “This trend is likely to stay in place and that leaves the burden on the domestic investors, which aren’t being supported by the ECB’s liquidity anymore.”

Natixis Asset Management is buying Italian debt while remaining neutral on Spain, because Prime Minister Mario Monti’s government has removed much of the political risk surrounding his nation’s securities, while Spain’s situation remains clouded, according to Axel Botte, a Paris-based strategist at the $694 billion fund manager.

Monti, who replaced Silvio Berlusconi in November as Italian bond yields jumped to euro-era records, is implementing spending cuts and tax increases to eliminate the budget deficit next year and trim the nation’s 1.9 trillion-euro debt.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Far-Flung Demand Bolsters German Exports

Exports by Europe’s biggest economy picked up unexpectedly in February, with a second consecutive monthly rise. Rising import figures also provide a glimmer of hope for depressed eurozone members. German exports rose by 1.6 percent month-on-month in February, hitting a total of 91.3 billion euros ($119 billion), according to data released by the Federal Statistics Office (Destatis) on Tuesday.

The second consecutive monthly rise in goods and services exported by Germany has driven the overall 2012 figure to 177.3 billion euros so far, 14.7 million euros more than in the first two months of 2011. Germany’s traditionally export-heavy economy is also being helped by strong domestic demand, resulting in rising import figures too.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘17,000 Northern Businesses Went Bust Since 2009’

North-west hardest hit

(ANSA) — Milan, April 9 — Some 17,000 businesses have gone bust in the north of Italy since the global financial crunch in 2009, the think tank Cerved said Monday.

The northwestern regions of Lombardy, Piedmont and Liguria were harder hit than the north-east, Cerved said.

Of the nationwide total of bankruptcies up to last year, Cerved said, a quarter came in the south of Italy and 22% in the centre.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



JPMorgan Trader Iksil Fuels Prop-Trading Debate With Bets

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) trader Bruno Iksil’s outsized bets in credit derivatives are drawing attention to a little-known division that invests the company’s reserves and fueling a debate over whether banks are taking excessive risks with federally insured and subsidized money.

Iksil’s influence in the market has spurred some counterparts to dub him Voldemort, after the Harry Potter villain. He works in London in the bank’s chief investment office, which has assembled traders from across Wall Street to its staff of 400 who help oversee $350 billion in investments. While the firm describes the unit’s main task as hedging risks and investing excess cash, four hedge-fund managers and dealers say the trades are big enough to move indexes and resemble proprietary bets, or wagers made with the bank’s own money.

The trades, first reported by Bloomberg News April 5, stirred debate among U.S. policy makers over the Easter-holiday weekend as they wrangle over this year’s implementation of the so-called Volcker rule, the portion of the Dodd-Frank Act that sets limits on risk-taking by banks with government backing. The law passed after the collapse of the subprime mortgage market triggered the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Alaska Expedition to Study Northern Lights From the Inside

A team of scientists is lofting weather balloons high into Alaska’s northern lights displays, getting a unique inside look at this dazzling atmospheric phenomenon.

The two-week expedition is called Project Aether: Aurora, and it’s slated to run through April 13. The goal is threefold: Learn more about the northern lights (also known as the aurora borealis), test out equipment and help get kids more interested in science, technology, engineering and math — the so-called STEM subjects.

“We think that the excitement of the whole expedition, and the drama involved in completing this cutting-edge science, helps play into the motivation to go into the STEM fields,” said project principal investigator Ben Longmier, a physicist at the University of Houston and chief research scientist at the Ad Astra Rocket Company.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hate Preacher Abu Hamza Facing Up to 50 Years Behind Bars in the U.S. After Losing Extradition Appeal

Hook-handed hate preacher Abu Hamza and four other Muslim fanatics will be sent to the U.S. to face trial after they today lost their appeals against extradition.

Judges in Strasbourg dramatically ruled this morning that Hamza must be extradited to the U.S. where he could face the rest of his life behind bars.

Four other fanatics also lost their appeals against extradition. The ruling stated that the five men would not be subject to ‘ill-treatment’ in the U.S.

The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg rejected the men’s claims that their human rights would be breached by leaving the UK.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Home Buyers Find Safety in Disused US Missile Sites

The anxious and wealthy buy luxury shelters in preparation of doomsday

Tucked deep beneath the Kansas prairie, luxury condos are being built into the shaft of an abandoned missile silo to service anxious — and wealthy — people preparing for doomsday.

So far, four buyers have splashed out a total of about €5 million for havens to flee to when disaster happens or the end is nigh.

And developer Larry Hall has options to retro-fit three more Cold War-era silos when this one fills up.

“They worry about events ranging from solar flares, to economic collapse, to pandemics to terrorism to food shortages,” Mr Hall said on a tour of the site.

These “doomsday preppers”, as they are called, want a safe place and he will be there with them because Mr Hall, 55, bought one of the condos for himself.

He says his fear is that sun flares could wipe out the power grid and cause chaos.

He and his wife and son live in Denver and will use their condo mostly as a vacation home, he says, but if the grid goes, they will be ready.

Mr Hall isn’t the first person to buy an abandoned nuclear missile silo and transform at least part of it into a shelter.

Built to withstand an atomic blast, even the most paranoid can find comfort inside concrete walls that are almost three metres thick and stretch 53 metres underground.

Instead of setting up shop in the old living quarters provided for missile operators, he is building condos right up the missile shaft.

Seven of the 14 underground floors will be condo space selling for €1.5 million a floor or €0.76 million a half floor.

Three-and-a-half units have been sold, two contracts are pending and only two more full units are available, Mr Hall said.

For now, metal stairs stretch down to connect each floor but an elevator will later replace them.

The units are within a steel and concrete core inside the original thick concrete, which makes them better able to withstand earthquakes.

He is also installing an indoor farm to grow enough fish and vegetables to feed 70 people for as long as they need to stay inside and also stockpiling enough dry goods to feed them for five years.

The top floor and an outside building above it will be for elaborate security.

Other floors will be for a pool, a movie theatre and a library, and when in lockdown mode there will be floors for a medical centre and a school.

Complex life support systems provide energy supplies from sources of conventional power, as well as windmill power and generators. Giant underground water tanks will hold water pre-filtered through carbon and sand.

And, of course, an elaborate security system and staff will keep marauding hordes out. The condo elevator will only operate if a person’s fingerprint matches its system, Mr Hall said.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



NASA Jumbo Jet Arrives to Ferry Shuttle Discovery to Smithsonian

Space shuttle Discovery’s chartered ride to retirement has arrived. The modified-Boeing 747, known as the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA), touched down at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center here Tuesday (April 10). The jumbo jetliner came in from Dryden Flight Research Center in California to ferry Discovery to the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., where the iconic spacecraft is set to go on public display.

The SCA will not be returning to Florida after dropping off Discovery. Instead, another shuttle, the prototype Enterprise, will be loaded atop of the 747 at Dulles Airport for its own flight to New York the following week. While Enterprise never flew in space, it was the first to fly on a Shuttle Carrier Aircraft for a series of approach and landing tests in the 1970s.

Since 2003, Enterprise has been on public display at the Udvar-Hazy Center. It is being moved to the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, a converted aircraft carrier that is berthed in Manhattan, to make room for Discovery.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Administration Corruption in Solyndra Deal Confirmed

The report, “Consultation on Solyndra Loan Guarantee Was Rushed,” reveals that Department of Energy cut out the Treasury Department officials from issues regarding Solyndra, ignoring the agency’s advice and limiting its opportunity to review the high-priced, high-risk financing of what critics call “an Obama green pipe dream.”

Treasury Department officials previously testified last October before the Energy Committee regarding the agency’s role in the Solyndra debacle and the fact that DOE kept Treasury out of the loop at key points in the decision-making process, according to Congressman Upton.

“The Treasury report echoes what our investigation has shown over and over; Solyndra was a bad bet from the beginning that was rushed out the door while every red flag was ignored. Treasury’s report confirms the agency had been effectively cut out of the loan guarantee process despite federal laws and regulations that require their consultation,” Upton said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Portrait of a Failed “Messiah”

What we have come to learn is that he is a liar. He lies even when he does not have to and he lies all the time.

“His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.”

If you think this is a psychological profile of Barack Obama, you would be wrong. It is a quote from a profile of Adolph Hitler, prepared for the Office of Strategic Services—the predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency—by Walter C. Langer and three others during World War II.

The fact that it rather closely resembles aspects of Obama’s personality we have come to know would be cause for alarm if we were living in the 1930s at the time of Hitler’s rise to power in Germany, but this is a very different time and the U.S. Constitution is still a powerful instrument.

Unlike the 1930s, the Internet has provided everyone with the ability to access information that, as often as not, conflicts with that the mainstream media would have us believe.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Santorum Suspends His Campaign, 2 Advisers Say

Rick Santorum is suspending his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination on Tuesday, according to two people with knowledge of his plans. Mr. Santorum is due to make the announcement at a stop in his home state of Pennsylvania after a weekend in which he tended to his three-year-old daughter, Bella, who had been hospitalized with pneumonia.

The decision abruptly ends his quest for the Republican presidential nomination after weeks in which he has struggled to compete with Mitt Romney’s well-financed, highly-organized campaign apparatus.

[Return to headlines]



State Department Barred Inspection

(IPT) — The State Department broke with normal procedures last week when it ordered the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) not to conduct a secondary inspection on members of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) on their way to visit government officials and think tanks in the United States.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Statism Needs Division

Statism, American liberalism, communism, socialism, fascism, or any other authoritarian ism you can think of, is not popular on its face, so it must force its way into our lives, even using deception to make the people desire it. Crisis fuels the desire by the people for the government to “gain control” of everything. But in order for the ruling elite to be able to ride in on their prized stallion to save the day, their must be division, so that the liberal statist can claim they are hear to resolve that division. . .

But what if the division is not severe enough for the statists to use it? What if, as individuals who are personally responsible and self-reliant, we are doing just fine without the intrusion of government in our lives?

Liberals need division, so if division is not present, they must create it.

Obamacare’s time in the Supreme Court, Trayvon Martin, and a whole bunch of other things going on, are the liberal left’s attempt to create division among Americans. That is how Obama won the Presidency in 2008 — by promising to unite our poor, divided nation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Who Cares About John Derbyshire?

After two days of outrage over John Derbyshire’s outrageously racist rant, National Review announced that it was “parting ways” with the writer. Rich Lowry wrote in a post this weekend that the piece was “nasty and indefensible” (interestingly, he didn’t call it racist) and that Derbyshire wouldn’t be writing for the publication anymore. That’s all well and good-but does it really matter?

It’s easy (and correct) to criticize Derbyshire-his article was explicitly, unabashedly racist and hateful. Frankly, it was a gift to conservative writers. Because now they get to shake their heads in disappointment and condemnation, patting themselves on the back as non-racist by comparison. By holding Derbyshire up as a real bad guy, conservatives are hoping that people will ignore their own racism-not just the content of their media but their ideological principles and the policies they support.

Some people would like to believe that racism is just the explicit, said-out-loud discrimination and hatred that is easily identifiable. It’s not-it’s also pushing xenophobic policies and supporting systemic inequality. After all, what’s more impactful-a singular racist like Derbyshire or Arizona’s immigration law? A column or voter suppression? Getting rid of one racist from one publication doesn’t change the fact that the conservative agenda is one that disproportionately punishes and discriminates against people of color. So, I’m sorry, folks-you don’t get to support structural inequality and then give yourself a pat on the back for not being overtly racist.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


European Zoos Welcome Panda Breeding Discovery

The beloved black-and-white bears are notoriously hard to breed. European zoos are taking note of a new study that sheds light on the endangered mammal’s reproductive “clock.” It turns out male pandas have a cycle too.

It’s mating season for giant pandas — and right about now, males are at their peak for making cubs, a new study has found.

Scientists at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Washington, D.C., have discovered that male pandas seem specially adapted to ramp up their sperm production in advance of female panda ovulation.

Panda captive breeding programs face the ongoing challenge that female pandas ovulate just once a year.

The new findings, published last week in the Biology of Reproduction journal, may improve the chances of preserving genetic diversity in an already small population that is under ever more pressure in the wild.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Flemish Far Right Party Launches Racist Website

(AGI) Brussels — Flemish far right party Vlaams Belang launched a racist website inviting the population to denounce irregular immigrants in Belgium. It is not a new idea: over the past few months, Dutch Geert Wilders’s Pvv party had launched a similar site in the Netherlands, triggering fierce polemics in Europe.

Vlaams Beland leader Filip Dewinter explained that the denounces will be forwarded to police, because, “the presence of tens of thousand of irregular immigrants in the large Belgian cities worsens phenomena like under the table jobs, criminality and abuse of social services”. The anti-immigrants movement has 12 deputies and 5 senators in the Belgian Parliament.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



France: 13 Salafis Before Judge for Indictment

Planned kidnapping of Jewish judge among charges

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 3 — Thirteen of the seventeen Salafis taken into custody by French police on Friday have gone before the investigating magistrate today who will be charging them with belonging to an illegal association linked to terrorism.

Among the charges against those detained, including the head of the Salafi group Forsane Alizza, is the “planned kidnapping” of a Lyon magistrate of Jewish origins, Albert Levy, said Paris prosecutor Francois Molins. The dissolution of Forsane Alizza (“the Knights of Pride”) was ordered by Interior Minister Claude Gueant, who accused the organisation of training its supporters for armed struggle, of being against Republican principles and of wanting to bring “the kingdom of Islam” to France.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France 2012: Sarkozy Attacks in Paris, Freeze EU Check

Hollande? “Rash of spending”.Programme and letter to French

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 6 — Nicolas Sarkozy is on the counter-attack. The French President, a candidate to his own succession at the forthcoming elections in April and May, has made his move following yesterday’s major rally by François Hollande, rigourously accusing his Socialist rival for the presidency of wanting to introduce a “rash of new spending” and has announced a plan that will see France balance its budget by 2016. Just as François Mitterand did before him, Sarkozy will also use a letter to explain his strategy, with six million copies sent to French households.

Speaking at a press conference in Paris, Sarkozy said that, if re-elected, the plan would see a freeze on the increase of Paris’ contribution to the European Union, allowing the country to obtain 3 billion euros over the entire period of the EU budget (2014-2020). “I can announce to you that France will ask for its contribution to the European budget to be frozen, which will mean savings of 600 million euros per year,” said Sarkozy, who, 17 days ahead of the first round of voting on April 22, today presented in detail his election programme, as well as a 34-page “Letter to the French people”, based on that sent by the former Socialist President, François Mitterand. Six million copies of the letter will be printed and sent to households across the country.

France’s contribution to the EU’s budget currently stands at 19 billion euros, putting the country in second position behind Germany. The President has already told his European partners that efforts to reduce France’s debt will cost 115 billion euros: 75 billion in cuts plus 40 billion in new revenue. Sarkozy also used the news conference in Paris to rail against Hollande, the overwhelming favourite in the polls, saying that his rival’s promises could drag France into a situation similar to that face by Spain or Greece.

Hollande’s plan, he warned, is a “rash of new spending, no-one knows how it will be covered”. “The situation faced by our Spanish friends, after what has happened to our Greek friends, brings us back down to earth,” Sarkozy said, insisting on the negative effect that the former Socialist government in Madrid had on Spain’s financial situation. “After 4 years of crisis, we must reduce deficit, we cannot say that it is time to party,” he added. The outgoing President also claimed that Hollande’s idea of bringing the pensionable age down to 60 “is the very denial of the existence of a crisis. This alone means 5 billion more in spending for nothing”. Sarkozy also pointed the finger at his rival’s tax proposals, which he said represent “a massacre” for families and the middle-class.

The Socialist candidate’s plan to renegotiate the EU fiscal compact agreement, Sarkozy continued “is simply utopian, because [talks] have just finished and there is no government in Europe that wants [such an outcome]”. Europe, he added, was “on the edge of the precipice” and emerging from the situation “has been very difficult”.

Sarkozy has brought the campaign back to an economic battleground after significant focus in recent days on the issues of security and immigration, after the trauma of the massacres in Toulouse and Montauban committed by the Islamic terrorist Mohamed Merah. The polls suggest that Sarkozy will be comfortably defeated by Hollande in the second round of voting on May 6. The first round, however, sees him in the lead. The far-left Front de Gauche party candidate, Jean-Luc Melenchon, also continues to gain ground.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Journalist and Writer Miriam Mafai Dies

Leftwing intellectual was 86

(ANSA) — Rome, April 9 — Distinguished former Communist journalist, writer and liberal intellectual Miriam Mafai died Monday aged 86.

The Florence-born Mafai was a former WWII Resistance fighter who suffered under Benito Mussolini’s racial laws because her mother was a Jew. She later became an official in the Italian Communist Party (PCI), the biggest Communist group in Western Europe and a major player in postwar Italian society.

She worked for PCI organ l’Unita’ and another leftwing newspaper, Paese Sera, before helping found La Repubblica, Italy’s leading progressive daily, in the mid-1970s.

She was looked up to by generations of leftwing women as a proto-feminist and gained a wide audience among both sexes as a waspish, libertarian critic of conservative policies.

From 1983 to 1986 she was head of the Italian journalists’ union FNSI and became an MP for the more moderate heirs to the PCI, most recently as a member of the national executive of the Democratic Party (PD), Italy’s main centre-left party.

Among her best-known works are Black Bread, Women and Daily Life in the Second World War (Mondadori); Goodbye Botteghe Oscure, Once Were Communists (Mondadori); and Forgetting Berlinguer, the Italian Left and the Communist Tradition (Donzelli).

PD leader Pier Luigi Bersani said Mafai was “one of the protagonists of our time”.

“Miriam Mafai lived many roles, always with intelligence, passion and curiosity,” he said. Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno, a political opponent, said Mafai’s death was “a painful loss for the whole city of Rome and all its citizens, regardless of their political leanings”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi’s Son Renzo Resigns as Lombardy Councillor

Northern League hit by fraud scandal

(ANSA) — Rome, April 9 — Umberto Bossi’s son Renzo resigned his position as councillor in the Lombardy regional assembly on Monday, four days after a big financial scandal caused Bossi elder to quit as the leader of the Norther League.

Prosecutors investigating alleged fraud by the populist party’s former treasurer Francesco Belsito suspect party money was misspent on members of the Bossi family.

“I’ve stepped aside in this moment of difficulty, without anyone asking me to,” Renzo Bossi told Mediaset television.

“I’m giving an example. I have peace of mind and I have faith in the judiciary, even though I’m not under investigation”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Northern League Must Have Clean Up, ‘Look in All Drawers’

Maroni says auditors to examine party assets

(see related story) (ANSA) — Rome, April 5 — The Northern League must purge itself of any corruption that may exist within it, former minister Roberto Maroni said on Thursday, when Umberto Bossi resigned as party leader after being linked to a fraud probe.

“Now we must work hard to have a clean up, looking at all the accounts and opening all the drawers,” said Maroni, who is one of three senior League figures who have temporarily been put in charge of the party.

The former interior minister added that an external auditing company had been put in charge of checking the party’s assets.

Verona Mayor Flavio Tosi, another League bigwig, said Bossi had shown he “really loves the movement” by taking the painful decision to quit.

However, some politicians from other parties forecast more trouble ahead for the populist League, which campaigns for greater autonomy for the wealthier north of Italy.

“The judicial affair that has forced Umberto Bossi to resign is the tip of the iceberg of the crisis of the League,” said Marina Sereni of the centre-left Democratic Party.

“A party that 20 years ago responded to the demand for change after the crisis of the old political establishment is now the symbol of a period that is coming to an end”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega: Formigoni Welcomes Resignation of Renzo Bossi

(AGI) Milan — The president of Lombardy region, Roberto Formigoni, welcomed Renzo Bossi’s resignation from the regional council. Writing on Twitter he said: ‘I have read the announcement of the resignation of Renzo Bossi from Lombardy Regional Council. It’s for the best’.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Plan to Give Away TV Frequencies Scrapped — Report

Rome, 10 April (AKI) — Italy has decided to scrap plans to give away digital television frequencies and will hold an auction that can raise up to 1.2 billion euros for the cash-strapped government.

“I don’t think diving away valuable state property is a good thing,” industry minister Corrado Passera told the la Repubblica daily.

Italy has raised taxes, implemented pension reform and passed other painful measures in an effort to cut the world’s fourth-biggest debt load and put its financial house in order.

The unelected government that came to power in November after Silvio Berlusconi’s rule came to an end amid a debt crisis had given themselves until 19 April to decide if it would eliminate the decision to give away six digital frequencies.

Berlusconi’s media empire was set to benefit from the move to allow qualified broadcasters to snap up valuable frequencies for free in what has been dubbed a “beauty contest.”

Berlusconi is the owner of the country’s largest private broadcaster, prompting accusations of conflict of interest for his government’s decision to not sell the frequencies. The plan was also criticized for favouring incumbent broadcasters.

An auction of fourth-generation mobile telephone frequencies last year raised almost 4 billion euros for the Italian treasury.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi Junior Steps Down, Rosy Mauro Urged to Follow Suit

(AGI) Rome — Umberto Bossi’s son Renzo has also taken a step back. The Lega has now invoked the Italian saying “there are never two without three”, and Roberto Calderoli has called on Rosy Mauro to make up the numbers by stepping down as Deputy Chairman of the Senate. It’s been a tough Easter for the Lega, which is going through what Roberto Calderoli called a ‘tsunami,’ which began with a leaked interview with Alessandro Marmello, Renzo Bossi’s driver and bodyguard. Marmello has apparently told Oggi magazine that he had withdrawn cash from “Lega funds” to pay Bossi Junior’s personal expenses. Just over an hour later came Renzo’s decision. “In this fraught period, I have decided of my own volition to take a step back and resign as regional councillor,” he announced. “I am not under investigation” he was at pains to point out, “it was a difficult decision, made to safeguard the movement and to respond to all the questions that will come out over the next few days.” The Lega leader was pleased with Renzo Bossi’s decision. “He was right to stand down,” said Bossi. But the former secretary also indirectly denied that this hand had been forced by the storm over the movement. “I had been fed up with working for the Region for two or three months,” was all he said. The “Senatur” gave a laconic reply on the subject of Rosy Mauro’s possible departure: “We’ll see” was all he said.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi Jr Driver: ‘I Handed Over Lega Money for His Expenses’

(AGI) Milan — Renzo Bossi’s driver said he gave party money to Renzo Bossi for his personal expenses. Alessandro Marmello, driver and bodyguard of Renzo Bossi, told the magazine Oggi (on the newsstands tomorrow): ‘I can’t carry on. I don’t want to continue to pass money to the son of Umberto Bossi in this way.

It is cash that I withdraw from the coffers of the Lega in my name under my responsibility. He collects it without blinking an eye, putting it in his pocket as it were the most natural thing in the world. That’s enough now. I am an honest person. I don’t want to play this game anymore’.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Italy: Public Prosecutor Acquires Video of Payment to Renzo Bossi

(AGI) Milan — Milano prosecutors are in possession of the video that appeared on the ‘Oggi.it’ web site showing Renzo Bossi receiving money from his driver, Alessandro Marnello, which Marnello said proves he took money from the Northern League.

RCS investigators obtained the video.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Handshake Muslim Loses Court Case

Rotterdam council was right not to offer lawyer Mohammed Enait the job of client manager after he refused to shake hands with women, a court in The Hague said on Tuesday afternoon.

Enait had applied for the job at the social services department but said he would not shake hands with women on religious grounds. However, he would greet them in another respectful fashion, he said.

When he was refused the job, Enait brought a civil case against Rotterdam council, saying the rejection was religious discrimination.

The court found the refusal to shake women’s hands ‘unacceptable’ and that Enait is ignoring the equality between men and women, reports news website nu.nl. In addition, it would damage the relationship between the council and its clients.

In 2009, Enait was in the news for refusing to stand up in court when judges entered the room on the grounds that in Islam all men are equal.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Norway Killer Breivik is Sane: Psychiatric Report

Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway last July, was not psychotic at the time of the twin attacks and can thus be held criminally responsible, a new psychiatric probe concluded on Tuesday.

“The experts’ main conclusion is that the accused, Anders Behring Breivik, is not considered to have been psychotic at the time of the actions on July 22nd, 2011,” the Oslo district court said in a statement which reopens the debate on whether the self-confessed killer can be sent to prison. “That means that he is considered criminally responsible at the time of the crime.”

The new evaluation counters the findings of an initial probe that found Breivik was suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia,” which meant he would most likely be sentenced to psychiatric care instead of prison.

On July 22nd, Breivik first set off a car bomb outside government buildings in Oslo, killing eight people, before travelling to the small island of Utøya north-west of the capital where he spent more than an hour methodically shooting and killing another 69 people, mostly teenagers.

The victims had been attending a summer camp hosted by the ruling Labour Party’s youth organisation.

The conclusions of the second psychiatric evaluation, which was ordered by an Oslo court amid an outcry over the initial exam findings, were published just six days before Breivik’s trial is set to start.

In the end however, it will be up to the Oslo court judges to determine his mental state when they publish their verdict around mid-July, thus deciding whether he will be locked up in a closed psychiatric ward or sent to prison.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Oslo Braces for ‘World’s Deadliest Shooter’ Trial

Anders Behring Breivik will go on trial in Norway next Monday charged with committing “acts of terror” when he slaughtered 77 people in twin attacks in July that shook the tranquil country to its core.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway’s Mass Killer Breivik ‘Declared Sane’

A second psychiatric evaluation of mass killer Anders Behring Breivik has found him sane enough to face trial and a jail term.

The findings contradict a previous evaluation, published in November, that found him legally insane.

Breivik is due to stand trial on 16 April over a shooting spree last July, in which he admits killing 77 people.

The question of his sanity decides whether he will be sent to a psychiatric ward or jail.

The second evaluation was approved by a court in January following widespread criticism of last year’s assessment that diagnosed him as a paranoid schizophrenic who could not be held criminally responsible for his actions.

Many critics questioned whether such a well-planned attack could have been carried out by someone suffering from a mental illness.

Breivik himself last week blasted the first psychiatric assessment as “lies”, saying 80% of it was wrong.

In a letter to Norwegian tabloid Verdans Gang, he said being sent to a psychiatric ward would be a “fate worse than death”.

“To send a political activist to an asylum is more sadistic and more evil than killing him!” he wrote.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik ‘Regrets Not Going Further’: Lawyer

Right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik, whose trial for the killing of 77 people in Norway begins on Monday, plans to tell the court he regrets “not going further”, his lawyer said on Tuesday.

“This will be extremely difficult, an enormous challenge to listen to his explanations,” Geir Lippestad told reporters. “He will not only defend (his actions) but will also lament, I think, not going further.”

The 33-year-old right-wing extremist also said he was “pleased” with the results of a new psychiatric probe that found him sane and criminally responsible, contrary to a first official exam that concluded late last year that he was suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia” and therefore criminally insane.

“His first reaction was that he was pleased with the conclusion” of the new expert report, Lippestad told reporters after discussing the new findings with his client. “He also said he was not surprised, that he had been expecting this conclusion,” the lawyer added.

Breivik, who has said being sent to a psychiatric ward would be “worse than death”, wants to be declared sane, according to his lawyers, so as not to damage the political message presented in his 1,500-page manifesto published online shortly before the twin July attacks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Trial: Facts and Figures

The trial of Anders Behring Breivik opens next Monday and will last about 10 weeks, involving hundreds of people.

Here are some facts about the trial:

The actors

  • The judges: Breivik’s fate will be decided by a panel of five judges, comprising two professional judges and three lay judges whose votes will all weigh equally. The chief judge is one of the professionals, Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen
  • The defence: Breivik will be defended by Geir Lippestad and three assistants
  • The prosecution: two state prosecutors, Inga Bejer Engh and Svein Holden
  • The victims: more than 770 survivors and families of the victims, represented by 162 lawyers
  • The witnesses: close to 150 people are expected to testify

The verdict is expected in mid-July, though no specific date has been set yet. A majority vote by three of the five judges is needed, and will focus on the question of whether Breivik was criminally sane, which will determine whether he is sentenced to prison or a closed psychiatric ward.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway Gunman Anders Behring Breivik ‘Pleased’ Probe Finds Him Sane

Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway last July, said through his lawyer Tuesday he was “pleased” that a new psychiatric probe found him to be sane and not psychotic. “His first reaction was that he was pleased with the conclusion” of the new expert report, Geir Lippestad told reporters after discussing the new findings with his client, who had been found to be suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia” in an earlier probe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Killer Deemed Sane After All

Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik is not criminally insane, according to a new psychiatric assessment, which contradicts an earlier examination. It comes six days before Breivik is to go on trial on terror charges.

Anders Behring Breivik, who confessed to murdering 77 people in a bomb and shooting rampage in Norway last July, is not criminally insane after all, an Oslo court said on Tuesday. A new psychiatric assessment says he was not psychotic before, during and after the attacks, nor is he a paranoid schizophrenic.

“Our conclusion is that he is not psychotic at the time of the actions of terrorism and he is not psychotic now,” Terje Toerrissen, one of the two psychiatrists involved in the examination, told the Associated Press news agency. The experts also said that there was “a high risk of repeated violent actions.”

The findings contradict an earlier examination and pave the way for prosecutors to seek a prison sentence instead of compulsory commitment to psychiatric care. Breivik is set to go on trial on terror charges on April 17 for last year’s massacre.

The court will take both psychiatric assessments into account during the trial, which is scheduled to last 10 weeks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Obama’s Anti-Semitism Expert to Meet Reepalu

Malmö mayor Ilmar Reepalu, still in the doghouse for recent comments about the city’s Jewish community, will meet with President Barack Obama’s anti-Semitism representative, who is due to visit Malmö in two weeks. “This is not something she has decided hastily. She has wanted to visit for a long time,” said Julia Janiec, chief of staff at the Malmö mayor’s office to local paper Sydsvenskan.

According to the paper, US president Barack Obama persuaded Rosenthal to take on the role as his representative in the fight against anti-Semitism in November.

Rosenthal, whose father was a survivor of the Buchenwald concentration camp, has already provoked the Israeli government on a number of occasions by pointing out the difference between anti-Semitism and justified criticism against the state of Israel.

Spokesperson for the US embassy in Stockholm, Chris Dunnett, told the paper that Rosenthal has been following events in Malmö for some time and wants to make sure that there are no politicians in the area that encourage anti-Semitism, discrimination, and racism.

While in Sweden, Rosenthal will also meet with representatives from organizations such as Malmö mot diskriminering (‘Malmö against discrimination’) and ECCAR — the European Coalition of Cities against Racism, to which Malmö belongs.

Björn Lagerbäck, who works with an initiative by the city to combat racism and intolerance, told Sydsvenskan that the Americans want to stay informed about what Malmö is doing to combat the problems in the area.

“Anti-Semitism has existed since the beginning of time. There is every reason to look at what is going on today. We are all responsible,” Lagerbäck told the paper.

Malmö mayor Reepalu has been likened by some observers to British ex-mayor Ken Livingstone for his habit to put his foot in his mouth.

His recent statements in right-leaning magazine NEO that the Jewish community in Malmö had been infiltrated by the Sweden Democrats ruffled a lot of feathers in Sweden and abroad.

Reepalu has recanted his comments completely and is making every effort to reconcile with the local Jewish community.

Israeli ambassador to Sweden, Benny Dagan, has noted his efforts but recently said that he is hoping to see more hands-on approach to sorting out the troubles in the area, according to Sydsvenskan.

           — Hat tip: Freedom Fighter [Return to headlines]



There’s More to Nuclear Fusion Than ITER

CONSTRUCTION is finally under way in southern France of ITER, the experimental fusion reactor that scientists hope will produce more energy than it consumes. It is a huge undertaking, needing the backing of the European Union and six powerful nations to get even this far.

But care needs to be taken that ITER does not overshadow other experiments. The US Department of Energy last month cited increased support for ITER as the reason it plans to axe funding for several smaller fusion projects.

In these penny-pinching times, tough choices need to be made. But ITER will not address a host of practical and operational questions that must be answered before fusion power can become a reality. It is a first step, not a last best hope. If that is forgotten, the distant dream of fusion power may remain just that.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Abu Hamza US Extradition Backed by European Court

The European Court of Human Rights has backed the extradition of Abu Hamza and four other terror suspects from the UK to the US.

The Strasbourg court held there would be no violation of human rights for those facing life and solitary confinement in a “supermax” prison.

Judges said they would consider further the case of another suspect because of mental health issues.

Prime Minister David Cameron said he was “very pleased” with the news.

“It’s quite right that we have a proper legal process, although sometimes you can be frustrated by how long things take,” he added.

The court’s decision is one of its most important since 9/11 because it approves of human rights in US maximum security prisons, making it easier for the UK to send suspects to its closest ally.

There could still hypothetically be an appeal against the court’s ruling in its final Grand Chamber — but in practice, very few cases are re-examined in that final forum.

The men have three months to try to persuade the Grand Chamber to reopen the entire case and examine it. If the men fail to launch an appeal, they will be extradited to the United States.

The family of one of the men, Babar Ahmad, who has been held for a record of nearly eight years without trial, said he would fight on against extradition.

Last week, he appealed in a BBC interview to be charged and tried in the UK because his alleged crimes were committed here.

Home Secretary Theresa May said: “I welcome the decision of the European Court of Human Rights to allow the extradition of Abu Hamza and other terror suspects.

“In five of the six cases, the Court found that extradition would not breach their human rights and in the remaining case, it asked for further information before taking a final decision.

“I will work to ensure that the suspects are handed over to the US authorities as quickly as possible.”

The European Court said there would be no breach of human rights if the men were to be held in solitary confinement at ADX Florence, a Federal Supermax jail in Colorado, used for people convicted of terrorism offences.

Abu Hamza is unlikely to be held at that jail because of his disabilities. The court also held that the life sentences each man faces would not breach human rights.

But in one case, Haroon Aswat, judges said they could not yet give the go-ahead to extradition because they needed to see more submissions on his schizophrenia and how that would be treated were he sent to the US.

The court said that the range of activities and services at ADX Florence were better than many European prisons.

It said: “Having fully considered all the evidence from both parties, including specifically prepared statements by officials at ADX Florence as well as letters provided by the US Department of Justice, the court held that conditions at ADX would not amount to ill-treatment.

“As concerned ADX’s restrictive conditions and lack of human contact, the court found that, if the applicants were convicted as charged, the US authorities would be justified in considering them a significant security risk and in imposing strict limitations on their ability to communicate with the outside world.

“The court finds that there are adequate opportunities for interaction between inmates. While inmates are in their cells talking to other inmates is possible, admittedly only through the ventilation system.

“Save for cases involving the death penalty, it has even more rarely found that there would be a violation of Article 3 (that no-one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment) if an applicant were to be removed to a state which had a long history of respect of democracy, human rights and the rule of law.”

Abu Hamza is charged with offences relating to hostage taking in Yemen and an alleged plot to set-up a terrorism training camp in the United States. Haroon Aswat is also accused in connection to the training camp.

Babar Ahmad and Talha Ahsan are accused of supporting terrorism through a website operated in London.

The final two men allegedly played a part in organising the 1998 US Embassy bombings in East Africa.

           — Hat tip: ICLA [Return to headlines]



UK: Blackpool Council Grants Free Parking for Muslims, But Everyone Else Has to Pay

WHEN BLACKPOOL FC were promoted to the Premier League in 2010 they staged an extremely busy event on the Promenade to celebrate, with the team riding through on an open top bus before taking to the stage to belt out that this was the “best trip they had ever been on”. I went to this event and parked on Blackpool South car park, paying a fairly ridiculous minimum charge of £3.50 for the trouble. But hey, it was a one-off (or maybe not if Ian Holloway can stop the team conceding cheap goals). I just checked and the minimum charge has gone up to £5.00 for this car park, and this is only enough to buy you 3 hours of time before the parking stasi come along and make your trip a whole lot more expensive. In tourist spots in Cornwall, £5.00 gets you the whole day making Blackpool very, very expensive. Expensive unless you are a Muslim that worships at the controversial Noor A Madina mosque on Waterloo Road, operated by Labour Party drone Tasurraf Shah.

This Sunni Islam mosque has been desperately trying to expand its capacity over the last year and boasts on its Wikipedia page that, ‘there are two 200-person capacity buildings at the mosque; three remain under development.’ Assuming the other three buildings are of equal size (they are all similarly sized shops), this works out at a current capacity of 400 and a prospective capacity of 1,000 Muslims. Unfortunately their expansion plans were quashed on the basis of insufficient car parking. On the 13th of February, 2012, Pam Goodwin from Blackpool Council confirmed that 8 parking permits, with no restriction on the vehicle used, had been issued to the Noor A Madina mosque permitting an hour’s free parking on Blackpool South car park every Friday. It seems like a token gesture, because this in no way covers the mosque’s capacity of 400 people. However, since the minimum charge at this car park is £5.00 per vehicle, this works out at a subsidy of £40 per week, or a colossal £2,080 per annum from Blackpool Council.

You might remember that Council Leader Simon Blackburn was asked, through a petition of over 2,300 signatures, to stop the council putting up the rent for the 1st Bispham Scout and Guides group from £10 to £1,400. In rejecting this request, he said;

The implication of granting the Scouts the discretionary payment they seek, while affordable in itself, would be to open the floodgates to a whole host of other equally venerable institutions, and that is a burden I am not prepared to ask tax payers to fund.

A fair point, I suppose, if a little disappointing. The council, however, are not operating in a consistent, fair manner on this. It appears that if the subject matter is a mosque, operated by a crony of the controlling Labour councillors, leading a minority group that could potentially cultivate Labour voters, the council are happy to throw away their stance of protecting taxpayers money and bung over £2,000 per year in benefits in kind to the cause. Simon Blackburn is a hypocrite. The Fairness Commission should be all over this because, as Tasurraf Shah highlights in her appeal against the rejection of planning permission, there are three other churches within sight of the mosque and, like the Noor A Madina, they do not have on-site parking for their congregations. As such, the council should in fact be supplying these churches with appropriate parking passes to maintain fairness. Similarly, other business owners in the area that I have spoken to have applied for parking permits and been rejected by the council, but it seems that handouts are only available if you pray to Allah rather than keep the town’s economy going.

Update

10/4/12, 16.00

I’ve just been informed that following these revelations about free parking passes (which portfolio holder Fred Jackson is said to have been unaware of) and some sniffing around from the Gazette, the council have performed a massive U-turn on this issue and withdrawn all of the passes from the Noor A Madina mosque. Council officers have no authority to whimsically hand out free council services to those they favour. This is yet another insight into a laissez-faire, tail-wags-dog culture in which the officers rule until they are found out. Sound familiar? Of course, if KPMG had done a report about it, it would probably have been kept secret. That said, expect to see this in Wednesday’s Gasjet. Give yourselves a pat on the back, folks!

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Hate Preachers Return to Quaker Venue

Readers of Harry’s Place will be familiar with the strange phenomenon of the hospitality extended by The Quakers — a small religious sect which eschews violence in all its forms — to a variety of hate preachers and theocratic Islamist political movements, all of which explicitly sanction the most horrific violence, backed by religious injunction, against women, gays, Jews and religious dissenters. We have previously discussed the strange politics which renders The Quakers oblivious to the calls to combat, not promote, the politics of hatred. They won’t be moved. So I don’t propose to rehearse those arguments here. The Quakers are beyond reason. For a while, it looked as if hate preachers might possibly have been asked to take their custom elsewhere. No such luck. June sees the return of some of the worst inciters of religious violence in the United Kingdom to Friends House.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Court Suspends Egypt’s Constitutional Assembly

An Egyptian court has suspended the formation of the Islamist-dominated assembly that was poised to draft the country’s new constitution. It is unlikely that the Muslim Brotherhood will welcome the news.

An Egyptian court on Tuesday blocked the creation of a constitutional assembly appointed last month to draft the country’s new constitution. The move was made pending a ruling on its legality, following fierce complaints from liberal and Christian groups that the Islamist- dominated panel did not reflect the diversity of Egyptian society.

Judge Ali Fekri said the court “rejected the argument that the court is not specialized and decided to halt the decision.”

This case, presented by lawyers and activists, represented one of numerous lawsuits that had called for the assembly to be scrapped. Its creation last month sparked outcry over the lack of representation for youth groups, women and Christian Copts. Christian religious bodies also earlier withdrew from the commission.

“This means the assembly’s activities are frozen; it is suspended until further notice, until the judicial panel convenes,” said lawyer Khaled Abo Bakr.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party has maintained that the assembly is representative of Egypt’s society.

The current constitution was suspended in February last year by the army. The military came to power after the country’s former president, Hosni Mubarak, was forced out of office by a wave of popular protests.

The new constitution could be key to determining which state institutions will rule Egypt and the extent and nature of individual freedoms and the terms of presidential power.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Jihadists Say French Paper ‘Liberation’ Is Enemy of Islam

(AGI) Paris — The Jihadists against French daily ‘Liberation’.

The renowned left-wing newspaper risks the same fate of the journal ‘Charlie Hebdo’, whose head office was set ablaze last year with molotov cocktails. According to another daily, ‘Le Figaro’, the fact that Liberation welcomed their colleagues, left without offices, unleashed the wrath of Forsane Alizza, the “Knights of Pride”, a pro-Jihad group which was joined by Mohammed Merah (the Franco-Algerian ‘killer of Toulouse’), which launched a crusade against the “enemies of Islam”.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Middle East


100 Vigilantes to ‘Cleanse Kubbar Island of Women’ — Girls Warned Against Going There

KUWAIT: Islamist activist Mubarak Al- Bthali said he will personally “cleanse Kubbar Island from sin,” and warned girls against going there. “Any girl found on Kubbar Island should only blame herself,” he said in a clear challenge to state laws and in the absence of any government reaction.

Al-Bthali said through his twitter account on Sunday that he will launch a campaign to cleanse the Island from sin. Al-Bthali said he previously made a visit to Kubbar Island, along with a ruling family member, and did not find any wrong doing.

He said he will repeat the visit, with ‘some youths in their boats’, and expressed hope that 100 vigilantes will join him. He said he will use cameras to film Island visitors and use loud speakers to hold prayers there.

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]



Iraq Progresses Toward a Future Built on Oil Wealth

When the US toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, few people imagined that it would take another decade before the Iraqi oil industry was rebuilt. Now, progress is finally being made, and the country’s massive reserves could bring untold wealth. But before that happens, Baghdad needs to improve security and get corruption under control.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kofi Annan Will Seek Tehran’s Support for Syria Peace Plan

(AGI)Tehran- Kofi Annan will fly to Tehran on Wednesday to seek support for the peace plan from Iran, one of Syria’s major allies. Salvaging the crumbling peace plan will be a difficult mission for the U.N. and Arab League envoy as the bond between Damascus and Tehran is stronger than ever. On Sunday last the commander of the Guardians of the Revolution’s ground troops, General Mohamad Pakpur, praised the Syrian government’s grand resistance against the U.S., Israel and their allies. ..

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Syria Accuses Turkey of Arming Rebels

(AGI) Moscow- Syria accused Turkey of arming Syrian rebels, undermining the peace plan proposed by UN-Arab Leage envoy Kofi Annan. “Turkey supports illegal Syrian militant groups, supplies them with weapons and lets them illegally cross into Syria,” Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem stated during a joint press conference in Moscow for his meeting with Russian counterpart Serghei Lavrov. “How can we [fulfill the plan] if there are still illegal arms deliveries and moving of militants from Turkey?” asked Minister Muallem. . .

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Turkey-Greece: Simit (Or Koulouri) Pretzel in Dispute

Istanbul wants patent to snatch it from the Greeks

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, APRIL 6 — Even a pretzel can bear witness to the deep roots linking Turkey and Greece, united under the Byzantine and Ottoman empires to then become rivals over the Aegean Sea, and now forced to engage in dialogue due to the current economic crisis. The pretzel in question is the sesame-seed-covered in ‘simit’, which — known under a variety of names such as the Greek ‘koulouri’ — is also widely consumed in Serbia, Bulgaria and other parts of the Balkans and Middle East, such as Lebanon.

Its spread went hand in hand with the conquests of Levantine empires and renders its culinary and national connotation uncertain. Now, in order to snatch it away from an attempt at appropriation by the Greeks, Istanbul’s vendors association has requested an international patent on the pretzel. This was reported by the Turkish daily Hurriyet, which underscored that the move has given rise to resentment in Greece, where another newspaper (Eleftheros Typos) spoke of a new stage in the debate over the origins of foods, as seen in the tooth-achingly sweet dessert baklava. However, this time it has also brought back up an age-old, territorial-nationalistic issue: that of the two small islands of Kardak (Imia) from the mid-1990s. In warning that they are taking action alongside the Turkish Culture Ministry, the chairman of Istanbul simit vendors association, Zeli Sami Ozdemir, said that “Greeks want to appropriate the simit, and we have decided to take possession of it” before they get to it.

However, the simit/koulouri has shared roots which are tricky to follow back to their source, as it has been eaten for centuries and enjoys an almost mythical character. The Greek newspaper quoted by Hurriyet noted that in the Roman province Epirus mothers hoped their sons would become simit vendors in the metropolis looking out over the Bosporus. The pretzel was widely known before Christ, and became popular in Constantinople (now Istanbul) and Thessaloniki (now part of Greece) in Byzantine times. As well-known, however, the Ottoman Empire which cemented this tradition also meant Turkish domination over Greece and painful deportations from both sides: first during the Balkan wars and then with the foundation of modern Turkey by Kemal Ataturk. The division of Cyprus and territorial disputes over other Aegean islands have often brought the two countries to the verge of war, averted solely by mutual membership in NATO. Due to conditioning and fostered by incendiary speculation, concerns have been sparked over the recent military exercises in the Mediterranean and hydrocarbons exploration in disputed waters over the past few months. But greater in number are the official statements and the initiatives indicating that the two countries are growing closer, especially due to the economy, with Greece’s in the depths of a serious crisis and Turkey’s prospering at a confirmed growth rate of 8.5% last year, the second strongest in the world after China’s and despite a 5.3% slowdown over the last quarter. In line with the conciliatory statements made by the two countries’ prime ministers in autumn, last month Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said that trade with Turkey would save Greece’s future.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Asian Terrorism Poses an Increasing Threat to Global Security

The US’ most-wanted list of terrorists in Asia seems to be expanding. Its most recent inclusion is Pakistani Islamist leader Hafiz Saeed — an addition that highlights the threat of Asian terrorism.

Recently, the US government put a bounty of 10 million US dollars (7.6 million euros) on the head of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, Pakistan’s infamous Islamist leader and founder of the banned terrorist organization Lashkar-e-Taiba. Saeed is accused of masterminding terrorist attacks carried out by Pakistan-based gunmen in India’s financial capital Mumbai in 2008. The US government also holds him responsible for bombings in Kabul in 2010 and an attack on Indian parliament in New Delhi in 2001.

The head money on Saeed is quite high. Only three militants, including Taliban’s leader Mullah Omar, have that high a bounty. Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri has a 25-million-dollar reward on his head.

Both Omar and al-Zawahiri are believed to be hiding in Pakistan — a nuclear power which many security and counter-terrorism experts consider an instable Islamic country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India: Red Academics Carry On

While people’s attention necessarily remains focused on the 2012 election and the domestic issues that animate it, leftist academics are moving at break neck speed in their efforts to poison young minds the world over against the United States. I had a chance to see and confront that head on during a recent trip to India when I was invited to address a seminar at Gautam Buddha University (GBU). The title, “The Marginalized and Excluded in Society,” suggested the same leftist tinge that most academic exercises have, but I had reason to hope that this one would be different.

By inviting me, the university signaled that the seminar would not shrink from identifying victims of Islamic hegemony, as I have done that time and again at universities and elsewhere in India, and the organizers knew it. And my topic, the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus, took no prisoners in calling out Muslims as the perpetrators.

The seminar began with a grand plenary session and announced Professor Gopal Guru of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) as the keynote speaker. His introduction was glowing. Evidently in India, as in the US, the academic left showers its own with self-congratulatory awards and honors in order to dismiss anyone who might dare take a contrary position as lacking credentials. Seated in the front as an honored guest from a foreign country, I nevertheless determined to listen politely. It was not long, however, before his hard-left bias put that to the test. Much of his speech was a rambling attack on capitalism as the source of all marginalization and big government as its solution. He coupled this with an unremarkable treatise about margins and centers so arcane and divorced from reality that it was the sort of thing that could keep audience members in their seats only in academia. Still, I sat quietly in deference to my hosts—until he started in on the United States.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


China: Nike and Zara Accused of “Environmental Pollution”

(AGI) Rome — What do Nike, Wal-Mart, H&M, Levi’s, Adidas, Burberry and Zara have in common in China? Nothing about fashion, profits or even fame. These international brands hold a negative record in terms of pollution on the other side of the Great Wall of China. This is what comes out of a report called “Cleaning fashion up — Pollution in the textile supply chain” which has been drawn up by a number of environmental organizations, including Friends of Nature (FON), the Institute of Pubblic and Environmental Affairs (IPE) and Nanjing Greenstone. The report focused on 48 suppliers of major brands.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]



Pyongyang Puts Washington to the Test

As North Korea gears up for its planned rocket launch, Seoul, Tokyo and the West continue to lambast Pyongyang, with experts saying the plans are aimed at putting Washington to the test.

The countdown has begun for a North Korean rocket launch, expected for later this week. Officials in Seoul, Tokyo, Beijing and Washington have all expressed concern over the North’s plans, saying it would violate UN resolutions that ban Pyongyang from testing long-range missile technology.

“North Korea’s launch of a missile would be highly provocative, it would pose a threat to regional security,” State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland told reporters Monday.

Washington’s call for a halt to the launch has been repeated by allies South Korea and Japan. Both East Asian states say they will shoot down the rocket if it strays too close to their territory.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Report: Sony to Cut 10,000 Jobs Worldwide Through March 2013

TOKYO (AP) — Sony Corp. will cut about 10,000 jobs worldwide over the next year as it tries to return to profit, Japanese news reports said Monday.

The Nikkei business daily and other media said Sony’s decision to slash 6 percent of its work force comes as it struggles with weak TV sales and swelling losses.

Sony spokeswoman Yoko Yasukouchi wouldn’t confirm the reports.

New CEO Kazuo Hirai is holding a press conference Thursday.

Sony has announced restructuring plans by selling its chemical unit. Sony is also merging its LCD panel operation with Toshiba and Hitachi. Yasukouchi said those changes could affect up to 5,000 employees who are subject to transfers.

Sony earlier this year reported a 159 billion yen ($2.1 billion) loss for the October-December quarter and more than doubled its projected loss for the full fiscal year through March 2013.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sony Expects Record Annual Loss

Japanese consumer electronics producer Sony has said it will book a much greater net loss for the past fiscal year than estimated in February. The period under revision ending on March 31 was marred by tax write-downs.

Japanese electronics company Sony announced on Tuesday that its net losses for the past financial year could reach 520 billion yen ($6.4 billion, 4.9 billion euros), more than doubling its previous projected loss, made public in February. The company has recorded a net loss for the past four consecutive years.

Sony said that the more negative outlook was mainly due to massive write-downs of deferred tax assets in the US, totaling 300 billion yen.

“Due to the recording of this additional tax expense, net loss attributable to Sony’s stockholders is expected to be significantly greater than the February forecast,” the company announced at a press conference in Tokyo.

But even before the write-down, Sony had been well on course to end the current fiscal year with a net loss of around 220 billion yen. Management cited slumping television sales and output disruptions from last year’s flooding in Thailand.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


100 Boko Harams Took Control of Gao in Northern Mali

(AGI) Bamako — At least 100 Nigerian Islamic Boko Haram guerillas crossed the frontier with Mali and took control of the town of Gao, in the north of the Country, according to Abu Sidibe, local deputy-governor. The news was confirmed also by the Bamako security forces. Seven people were killed today, including a girl of seven, in a new wave of attacks launched by the Nigerian Boko Haram Islamic group. In the north-eastern town of Dikwa, the terrorists killed a policeman, a civilian and a local politician during the night, as made known by the Nigerian army. The command attacked a police station, a bank, a hotel but was forced back by the soldiers, as lieutenant-colonel Sagir Musa, the Joint Task Force of the Borno State spokesperson announced. Three of the guerillas were killed, the others, though injured, managed to run away.

           — Hat tip: C. Cantoni [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Greece: “Absolutely Nothing” Done, Says Minister

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 6 — Greek Citizen Protection Minister Michalis Chrysochoidis has admitted the government has done “absolutely nothing” to contain the surge of undocumented migrants living in Athens. “We have done absolutely nothing — I want to be very clear,” Chrysochoidis told Mega television, referring to the immigration problem and a surge in HIV/Aids cases. “Not only has absolutely nothing been done, but in Omonia Square, out of the 100 drug users there, 35 are HIV positive.

For God’s sake, is there anyone who believes we can continue this way?” The minister defended his decision to impose draconian public health inspections and set up 30 migrant detention centres, mostly out of disused army facilities.

Residents, meanwhile, in the eastern Attican suburb of Menidi continued protests for a third straight day on Thursday against plans to create a detention centre in their area.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy, Libya Sign Anti-Migrant Pact

Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri visits Tripoli

(ANSAmed) — TRIPOLI — Italy and Libya on Tuesday signed an agreement to stop illegal immigrants leaving from the North African country. Under the accord, signed in Tripoli by Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri, Italy will also train Libyan police forces. Illegal immigration from Libya has started again after last year’s Libyan war and there are fears that large-scale landings on the southern Italian island of Lampedusa will once more become a frequent occurrence as the weather improves. Before the war, a controversial so-called ‘push-back’ policy virtually halted migrant sailings from Libya.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Key Events in Battle to Extradite Abu Hamza

Radical Muslim cleric Abu Hamza has lost his fight over extradition to the United States. Here is a timeline of key events in his case:

  • Hamza, who was born Mustafa Kamel Mustafa in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1958, came to the UK to study in the early 1980s.
  • He met and married an English woman, Valerie Fleming, and received British citizenship, but the couple divorced years later.
  • He suffered injuries to his hands and eye in Afghanistan, where he travelled to fight a “jihad” against Soviet occupation.
  • On his return to the UK, Hamza started preaching radical anti-Western sermons at the Finsbury Park Mosque, in north London.
  • Following the attacks on September 11 2001, Hamza’s comments in support of Osama Bin Laden sparked outrage.
  • In April 2002, he was formally suspended by the Charity Commission from his position at the mosque, over his inflammatory speeches.
  • On September 11 2002, Hamza spoke at a controversial conference at the mosque titled A Towering Day in History.
  • In January 2003, armed police arrested seven people at the mosque in a dawn raid. A stun gun, replica firearms and CS gas canisters were among the items seized.
  • In February 2003, Hamza again caused outrage when he described the Colombia space shuttle, which contained Christians, Hindus and a Jewish person, as a “trinity of evil” and said its destruction was a punishment from Allah.
  • In April 2003, then-home secretary David Blunkett announced new laws allowing British citizenship to be removed from immigrants who “seriously prejudice” the UK’s interests. Legal moves began to get Hamza deported to Yemen.
  • Two weeks later, his lawyers announced he would appeal against the move.
  • In May 2004, Hamza was arrested on a US extradition warrant. The US want him on charges of conspiring to take Western hostages in Yemen, funding terrorism, and organising a terrorist training camp in Oregon between 1998 and 2000.
  • In October 2004, he was charged with 15 offences under the Terrorism Act, including incitement to murder and possession of a terrorism document, temporarily staying the US extradition process.
  • On February 7 2006, Hamza was jailed for seven years after being found guilty on 11 of 15 charges.
  • In July that year, he was given the go-ahead to challenge the convictions for incitement to murder and race hate offences.
  • In November 2006, the Court of Appeal dismissed his appeal against the conviction.
  • In May 2007, a preliminary extradition hearing took place in London.
  • This was followed, in July 2007, by a hearing where Hamza spoke by video link to fight the extradition.
  • In November 2007, a judge at London’s City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court ruled that Hamza had lost his legal arguments against his long-running extradition battle. Senior District Judge Timothy Workman sent the matter to the Home Secretary to make a final decision.
  • On February 7 2008, then-home secretary Jacqui Smith signed an extradition order, meaning Hamza would be handed over to US authorities within 28 days if he did not appeal.
  • But Hamza appealed, delaying moves to extradite him. He later lost his bid to avoid extradition on June 20 2008, when two High Court judges ruled that the decision was “unassailable”.
  • On July 23 2008, he was also refused permission to appeal to the House of Lords when senior judge Sir Igor Judge refused to certify that his case raised a point of law of such public importance to go before the highest court in the land.
  • On August 4 2008, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg ruled that Hamza should not be extradited until judges could examine his case. The Home Office said it would abide by the court’s request.
  • On January 18 2010, Hamza launched another legal fight to hang on to his British passport.
  • On February 9 2010, legal aid bosses seized Hamza’s house in Greenford, west London, to pay off his legal bills, despite the radical preacher claiming it did not belong to him. Officials hoped to raise £280,000 from the sale.
  • On November 5 2010, Hamza won his appeal against the Government’s attempts to strip him of his British passport. The move would have rendered him “stateless” as he had already been stripped of his Egyptian citizenship, the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) ruled.
  • On April 10 2012, Europe’s human rights judges ruled that Hamza, along with four other terror suspects, would not be subject to “ill-treatment” in America and their extradition was lawful.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Palestinian Ambassador Thanks Memo for Sheikh Raed Support

Following the success of Sheikh Raed Salah’s appeal against a deportation order, the Palestinian Ambassador to London, Professor Manuel Hassassian, has offered his thanks to those who have supported Sheikh Raed and helped to highlight the injustice of the government’s legal action. In particular, Prof. Hassassian thanked Middle East Monitor (MEMO), ITN Solicitors and other organisations who have done what he called “a tremendous job” in the 10-month battle to clear Sheikh Raed’s name against false accusations. Ambassador Hassassian declared the Upper Immigration Tribunal’s ruling to be “a victory for Palestine”, and said that the British justice system had acted in a fair and just way. “This has not only restored dignity and credibility to a man who has campaigned for the Palestinian cause, but has also symbolised victory for the Palestinians in their struggle for freedom, liberty and human rights,” he added. MEMO would also like to thank the Palestinian Embassy and Professor Hassassian in particular for his support for Sheikh Raed throughout his legal battle.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Theresa May Humiliated by Judge Over Attempted Deportation of Palestinian Activist

A judge has strongly criticised Theresa May’s attempt to deport a Palestinian activist over fears that he would stir up race-hate violence, ruling that she was wrong about the danger he posed and that her decision was “entirely unnecessary”.

The Home Secretary was “misled” about a supposedly anti-Semitic poem written by Sheikh Raed Salah, took “irrelevant” matters into consideration and tried to ban him from Britain on the basis of a “few sentences” in an old sermon, it was said. The judgment is a third humiliation for the Home Secretary in the case of the leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, who was able to walk into this country despite being banned and who later won damages for being detained without being told why. It also raises further doubts over the Government’s ability to deport those it considers dangerous extremists, coming just weeks before two notorious terror suspects, Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada, could be set free.

Sarah Colborne, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, said: “By arresting, imprisoning and attempting to deport Sheikh Raed Salah on what the judge has determined as a ‘misapprehension of the facts,’ the British Government have acted in a shameful way.” Mr Salah, 53, is an Israeli citizen and a prominent activist for an independent Palestine who has previously been jailed for spitting at a policeman and for funding banned charities. He has been accused in the House of Commons of having a “history of virulent anti-Semitism”.

[JP note: Re Abu Hamza ruling, one step back, two steps forward on the road to the Islamic conquest of Europe.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The ECHR is Right About Abu Hamza, But Britain Still Needs to Leave

by Ed West

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that six terror suspects can be extradited. The famous hook-handed Abu Hamza, along with Babar Ahmad, Haroon Rashid Aswat, Seyla Talha Ahsan, Adel Abdul Bary and Khaled al-Fawwaz, will soon be off our hands for good. Over £4 million of taxpayers’ money has been spent keeping the men in British jails, paying for legal costs and keeping their families on benefits. All are wanted on terror charges in the US, but have been able to spend years fighting extradition because some argue that supermax prison would amount to inhuman and degrading treatment under Article 3 of the Human Rights code. Well, I’m sure we’ll all be horrified at the thought that men responsible for hundreds of innocent deaths, who have leached this country dry and filled Guardian column inches and Radio 4 minutes with sanctimonious drivel, might be treated inhumanely. None of this should have been allowed to happen in the first place. We should give asylum to our friends, not our enemies, and there are deep and fundamental problems with that system. But it also raises questions about the role of the European Court. And John Bolton, George Bush’s ambassador to the UN, said that Britain should renounce the jurisdiction of the court. He said:

It’s a question of what do British people want to do? Do you want to be an independent nation, or do you want to be a county in Europe? This is just another example of Britain’s mistake in allowing European institutions to develop to the extent they have. It is yet another infringement on British sovereignty that undercuts its ability to co-operate with the United States. It also calls into question the ability of Europe as a whole to be an effective partner in the war against terrorism.

The problem with the ECHR is not that just it is incredibly ineffective, with more than 100,000 pending cases, nor that by its very nature its prone to increasing its jurisdiction, nor that its understanding of “rights” are totally removed from those of the rest of humanity; but that by its very nature a supra-national judiciary inevitably leads to an supra-national government. Even if it was manned by the wisest men in Christendom, I would still not wish Britain to be a part of it.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: What Today’s Abu Hamza Ruling Means

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that five terror suspects, including notorious Islamist cleric Abu Hamza, can be deported to the United States — a decision welcomed by both David Cameron and Theresa May. Last year, Hamza and three of the other men appealed to the ECtHR against extradition to the US on a whole host of grounds — including that they might face the death penalty and that their trials would be prejudiced. The Court found almost of all their grounds inadmissible, but allowed the appeal to proceed on two grounds: that they would be held in the ADX Florence ‘super-max’ prison and would face extremely long sentences — both of which they claimed would contravene Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which states that ‘No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.’

In its judgement today, the Court found that the conditions at the super-max prison would not be so bad as to constitute torture or degrading treatment, and that — as Isabel McArdle at the excellent UK Human Rights Blog puts it — ‘given the seriousness of the criminal allegations against the applicants in question, and the fact that aggravating and mitigating circumstances would be taken into account by the sentencing judge, the sentences would not be grossly disproportionate’. This means that the five men will likely soon be deported. They do have three months to launch an appeal, but — as Joshua Rozenberg points out — the fact that the judges reached a unanimous decision without feeling the need for an oral hearing makes the chance that a request for appeal will be accepted slim. And the wider implications of the ruling? McArdle calls it ‘a very important victory for the UK government, coming at a time of increased public unease about deportation and extradition law’. Perhaps it will also go some way towards correcting the caricature many have propagated in this country of the European Court of Human Rights as a court that always sides with terrorists against our government.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


France: Imam Blesses Union Between Two Gay Muslims

‘Religious wedding in Sevran following sharia rules’

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 10 — An imam has blessed the union of a same-sex Muslim couple in France. Several media, including France 24 and Al Arabiya, report that Ludovic Zahed Mohamed and his partner Qiyam al-Din Qiyam were not allowed to get legally married in France, but that they still received the blessing of the imam in the mosque of Sevran in February. Ludovic Zahed Mohamed, a Frenchman of Algerian origin, and his South African partner Qiyam al-Din reportedly got married in line with the sharia (Islamic law) in the presence of Jamal, an imam from the Mauritius islands. Jamal has blessed the union, following exactly the same rites that are performed at the marriage of heterosexual couples. Christian and Jewish prayers were said as well during the ceremony, in honour of the couple’s Jewish and Catholic friends. They also had a civil wedding ceremony in South Africa, where same-sex weddings are allowed while France does not recognise this type of union. Ludovic Mohamed Zahed, a practising Muslim, has recently published a book, ‘Le Coran et la chair’ (‘The Koran and the Flesh’), an attempt to reconcile Islam and homosexuality.

“Today I am convinced that if the Prophet Muhammad were still alive, he would celebrate gay weddings,” writes Mohamed in his book that was published in France on March 29. The man, born in 1977, has also founded an association for the defence of homosexual Muslims in France (HM2F).

The socialist candidate for the presidential elections that will be held in April and May, Francois Hollande, leading in the polls, has made marriage and adoption for same-sex couples part of his programme.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]