News Feed 20101230

Financial Crisis
» Eurozone ‘Has 80% Chance of Losing the Single Currency in Next Decade’
» Financier Steven L. Rattner to Pay $10 Million in Restitution, Cuomo Says
» Metals From Copper to Silver Hit Record Highs
» UK: Rail Fares Racket: Prices Jump by Up to 46 Per Cent in New Year
» Vatican to Set Up Anti-Money Laundering Unit
 
USA
» Gitmo is Not a Recruiting Tool for Terrorists
» Obama’s Muslim Adviser Says Sharia Law Misunderstood
» Reid’s Rules Scheme to Rewrite Defeat
» Reporting on Fair, Balanced — And Accurate
» Revealed: Hawaii Governor’s Own Hidden Past
» ‘We No Longer Have Republic Subservient to Constitution’
 
Europe and the EU
» Finland: Building of Mega Shiia Mosque Raises Anger of Locals in Mellunmäki Helsinki
» Islamist Websites in Europe — a General Review
» Spain Goes on Mosque-Building Spree: Churches Forced to Close
» Swede Suspects Once Arrested in Pakistan
» Switzerland Has Unusually Cold December
» Terror in Greece: Bomb Explodes Outside Athens Court
» Trust in Dutch Cabinet on the Rise
» UK: ‘Scared’ By English Defence League Protest
» UK: How the Iron Lady Saved Britain: Mrs Thatcher Drove Through Economic Revolution Single-Handed
» UK: Halal Method is Animal Cruelty
» UK: Interview With Melanie Phillips on “World Turned Upside Down”;
» UK: Joanna Yeates’ 65-Year-Old Landlord Arrested on Suspicion of Young Architect’s Murder
» UK: Lauren Booth is Bankrupt and Owes Her Sister Cherie Blair £15,000
» UK: Solved: Puzzle of Desai in Terror Nine
» UK: U.S. Embassy in London Was Terror Target
» UK:2011 Could See Poll Tax Riots Re-Run Warns TUC
» What Other Catholics Stand Up to the Vatican’s Islamo-Insanity Like the Italians. Hey, Benedict: Why Not Build a Mosque in Vatican City
 
Balkans
» Albanians Deposited Serb Organ Profits in Islamic Charities, Prosecutor
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Eritreans Taken Hostage, No Progress in Talks
» Egypt: Trial of Synagogue Attacker Postponed Till Jan 15
» Kidnapped Eritreans: Israeli NGO Appeals to Egyptian Govt
» Libyan Leader Pardons 2 South Koreans on Trial
» Morocco: Security Ratcheted Up Ahead of New Year
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Fifty Rabbis’ Wives Publish Letter Telling Girls Not to Date Arab Men
» Former Israel President Moshe Katsav Facing Four Years Behind Bars After Being Found Guilty of Rape
 
Middle East
» Al-Qaeda in-Fighting
» An Eye for an Eye: Iranian Court Orders Man to Lose an Eye and an Ear After Acid Attack on Student, 22, Outside College
» Briton Faces Death Penalty in Baghdad Murder Trial: Security Contractor Charged With Killing Two Colleagues
» Civilian Deaths Drop in Iraq in 2010… As Suicide Bombers Kill Top Police Commander
» Dopes of the Day: Fooled by Syria…Twice
» Iran is Now a Nuclear State: Ahmadinejad
» Iran Reports Arrest of 7 Al-Qaida Suspects
» Iraqi Christians Killed in Series of Baghdad Attacks
» Israel: Iran Nuclear Bomb ‘Still Three Years Away’
» Violent Deaths in Iraq Fall ‘But at Slower Rate’
 
Russia
» Artificial Intelligence to Transform Web: Russian Tycoon
» Dmitry Medvedev Condemns Russia’s ‘Stagnant’ Political System
» Russian Space Officials Fired Over Satellite Crash
 
Caucasus
» Ignorant Wahhabis Killed Fifty Imams and Muftis in North Caucasus
 
South Asia
» More NATO Tankers Torched in Pakistan
» Pakistan Says it Will Defend Spy Chief in US Suits
» West Quickly Agreed to Back Afghan Resistance in 1980: Files
» Who Keeps the Faith?
 
Far East
» China Makes Skype Illegal
 
Australia — Pacific
» Gang Link Sees Soccer Star Kerem Bulut Lose Bail
 
Latin America
» Battisti Victim’s Son Vows to Fight if Lula Grants Asylum
» South American Drug Gangs Funding Al-Qaeda Terrorists
 
Immigration
» UK: Migrant Numbers Will Not Fall Significantly in 2011 Think Tank Warns
 
Culture Wars
» ‘Super Death Panels’ On a ‘Massive Scale’
 
General
» Al-Qaeda Targeting Christians in Canada, Austria
» Henninger: Popes, Atheists and Freedom

Financial Crisis


Eurozone ‘Has 80% Chance of Losing the Single Currency in Next Decade’

There is an 80 per cent chance that the euro will not survive in its current form, a leading think tank has warned.

The financial crisis that has crippled Greece and Ireland will spread to other debt-ridden European countries in the New Year, according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research.

Among those in the firing line will be Italy and Spain — the third and fourth biggest economies in the single currency bloc behind Germany and France.

‘We give the euro only a one in five chance of surviving in its present form for 10 years,’ says CEBR chief executive Douglas McWilliams.

The hard-hitting report also warns that Britain faces a tough 2011 as austerity measures bite.

‘A double dip for the world economy is not likely because of the strength of the emerging economies,’ says Mr McWilliams.

‘But it is well within the bounds of possibility for the UK.’

An escalation of the eurozone debt crisis would be bad news for Britain because Europe is the UK’s biggest export market.

British taxpayers could also be asked to contribute more to Europe’s emergency rescue fund having already pledged £7 billion towards the £72 billion bailout of Ireland.

The CEBR’s top economic prediction for 2011 is ‘yet another eurozone crisis in the spring if not before’.

Fears are rising that governments across Europe will struggle to raise the hundreds of billions of euros they need next year because of soaring borrowing costs.

The CEBR reckons Spain and Italy are particularly vulnerable although there are also fears about Portugal, Belgium and even France.

The forecaster warns that the euro could break up next year — although it says this is unlikely given the political will in Berlin and Paris to keep it together.

Mr McWilliams said: ‘I suspect that what will break up the euro will be the failure of most of the countries to take the tough medicine necessary to make their economies competitive over the longer term.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Financier Steven L. Rattner to Pay $10 Million in Restitution, Cuomo Says

The investment banker Steven L. Rattner agreed on Thursday to pay $10 million to settle influence peddling accusations in New York.

The New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo had initially sought $26 million in fines and penalties and a lifetime ban from the securities industry.

As part of the deal, Mr. Rattner admitted no wrongdoing, but did agree to a five-year ban from appearing in any capacity before any public pension fund within the state.

Mr. Cuomo’s office had filed civil lawsuits against Mr. Rattner in November, accusing him of paying kickbacks to help his company land $150 million in state pension fund investments in 2004 and 2005. He had denied the charges.

[Return to headlines]



Metals From Copper to Silver Hit Record Highs

The red base metal, used in electronics and wiring, hit $9,550 per tonne on the London Metal Exchange, having crossed the symbolic $9,000 per tonne mark earlier this month.

Metals were strong across the entire commodities sector, with palladium reaching new nine-year highs, silver at fresh 30-year peaks and gold trading near its record price.

Traders said automatic trading orders — to take on new positions or cover a short position — during the holiday season could be responsible for high volumes.

In metals, there was also steady buying from Japan, as investors took advantage of the strong yen and weak dollar. In terms of the Japanese currency, prices are falling, compared with rises in dollar denomination.

Palladium has nearly doubled in price, silver is up 83pc and gold is 30pc higher — its tenth consecutive annual gain.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Rail Fares Racket: Prices Jump by Up to 46 Per Cent in New Year

Rail passengers are being hit with ‘astronomical’ fare-rises of up to 46 per cent this weekend — despite almost a third of trains running late on some lines.

Train operators are exploiting a loophole which allows them to ramp up prices on the busiest lines as long as they also cut charges on little-used routes, so that the average ticket rise remains modest.

Consumer groups attacked the inflation-busting hikes as ‘outrageous’ and demanded ministers scrap the increases which start on Sunday.

The rises also come after rail companies were lambasted for their poor performance and inability to cope with the winter weather before Christmas.

Rail operators, which receive billions in taxpayer subsidies, are taking advantage of the change in pricing laws to maximise their takings next year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Vatican to Set Up Anti-Money Laundering Unit

Pope will issue proclamation Thursday

(ANSA) — Vatican City, December 29 — Pope Benedict XVI will issue a proclamation Thursday setting up a new Vatican authority against money laundering, the Vatican press office announced Wednesday, three months after the Vatican’s top two bankers were placed under investigation.

The Financial Information Authority (AIF) will aim to “prevent and combat illegal activities in the financial and monetary fields,” the press office said.

Its remit will also extend to preventing and combatting the laundering of the proceeds of criminal activities and the funding of terrorism.

The Vatican has been making efforts to secure inclusion on the international ‘white list’ of countries which are considered to have acceptable financial transparency laws, unlike tax havens.

The Vatican Bank, IOR, is currently at the centre of a probe into two bank transfers that were deemed suspicious under a new Italian money-laundering law.

IOR’s chairman and another top executive were placed under investigation because of an alleged failure by IOR officials to provide full information about the transfers, which totalled some 23 million euros.

They are not accused of money laundering.

The Vatican has expressed “amazement” at the probe, which is says stems from a “misunderstanding”.

In the past there have been allegations IOR was used to launder money, most notably by ‘God’s Banker’ Roberto Calvi whose body was found hanging under Blackfriar’s Bridge in London in 1982, a suspected victim of the Mafia.

IOR was also named in kickbacks probes stemming from the 1990 collapse of public-private chemicals colossus Enimont, part of the Clean Hands investigations that swept away Italy’s old political establishment

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Gitmo is Not a Recruiting Tool for Terrorists

In his Dec. 22 news conference, President Barack Obama claimed that the Guantanamo Bay detention facility was “probably the No. 1 recruitment tool” for al Qaeda and its affiliates. This is an escalation: Earlier this year he merely called it “a tremendous recruiting tool” for Islamic terrorists.

But the president is wrong to assign such importance to Gitmo and, by implication, to suggest it would be a major setback to al Qaeda were he to close it, as he promised but failed to do by the end of his first year in office. Shuttering the facility would not take the wind out of terrorism, in part because it is not, and never has been, its “No. 1 recruitment tool.”

If it were, then al Qaeda leaders would emphasize it in their manifestos, statements and Internet postings, mentioning it early, frequently and at length. They don’t.

Tom Joscelyn, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, reviewed 34 statements and interviews of top al Qaeda leadership since January 2009. Writing for the Weekly Standard, he reported only seven references to Guantanamo in just three public pronouncements.

In the same period, however, Mr. Joscelyn found top al Qaeda leaders mentioned Crusaders (their label for Western leaders and military) 322 times, Palestine 200 times, Gaza 131 times, Jews 129 times, Israel 98 times and Zionists 94 times. Al Qaeda leaders also talked more about Afghanistan (333 mentions), Pakistan (331), Iraq (157), Somalia (67), Yemen (18) and even Chechnya (15) than they did about Guantanamo.

New York Daily News reporter James Gordon Meek obtained similar results last January. U.S. government officials told him that al Qaeda and its affiliates “griped” about Guantanamo in only 58 out of hundreds of public statements and interviews between 2003 and 2009.

Far more numerous and more extensive in these documents are complaints about the existence of Israel, the U.S. military presence in the Middle East, Western notions of democracy and freedom, Western culture, and the fact that al Qaeda’s leaders see America as the obstacle to their achieving a restoration of the Golden Age of Islam.

Take Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri’s Sept. 15, 2010, statement entitled “Nine Years After the Start of the Crusader Campaign.” He is one of al Qaeda’s top strategists, and his statement was meant to draw attention, being released close to the anniversary of 9/11. Of its 12 pages, nearly four are devoted to Pakistan, two to the conflict in Afghanistan, nearly two to Egypt, two to the plight of the Palestinians, and two to al Qaeda’s prospects for victory. Gitmo receives one mention-in a single sentence about how the Quran was “humiliated” in “Guantanamo, Iraq and elsewhere.”

The lesson is obvious: Al Qaeda will invent any excuses to justify its war on America and the West. If one excuse is no longer salient, another pops up. Al Qaeda’s rhetoric also moves in cycles. When things were going badly for the United States, as they were in Iraq in 2006 or Afghanistan in late 2007 and early 2008, al Qaeda’s chieftains emphasized their growing chances for defeating America.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Muslim Adviser Says Sharia Law Misunderstood

President Barack Obama’s adviser on Muslim affairs, Dalia Mogahed, has provoked controversy by appearing on a British television show hosted by a member of an extremist group to talk about Sharia Law.

Miss Mogahed, appointed to the President’s Council on Faith-Based and Neighbourhood Partnerships, said the Western view of Sharia was “oversimplified” and the majority of women around the world associate it with “gender justice.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Reid’s Rules Scheme to Rewrite Defeat

The Democrats are trying to change the Senate rules so that they can ram through their agenda when their majority shrinks next week from 59 to 53 seats.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has been scheming behind closed doors to use his slim majority to vote on January 5 for the most drastic rules changes since 1975.

“Democrats lost the election. Their power has been weakened significantly. So they are trying to do a Washington-insider tactic to try to grab power, even though the voters told them very clearly in the election that they didn’t like them, and didn’t like their policies,” said a Republican Senate aide.

In a closed-door meeting last week, Reid told the Democrats that he may outright break the rules on the first day of the 112th Congress in order to pass his audacious changes without bipartisan support.

“If Reid endorses the rules change, it would be the first time in history that a Majority Leader has opted to cut off debate on a Senate rules change by a majority vote,” said Marty Gold, a long-time Senate leadership aide and now an attorney at Covington and Burling.

Currently, the Senate needs 67 votes to end debate on a rule, then 51 votes for the rule itself. Since Reid’s rules do not have Republican support, he will need to do a historic end-run around the 67-vote bar (two-thirds of the Senate) to pass them.

[…]

Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and his leadership team have a plan in place to try to stop the rules changes, according to insiders. But with only 51 votes needed to change the rules, the Senate Democrats have a real chance at succeeding.

nging the rules in this extraordinary process has the effect of election nullification,” said Gold. “It allows a smaller majority to write for itself new rules, which permit it to govern the way it wishes, even though the voters said something contrary last November.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Reporting on Fair, Balanced — And Accurate

Frank Gaffney on the O’Reilly Factor talks about the Ground Zero imam, the Muslim Brotherhood and shariah

On Tuesday night, I had an opportunity to address the O’Reilly Factor’s audience on a matter of immense importance: the threat posed to America by not only the violent form of jihad but by its stealthy counterpart — what its prime practitioner, the Muslim Brotherhood (MB or Ikhwan), calls “civilization jihad.”

As it happened, Eric Bolling was substituting for Bill during our conversation about the blindspot too many in academia, journalism and the U.S. government have when it comes to the sort of non-violent — or, more accurately, pre-violent — jihad being waged against the United States by the likes of Ground Zero Mosque Imam Faisal Abdul Rauf.

Watch the clip below: [see link for video]

The news peg for this segment was Rauf’s announcement that he is going to begin next month a nationwide tour of college campuses and other venues. The ostensible goal is to promote “understanding” and “tolerance” through speeches, interviews and interfaith dialogue. In fact, the real purpose is dawa — the systematic, highly disciplined and aggressive effort to proselytize and recruit adherents to shariah. Dawa is the engine behind what the Ikhwan has dubbed the “process of settlement,” a term used to describe the phased insinuation and ultimate triumph of shariah in lands where it has yet to be established. Dawa is the precursor to jihad…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Revealed: Hawaii Governor’s Own Hidden Past

Democrat who wants to end ‘birther’ issue tied to socialist group

Democratic Gov. Neil Abercrombie has a radical history that ties him to a U.S.-based socialist organization with deep connections to President Obama and to a “Marxist-socialist” bloc in Congress. WASHINGTON — JULY 28: U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D-HI) (2nd R) speaks as (L-R) Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), Rep. Walter Jones (R-NC), Rep. Martin Meehan (D-MA), Rep. Wayne Gilchrest (R-MD) and Rep. Joseph Crowley (D-NY) look on during a news conference on Capitol Hill July 28, 2005 in Washington, DC. The congressmen talked about H.J.Res.55., legislation titled ‘Homeward Bound’ that requires President George W. Bush to develop and implement a plan for the withdrawal of U.S. armed forces from Iraq. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Abercrombie in recent days placed himself at the center of an eligibility dispute surrounding Obama’s birth documentation, telling reporters he is deeply troubled by questions that cast doubt on the president’s eligibility for office.

[…]

Abercrombie is tied to the Marxist-oriented Democratic Socialists of America.

WND previously reported that issues of the organization’s official magazine, the Democratic Left, list Abercrombie as a member of the socialist party.

In response, Abercrombie’s campaign website denied the politician was ever a member of a socialist party.

[…]

According to the organization magazine’s Winter 2007 edition, Abercrombie spoke at the socialist group’s political-action-committee event in Washington, D.C., at the home of philanthropist Stewart Mott.

A former aide to Abercrombie, George (Skip) Roberts, has long served as a Democratic Socialists of America representative to the Socialist International, the socialist group for which White House energy-environment czar Carol Browner was recently discovered to be a commissioner until 2008.

Abercrombie’s wife, academic Nancie Caraway, was listed in 1985 as a member of the Democratic Socialists of America’s Feminist Commission.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘We No Longer Have Republic Subservient to Constitution’

Officer: Lakin case is end of ‘rule of law’

A retired military officer who pursued all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court a legal challenge to Barack Obama’s occupancy of the Oval Office says the conviction and sentencing of an active duty officer who raised similar questions signals the end of the “rule of law” in the United States.

Cmdr. Charles Kerchner’s legal case, handled by attorney Mario Apuzzo, alleged that Congress failed its constitutional duty to examine the legitimacy of a successful candidate during the Electoral College vetting process on Capitol Hill. The Supreme Court ultimately decided not to hear arguments, leaving standing a lower court’s dismissal.

Now Kerchner has attended, and is analyzing, the military’s court-martial of now-former Lt. Col. Terrence Lakin, who refused to deploy to Afghanistan because of concerns that Obama consistently refused to document his eligibility to serve as commander in chief.

His comments came in an interview with Sharon Rondeau of The Post & Email.

The judge in Lakin’s case, Col. Denise Lind, ordered that Lakin could not raise the issue of Obama’s eligibility, could not seek through the discovery process evidence that would support him, could not bring in evidence to the trial and could not bring in the witnesses he sought.

The conviction, then, was assured before the panel of officers ever deliberated the question.

That means, warned Kerchner, “we no longer have a rule of law and a constitutional republic subservient to the fundamental law of the land, the U.S. Constitution.”

He explained how Lakin, before publicly challenging Obama’s eligibility to serve as president under the Constitution’s “natural born citizen” requirement — an issue that remains undocumented — had gone through every available channel seeking resolution.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Finland: Building of Mega Shiia Mosque Raises Anger of Locals in Mellunmäki Helsinki

This is yet another example of the city leaders not giving a care about what the locals think or feel, they just head along with their plans for more “multiculturalism” without ever considering what “Matti or Maija” think. Be sure to take notice the section where the secretary for the Shiia community insists that it’s “not just for Muslims”, it’s the same nonsense being used by the Ground Zero mosque Imam, Faysal Abdul-Rauf, who’s planning on building a mega mosque upon the cemetery of 9/11. KGS

NOTE: Yep, the people are really angry, and once the mosque is up, it will only be a matter of time before they start demanding the open call to prayer by loud speaker, then you’re really going to see a lot of angry Finns.

Mosques are our barracks, domes our helmets, minarets our bayonets, believers our soldiers.”…

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Islamist Websites in Europe — a General Review

Part 1: Assabyle.com Comes Back Online to Defend Sheikh Bassam Ayachi, Detained in Italy on Suspicion of Terrorism

The French-language Islamist website Assabyle.com, which had posted inciting and antisemitic content and was shut down for several years, has come back online in order to recruit support for Sheikh Bassam Ayachi, a French citizen of Syrian origin who is detained in Italy on suspicion of ties with Al-Qaeda and involvement in terrorism. The site was closed down in 2006 after its two administrators — Abdel Rahman Ayachi (26) and French convert to Islam Raphaël Gendron, aka Abdel Raouf (30) — were convicted of racism and Holocaust denial and were each sentenced to 10 months in prison and fined 2,000 Euros. The two were arrested after the site posted an article titled “The End of the People of Israel,” which described the Jews as “cunning and base… apes and pigs.”[1] At the time, the site was closely affiliated with the Belgian Islamic Center, which carried out Islamist activities in Belgium.

In November 2008, the Italian police arrested Raphaël Gendron and Bassam Ayachi (63), Abdel Rahman Ayachi’s father, on suspicion of planning terror attacks in Britain and in France, specifically in Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris. The two were arrested along with five illegal immigrants — three Palestinians and two Syrians — who were riding with them in their vehicle. According to the Italian daily La Repubblica, they had obtained weapons and explosives, and had also set up a network for recruiting suicide bombers for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. After their arrest, Assabyle.com came back online (http://www.assabyle.com/fr/page/acceuil.php), and posted a petition for their release. The site is regularly updated by Abdel Rahman Ayachi, who posts under the username “Abounour,” and its main aim is to enlist support for the two and raise funds for their defense. It features scans of handwritten letters they sent from prison, as well as a translated transcript of a conversation they held in prison, which was recorded and is being used against them, and which the site describes as innocuous. There is also contact information and bank account information for those who wish to make donations.

This review, the first in a series on Islamist websites in Europe, provides a description of the site.

Homepage

The main page of the site, which officially belongs to the “Committee for the Defense of Sheikh Bassam,” states: “Sheikh Bassam is one of Europe’s most renowned Muslim imams… He taught a simple and original [brand of] Islam, from an open and independent perspective. He was free and committed in preaching his beliefs — which are similar to those of the vast majority of Muslims. However, he did not hesitate to address politics and current affairs from a critical [perspective]. His speeches were published in the media and on the Internet, and [were sold] in bookshops, [so] the Sheikh became a troubling and alarming [force in the eyes of the authorities]… As a result of a Zionist plot, [he] was sentenced to a lengthy term in prison…”

The site forum — which allegedly has some 30 members — features 56 posts by “Abounour” and only a few posts by a handful of others.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Spain Goes on Mosque-Building Spree: Churches Forced to Close

The city of Barcelona, widely known as a European Mecca of anti-clerical postmodernism, has agreed to build an official mega-mosque with a capacity for thousands of Muslim worshipers. The new structure would rival the massive Islamic Cultural Center in Madrid, currently the biggest mosque in Spain. An official in the office of the Mayor of Barcelona says the objective is to increase the visibility of Muslims in Spain, as well as to promote the “common values between Islam and Europe.”

The Barcelona mosque project is just one of dozens of new mosques that are in various stages of construction across Spain. Overall, there are now thirteen mega-mosques in Spain, and more than 1000 smaller mosques and prayer centers scattered across the country, the majority of which are located in Catalonia in northeastern Spain.

The Muslim building spree reflects the rising influence of Islam in Spain, where the Muslim population has jumped to an estimated 1.5 million in 2010, up from just 100,000 in 1990, thanks to massive immigration. The construction of new mosques comes at a time when municipalities linked to the Socialist Party have closed dozens of Christian churches across Spain by way of new zoning laws that several courts have now ruled discriminatory and unconstitutional. It also comes at a time of growing anti-Semitism in Spain.

The Barcelona mosque project was announced during a weeklong seminar titled “Muslims and European Values,” jointly sponsored by the European Council of Moroccan Ulemas [Muslim religious scholars], based in Brussels, and the Union of Islamic Cultural Centers in Catalonia, based in Barcelona. A representative of the Barcelona mayor’s office who attended the conference told the Madrid-based El País newspaper that the municipality would get involved in the mosque project because “although religion pertains to the private realm, this does not mean it does not have a public role.”

The idea to build a mega-mosque funded by Spanish taxpayers comes after Noureddine Ziani, a Barcelona-based Moroccan imam, said the construction of big mosques would be the best way to fight Islamic fundamentalism in Spain. “It is easier to disseminate fundamentalist ideas in small mosques set up in garages where only the members of the congregation attend, than in large mosques that are open to everyone, with prayer rooms, cafes and meeting areas,” Ziani told the Spanish news agency EFE. He also said European governments should pay for the training of imams, which would be “a useful formula to avoid radical positions.”

[…]

Not surprisingly, the Saudi government officially supports the Alliance of Civilizations, an initiative sponsored by Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, which borrows heavily from the Dialogue of Civilizations concept promoted by Islamic radicals in Iran in the 1990s — an the initiative calls for the West to negotiate a truce with Islamic terrorists on terms set by the terrorists.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Swede Suspects Once Arrested in Pakistan

Two of the Swedish citizens arrested following a foiled terror plot against a Danish newspaper have previously been arrested in Pakistan.

Munir Awad, a 29-year-old Swede of Lebanese decent arrested near Copenhagen on Wednesday, was arrested in 2007 by Ethiopian forces in Somalia, together with several other Swedes, including his fiancée, then 17-year-old Safia Benaouda.

Awad was detained in Ethiopia for several months on suspicions of having fought on the side of Islamic forces in Somalia.

He was eventually released in May 2007.

Awad was arrested once again in August 2009, this time in Pakistan. Also detained were Benaouda, the couple’s toddler son, and Mehdi Ghezali, a former inmate of the US-operated Guantánamo Bay prison, as well as several other foreigners.

The Swedes were part of a group of foreigners thought by Pakistani police to be travelling in the company of a terror suspect who was bringing the group to the lawless region of northern Waziristan to meet Zahir Noor, a suspected Taliban leader.

The group was arrested on the border of the North-western province, a region heavily targeted in the ongoing civil war against the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

Awad and the other Swedes were eventually released in October 2009. Following their return to Sweden, lawyers explained that the Swedes were in Pakistan as a part of a pilgrimage to celebrate Ramadan in a “larger Pakistani city”.

In addition, 37-year-old Sahbi Zalouti, who was arrested in the north Stockholm suburb of Järfälla on Wednesday in connection with the Danish terror plot, has been under surveillance by Swedish security service Säpo for some time, according to Swedish media reports.

He was arrested in Pakistan last year and spent 10 days in a Pakistani prison last year for having entered the country illegally. Zalouti claimed at the time he had traveled to Pakistan to spread information about Islam, according to tabloid Aftonbladet.

Speaking with the Expressen tabloid, the imam at a local mosque described Zalouti, a Swedish citizen of Tunisian decent, as “nice, pleasant and interested in knowing how to practice Islam”.

However, the imam added that Zalouti had become increasingly devout about his Muslim faith over the last year and stopped attending services at the mosque about five months ago.

He was also recently divorced from his wife, and while the two remained friends, a friend tells Expressen he told her to return to Tunisia a few days ago.

According to Säpo, Zalouti was involved in the planning of the foiled Copenhagen attack, but decided to remain in Stockholm for reasons as yet unknown.

The Local/dl (news@thelocal.se)

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



Switzerland Has Unusually Cold December

There was an unusual amount of snow in the Swiss plateau in December, while the mountains were colder than they have been for decades.

Bern had more snow in a single month than in the whole of last winter, according to the national weather service MeteoSwiss on Wednesday. Geneva had never had such deep snow — 31 centimetres — in December.

The snow set in on December 1, and after a brief thaw, it returned again on December 12. The warm southern Föhn wind melted it again on December 23, when temperatures rose sharply — 13.3 degrees in the eastern city of St Gallen, for example — almost dashing hopes for a white Christmas.

But heavy snowfall practically everywhere on Christmas Eve then covered almost the whole country in white again.

The mountains were unusually cold. Temperatures four degrees lower than usual were recorded on top of the Säntis in eastern Switzerland and the Jungfraujoch in the Bernese Oberland. Such low temperatures had not been recorded on the Säntis since 1969 or on the Jungfraujoch since 1981.

The sun made only rare appearances in December: there was between only 30 and 70 per cent of normal sunshine.

Although most parts of Switzerland were colder than usual, in the valleys where the Föhn blows it was slightly warmer.

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



Terror in Greece: Bomb Explodes Outside Athens Court

A bomb hidden on a parked motorcycle exploded outside two court buildings in central Athens on Thursday, damaging cars and shattering windows but leaving no one hurt, officials said.

The powerful rush-hour blast occurred at 8:20 a.m. (0620 GMT) following a warning telephone call to a newspaper and private TV station, authorities said.

Police had evacuated the targeted buildings, which are used for administrative purposes. State health officials confirmed that no one was injured.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but suspicion fell on Greek militant groups, which have stepped up attacks in the past two years. A group of suspects facing trial next month.

The blast occurred in a densely populated area in the city’s Ambelokipi district, shattering windows and nearby shop storefronts, and damaging cars. It sent up a cloud of smoke that was visible across the city.

‘It goes without saying that we condemn this attack. Violence does not solve anyone’s problems,’ Spyros Vouyias, a deputy public works minister, told private Skai television. Vouyias served previously at the public order minister, in charge of police and the anti-terrorism service.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Trust in Dutch Cabinet on the Rise

Trust in the Dutch government is growing, with approval ratings rising from 46 percent in the third quarter to 52 percent in the fourth, according to figures released by the Institute for Social Research.

Among liberal VVD voters ratings soared from 51 to 71 percent and among anti-Islam PVV voters from 20 to 45 percent. Socialist Party voters also gave the government better ratings. Ratings dropped among Labour, Democrat 66 and Green Left voters. Christian Democrat ratings remained unchanged at 73 percent. The cabinet is made up of the VVD and the CDA with PVV support in parliament.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Scared’ By English Defence League Protest

An English Defence League (EDL) member who displayed a St George flag outside a partially built mosque and shouted “EDL” and “England” was staging a one-man protest against the “monstrosity”, a court heard.

Ronald Peterson, of Elvaston Way, Tilehurst, told Reading magistrates he wanted to speak out against what he believed to be the flouting of planning regulations and public funding of the building in Oxford Road, West Reading.

Two Muslim men who heard the shouting on May 30 said they thought a march was taking place and were afraid the situation would escalate, the court heard.

Police were out in force on Thursday last week when about 20 members of the EDL, who say they are against the ‘Islamification’ of England, demonstrated outside the court in support of Peterson.

The 37-year-old denies two public order offences, one of them being racially or religiously aggravated, and faced trial.

Giving evidence, Urfan Azad told the court he was in the Tea House, in Oxford Road, with friend Amar Nazir on the evening of Sunday, May 30, when they heard “EDL, EDL” being chanted. He said: “We thought it was a demonstration. We went around the corner and saw three guys raising their hands up and they had a St George’s flag on the fence around the mosque which is being built. I felt a bit scared and called the police.”

Mr Azad said prayers were due to take place in the existing mosque about 100 yards away in Valentia Road and he was afraid the situation might get out of control.

Mr Nazir added: “Me and my friend discussed it and we thought it could turn into something ugly. Any other Muslim could drive past and do something stupid and start a fight so we decided to call the police.”

The court heard the police arrived within about five minutes of the call to find two men standing by the St George’s flag.

Sergeant Lee Barnham said: “I asked Mr Peterson what his intention was and he told me he was staging a static protest against this monstrosity and motioned towards the mosque.”

He said he spoke to Mr Azad and said to the court: “He told me he was offended by the use of what he considered to be a religious cross against the site of worship. It was clear to me he was upset about what happened and felt intimidated and I was convinced an offence against the Public Order Act had been committed.”

Peterson, bearing facial cuts and bruises from an alleged assault, said he had planned the one-man protest because he believed the council had given the people behind the mosque preferential treatment and public money to finish the project.

He said he had the England flag with him because he had been watching England play Japan in a football match on the TV at home.

Peterson said: “I’m not a religious person. I don’t follow any religion. I see the St George Cross as being the flag of my country and there is nothing more to it than that.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: How the Iron Lady Saved Britain: Mrs Thatcher Drove Through Economic Revolution Single-Handed

Margaret Thatcher stood almost alone in driving through the tough policies now credited with saving the economy, secret papers reveal.

The Tory Premier had to take on her predecessor Harold Macmillan, Bank of England governor Gordon Richardson and even her own Chancellor Geoffrey Howe to push through the policies which pulled Britain back from the brink of economic chaos.

Documents released by the National Archives under the 30-year rule show the pressure Mrs Thatcher faced from the Establishment behind the scenes — and the extent to which she was isolated.

[…]

In 1981, 365 economists wrote to The Times urging Mrs Thatcher to change course and limit the damage caused by the recession.

But she was unmoved, and her tough stance succeeded in reducing inflation from 27 per cent to four per cent in four years, putting Britain on the road to recovery.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Halal Method is Animal Cruelty

CRUELTY: In relation to the debate about halal meat being served in schools, I would like to add support to previous letters to the editor, written against the use of halal meat.

Halal killing is animal cruelty in this so-called animal-loving country, and people are afraid to speak out in case they are accused of being anti-Muslim.

But it is nothing to do with being racist, it’s about being against unnecessary cruelty to animals.

This halal way of killing animals is disgraceful and needs to be banned. No animal should suffer such dreadful pain and cruelty.

People need to speak out on behalf of our animals.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Interview With Melanie Phillips on “World Turned Upside Down”;

Has Western civilization now reached a point where it has stopped trying to survive? That is one of many questions raised by British journalist and author Melanie Phillips in her recent book, The World Turned Upside Down: The Global Battle Over God, Truth, and Power. In an exclusive interview with Accuracy in Media, she was very critical of the role the media have played in creating this upside down world, as she sees it. She said that “The British media are worse than your American media. At least in America you have Fox News, you have talk radio, which can challenge the otherwise unchallenged worldview of the Left represented in organizations like CNN, ABC, and so on-and our BBC. But the fact is, most journalists are on the Left, and most journalists, I think, are acting as fifth columnists in the war against the West, a war waged both from within and from without.”;

Melanie Phillips worked for a decade for the left-wing British newspaper, The Guardian, as a correspondent, editor and columnist, starting in 1977. From there she went to The Observer (which had been bought by The Guardian), The Sunday Times and later The Daily Mail, and has written several books along the way, including the widely acclaimed Londonistan. She also currently writes for The Spectator.

Among the issues most important to Ms. Phillips, are the breakdown of the family, the obsession with multiculturalism, the phenomenon of radical Islam coming into Britain and not being dealt with properly, and Israel, of which she is a passionate supporter.

She explained that she decided to write The World Turned Upside Down when she realized that the above-mentioned issues, and others such as how the war in Iraq was reported, had something in common: “They were all issues on which it was not possible, any longer, to have a proper discussion or debate; they were all issues on which the progressive side of politics took the view that it wasn’t simply that they believed that people who dissented from their point of view were wrong, they believed that they shouldn’t be allowed to speak at all.”;

What these issues have in common, she concludes, is that “They were all linked by the fact that they were all ideologies-that is to say, they were all governed by ideologies such as a whole range of -isms: Feminism, anti-Americanism, environmentalism, anti-Zionism, moral and cultural relativism, and so on. And all these ideologies, because they’re ideologies, basically, they start with the belief that the idea is not only correct, but can’t be challenged, whatever that idea is, and then they force evidence to fit the idea.”;

Below, in italics, are excerpts from the interview. You can listen to the entire two-part interview or read the transcript here.

The higher up the social and educational scale you go, particularly people who have been educated in universities in the last decade or two, you find that they are people who are much more likely to have a highly ideological view of the world, to be anti-America, anti-West, anti-capitalism, and to have-most importantly-no idea what truth and objectivity actually are. They disdain the whole notion of truth and objectivity, and they’re the people who are the most vicious and venomous towards Israel, a subject I care about very deeply. I am, myself, a Jew, but I also believe that Israel should be supported not simply in its own right, but because I believe Israel is a kind of paradigm issue of our time, that as far as Britain and Europe are concerned, it’s where the most irrational and bigoted views coalesce under the umbrella of “being rational” and “progressive.”; It’s a kind of symbol, if you like, of where we’ve lost the plot over a whole range of issues.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Joanna Yeates’ 65-Year-Old Landlord Arrested on Suspicion of Young Architect’s Murder

The landlord of murdered architect Jo Yeates was today arrested on suspicion of her murder.

Bachelor Chris Jefferies, 65, was taken into custody just after 7am this morning — hours after he claimed he had watched as three people left Jo’s flat on the night she vanished.

A statement from Avon and Somerset police said: ‘Just after 07.00hrs this morning, police attended an address in Canynge Road and arrested a 65-year-old man on suspicion of murder.

‘He has been taken into custody at a police station within the Avon and Somerset force area and detained for questioning.

[…]

The body of the 25-year-old, who had been strangled, was found by dog walkers on Christmas morning, three miles from her £200,000 flat in the upmarket area of Clifton, Bristol.

She was last seen by friends on December 17 and was reported missing two days later by her live-in boyfriend Greg Reardon when he returned from a weekend with relatives.

[…]

Mr Yeates told the Southern Daily Echo: ‘At the end of the day, obviously I’m not happy because my daughter is still dead. But we are pleased the police have made an arrest as they have been working very hard to make progress in this case.

‘During the investigation police have not told us everything they have discovered but we understand there are certain things they cannot reveal.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Lauren Booth is Bankrupt and Owes Her Sister Cherie Blair £15,000

While Tony Blair can look forward to cracking open the Bollinger on New Year’s Eve at his £5.75?million mansion in Bucks, ­having added to his wealth by at least £20?million since he left No 10, things are very different for his wife’s pretty, blonde half-sister, Lauren Booth.

Indeed, so poverty-stricken is Lauren, 43, that she has just been forced to declared herself bankrupt.

Lauren, a writer, broadcaster and human rights activist who recently converted to Islam in an extra­ordinary epiphany after she visited a shrine in Iran, is named in the London Gazette as having petitioned for bankruptcy in the run-up to Christmas.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Solved: Puzzle of Desai in Terror Nine

Gurukanth Desai, one of nine men charged with plotting to carry out Mumbai-style terrorist attacks in London and other cities in Britain, is a Muslim who changed his name by deed poll to take on a Hindu name, The Telegraph can reveal having consulted unimpeachable sources.

Why 28-year-old “Desai”, a married father of three young children, of Albert Street, Cardiff, felt he had to change his name and that, too, to a Hindu one must remain a matter of speculation until his Old Bailey trial next year.

However, as far as one can tell, “Desai”, despite his new name, remained a Muslim.

He faces serious terrorism charges, as does his brother, Abdul Malik Miah, 24, of Ninian Park Road, Cardiff, who was charged under his real birth name.

That clean-shaven “Desai” and bearded Miah, whose wife is five months pregnant, are brothers was mentioned — perhaps deliberately so — when the nine men, were remanded in custody at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on December 27. All nine were picked up in dawn raids by anti-terrorist police in London, Cardiff, Stoke-on-Trent and Birmingham on December 20.

When “Desai” was charged, he had to be indicted under his new legal name, not the one given to him at birth.

The Telegraph has independently established that “Desai” and Abdul Malik Miah are indeed brothers. The birth name of “Desai” has yet to be officially revealed by the authorities (though one unconfirmed report claimed it was Abdul Mannan Miah). It has also been suggested, though again not confirmed, that the brothers are of Bangladeshi origin.

The process of changing names by deed poll is relatively simple and inexpensive in Britain, though there will now be concern both on the part of the one-million-strong Hindu population and the security services if would-be terrorists are suspected of acquiring names associated with other faiths to bypass scrutiny.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: U.S. Embassy in London Was Terror Target

The U.S. State Department confirms that the 12 terrorism suspects arrested in the United Kingdom last week had targeted the American Embassy in London.

British authorities arrested 12 men Dec. 20 for suspicion of terrorism. Few details of a possible plot emerged until a court hearing in London today for the nine men still in custody. A British police statement released earlier in the day did not provide a list of targets but said the men had conspired to cause “explosions of a nature likely to endanger life or cause serious injury to property.”

The BBC reported that prosecutors told the court that the nine men had plotted bomb attacks on the American Embassy and the London Stock Exchange in the days before Christmas. The men were also said to have targeted unnamed political and religious figures.

But State Department spokesman Mark Toner confirmed to reporters today that U.S. Embassy officials in London “are aware of this, are working quite closely with British authorities and appreciate the high level of cooperation that we have with them, and are obviously taking suitable security precautions.”

When he was asked if the information had come first-hand from British authorities, he said, “I think you asked me if we were aware that we were on the targeting list? and I confirmed that.”

The State Department is also warning U.S. embassies around the world to review mail screening procedures after parcel bombs were presumably sent by an anarchist group to various embassies in Rome last week. Toner said, “We have notified all U.S. embassies worldwide to review current mail screening procedures and to continue vigilance when opening mail.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK:2011 Could See Poll Tax Riots Re-Run Warns TUC

Britain is on the verge of protests on par with the ferocious poll tax riot of 1990, union leaders claimed yesterday.

In his New Year message, Brendan Barber, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, said 2011 will be ‘a horrible year’, with millions of families reeling from the Government’s austerity crackdown.

He added: ‘This is going to be a year when many people suffer, but it just could be the year when the campaign for change really gets going.

‘This could well be the year that the country starts to say No to government in a way that they have not since middle Britain made a previous Conservative government abolish the poll tax.’

His reference to the poll tax protests is significant, as they culminated in a riot in London in March 1990, with looting, smashed shopfronts and mounted police battling to control demonstrators.

The poll tax — which was scrapped within months and was crucial to the fall from power of Margaret Thatcher — was eventually replaced by council tax in 1993.

Mr Barber’s remarks raise the prospect of a nationwide series of strikes organised by unions who believe the cuts are unnecessary and wrong.

The unions are promising co-ordinated strike action and other joint protests. The first protest march is scheduled for March 26.

The warning was echoed by Ed Miliband, who used his New Year message to warn that 2011 would be a ‘year of consequences for Britain’.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



What Other Catholics Stand Up to the Vatican’s Islamo-Insanity Like the Italians. Hey, Benedict: Why Not Build a Mosque in Vatican City

As I wrote in a recent post, I will try to get to a long-accumulating blog early next year, explaining my statement that converting to Catholicism (as Islam-loving Tony Blair did, and as Islam-loving Dubya was considering doing), puts a person a step closer to Islam.

But in the meantime, we’ve gotten some additional news items related to the unofficial Catholic-Islamic axis which most Catholic faithful would be horrified to perceive. But I feel compelled to help them do so, so that they might help their hierarchy with its moral confusion.

To begin with, we had the following news item in September: “[Mosque] proponents are getting help from an unlikely corner: the Vatican.” Not exactly “unlikely,” actually. Read on:

Catholic Church backs Muslim struggle to build Milan’s first mosque (Sept. 21)

…[A]nother of the world’s great cultural cities is arguing over a proposal for its first mosque. And proponents are getting help from an unlikely corner: the Vatican.

Milan, the northern Italian city famed for finance and fashion, is home to about 100,000 Muslims, mostly migrant workers from North African countries. But within city limits, there isn’t a single mosque.

[…]

Last winter there were a series of arrests in Northern Italy among Muslim immigrants accused of having ties to terrorist organizations. In November, for instance, two Pakistani nationals were arrested on the charge of having raised funds for the 2008 attacks in Mumbai, India, where 173 people lost their lives. In a similar move, a judge in Milan issued 17 arrest warrants for people accused of raising 1 million euros ($1.49 million) to fund terrorist activities in Algeria.

To those pointing out that freedom to practice one’s religion is a constitutional right, Salvini replies that “Islam is not just a religion.” In his view, it “is a tool to spread a way of life and political views that are not compatible with Western democracy.” The Milan native says “there is no need to build a mosque here.” He agrees with the idea of holding a local referendum, confident most Milanese would reject the mosque.[…]

The unequivocal and unmoved tone of these Italian politicians is, to put it mildly, refreshing and impressive.

The Vatican has an Islamic problem. Recall the 1993 political cartoon on the front cover of an Italian newspaper during the Bosnian war, depicting Pope John Paul II standing atop a minaret crying to the heavens, “Isus (Warren) Christopher, save us!” As Bill Dorich wrote in his book The Suppressed Serbian Voice and the Free Press in America:

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Albanians Deposited Serb Organ Profits in Islamic Charities, Prosecutor

Serbian war crimes prosecutor says that the Kosovo Albanian criminal boss, Hashim Thaci, used bank accounts designated as Islamic charity to deposit profits he earned by selling organs he extracted from captured Serbs.

The prosecutor’s office says that Thaci deposited his organized crime money in Swiss, German and Albanian bank accounts.

Names of some of those accounts are Help For Kosovo, Medicare, Caravan, Al- Haramajin, Taibah International. etc.

Serbian prosecution says that the FBI has also uncovered these accounts after the 9/11 attacks but it is not specified why the FBI withheld the information about Thaci.

Persecution says that it has sufficient evidence to initiate a “deep” investigation of the Albanian organ trade.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Eritreans Taken Hostage, No Progress in Talks

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 22 — Talks are still underway but have not yet been successful between religious and tribal leaders in the northern Sinai and the migrant traffickers who have been holding at least 300 Eritreans — and over a hundred other Africans — hostage for weeks and who are demanding that ransom money be paid. This was reported to ANSA by local sources, who said that the hostage takers continue to demand sums of money from the hostages’ families, for some of whom several thousands of dollars in individual ransom have already been paid.

The talks, which the government in Cairo urged clan chiefs to engage in — who it seems are not for the moment engaging directly in the matter — are allegedly at a standstill after some of the hostages were freed over the past few weeks and then arrested by Egyptian police for the crime of illegal immigration.

According to not-yet-confirmed figures cited by an Egyptian source, there are 1,500 Africans being held by the marauders, to whom they had already been paid to cross the Sinai peninsula and reach Israel, a country in which they had planned to settle to find work. The sources also report that among the migrants being held by the marauders are Nigerians, Sudanese and Ethiopians.

No official source has yet confirmed the news concerning the hiding place in the Sinai in which the hostages are being held — reportedly in very bad conditions — although the humanitarian association Everyone claims that for days it has been communicating “all necessary information to reach the refugees, imprisoned in the outskirts of the Egyptian city Rafah near a government building, surrounded by an orchard, next to a large mosque and a church which has been converted into a school.

“Everyone representatives have accused the Egyptian government of “lying” on the issue, and “to prevent the killing of other innocent people” it “is turning to Navi Pillay, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Trial of Synagogue Attacker Postponed Till Jan 15

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 22 — Cairo Criminal Court decided on Tuesday to adjourn to January 15 the trial of Gamal Hussein Ahmed, 49, who is facing charges of attacking a synagogue in downtown Cairo.

Ahmed has been admitted to a mental institution and was being examined by a number of doctors, who said that he is mentally strong.

Ahmed went up to the fourth floor of the three-star Panorama Hotel opposite the synagogue on Cairo”s Adly Street carrying a medium-sized bag and asked to book a room in February this year.

The case contained four containers of gasoline each attached to a glass bottle of sulfuric acid meant to shatter on impact and ignite the makeshift bomb.

As he was at the reception hall, he tricked the hotel employees throwing the bag toward the pavement near the building setting the explosive charge inside ablaze.

He confessed to having committed the attack and said it was an expression of his deep anger at the situation in the occupied Palestinian lands. No one was hurt and no property was damaged in the attack.(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Kidnapped Eritreans: Israeli NGO Appeals to Egyptian Govt

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, DECEMBER 29 — ‘We Refugees’, an Israeli human rights NGO called for urgent action by the Egyptian government to free the 300 Eritrean refugees being held captive in inhuman conditions by traffickers in the Sinai Peninsula, according to reports. The NGO joined a similar “indignant” plea launched yesterday by 13 Egyptian NGOs, which denounced “a conspiracy of silence” on the issue. The message from the Israeli NGO, also signed by former MP Zaava Galon, states that the lack of action by the authorities until now “creates a concerning impression that the crimes (of which the refugees are victims, editor’s note) are seen by the Egyptian and Israeli government as in line with their national interests. The current situation is the direct pursuance of policies that have seen migrants killed (by fire from border guards) on the Israeli-Egyptian border.” ‘We Refugees’ is an NGO formed by lawyers who have undertaken a commitment to protect the rights of refugees, asylum-seekers and stateless people. According to several sources, about 300 Eritrean refugees (and perhaps also Sudanese) are being held hostage by a group of predators who have reportedly sharply increased the initial sum of money agreed upon in order to allow them to illegally enter into Israel. Based on what has been leaked to the press, it is believed that these people have suffered serious maltreatment, most probably including torture and rape.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libyan Leader Pardons 2 South Koreans on Trial

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has pardoned two South Koreans charged with violating the country’s religious law, the Foreign Ministry said, closing a case that overlapped with a separate diplomatic row.

The two South Koreans, identified only by their surnames, Koo and Jeon, were arrested earlier this year on charges of engaging in Christian missions work in the Muslim country.

Their arrests were seen as related to a dispute over allegations that a South Korean intelligence agent attempted to collect information on the Libyan leader and the country’s weapons systems.

Koo and Jeon were released in early October after the diplomatic row was resolved following a meeting between Gaddafi and South Korean lawmaker Lee Sang-deuk, who is also a brother of President Lee Myung-bak. Still, Koo and Jeon have been barred from leaving Libya.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Morocco: Security Ratcheted Up Ahead of New Year

Rabat, 29 Dec. (AKI) — Morocco’s security services are boosting security in tourist locations, churches and at the offices of international organisations in the North African country ahead of the New Year, according to the Interior Ministry.

The heightened alert follows the arrests of six jihadist terror suspects last week when police uncovered an alleged Al-Qaeda cell in Morocco. The six suspects were all weapons and explosives experts and made extensive use of the internet to communicate.

Moroccan security chiefs have also decided to set up road blocks at the main approaches to cities.

Security forces have uncovered dozens of suspected terrorist cells in Morocco since May 2003, when a deadly attack by an Al-Qaeda linked Salafite group killed 45 people in the city of Casablanca.

Targets included a Spanish-owned restaurant in the city, a Jewish cemetery, community centre and Jewish-owned Italian restaurant, as well as the Belgian consulate.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Fifty Rabbis’ Wives Publish Letter Telling Girls Not to Date Arab Men

(AKI) — The wives of around 30 well-known rabbis in Israel published an open letter urging Israeli girls to avoid dating Arab men because their courtship is only a ruse that will result in maltreatment.

The letter comes three weeks after an uproar sparked by another open missive by 50 state-appointed rabbis telling Jews not to rent or sell property to non-Jews.

The latest letter that was was published by some websites and news outlets warned Israeli girls that Arab men’s gentlemanly behaviour won’t last.

“As soon as you are in their hands, in their villages under their control, everything becomes different. You can ask dozens of girls who have been there. They will tell you it is all an act.

“Your life will never be the same. The attention will be replaced with curses, beatings, and humiliations. Even if you want to leave the village it will be much harder. They won’t let you, they will chase you, they won’t let you come back.”

The letter was spearheaded by the head of Lehava, an extreme right-wing group that says it aims to prevent the “assimilation of the Jewish people” and works at “saving Jewish girls from Arab villages.”

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



Former Israel President Moshe Katsav Facing Four Years Behind Bars After Being Found Guilty of Rape

The former president of Israel has been found guilty of two charges of rape this morning.

Moshe Katsav, who was in charge of Israel for seven years from 2000 to 2007, was forced to step down due to the allegations.

And now the 65-year-old, the eighth president of Israel, has been convicted of rape by a court in Tel Aviv, the country’s second-largest city, and faces at least four years in prison.

Katsav had faced two allegations of rape by an employee when he was tourism minister in the 1990s. He was also accused of later sexual offences.

Judge George Karra, who presided over a panel with two other judges, delivered the verdict and said: ‘We believe the plaintiff [Woman A] because her testimony is supported by elements of evidence, and she told the truth.’

Katsav’s evidence, the judges decided, was ‘riddled with lies’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Al-Qaeda in-Fighting

The bravado of the Al-Qaeda leadership is hiding divisions within the terrorist group over the wisdom of their strategies. Despite the tough talk, key leaders are seriously questioning whether Al-Qaeda is on the winning side. This does not mean they are giving up on the cause but it shows that the War on Terror is taking a toll on their confidence. The former spokesman of Al-Qaeda, Suleiman Abu Ghaith has been permitted to leave Iran and has written a book called “Twenty Guidelines on the Path of Jihad.” Al-Qaeda and its leaders are not mentioned by name but the criticisms are widely seen as directed towards them. He says that certain jihadists have made it seem like they are part of a “culture of killing and destruction” instead of “securing a better life for all who live with Islam and in the Islamic state.” He writes that there’s been too much of an emphasis on violence instead of on building the institutions of Islamic states.

The introduction to Abu Ghaith’s book is written by Abu Hafs the Mauritarian, another high-level Al-Qaeda leader who was the head of its Sharia Committee. He opposed the 9/11 attacks and has had a public rift with Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second-in-command of Al-Qaeda. This shows that significant elements of the group are calling for a revision in strategy and are willing to publicly voice their challenges to the leadership.

This dissension first became public in 2005 when a letter from Ayman al-Zawahiri to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, criticized his tactics. He questioned the wisdom of Zarqawi’s attacks on Shiite civilians, beheadings and bombings of mosques. Zawahiri said this was causing a backlash and “in the absence of this popular support, the Islamic mujahed movement would be crushed in the shadows.” He also warned Zarqawi that “this matter won’t be acceptable to the Muslim populace however much you have tried to explain it.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



An Eye for an Eye: Iranian Court Orders Man to Lose an Eye and an Ear After Acid Attack on Student, 22, Outside College

A court in Iran has ordered a man to lose an eye and an ear as punishment for blinding another man and burning his ear in an acid attack.

The accused, identified only as Hamid, was also ordered to pay blood money after he was found guilty of the attack five years ago.

Hamid claimed he had mistaken his victim — identified only as Davoud — for a former classmate who had bullied him at college, reports Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency.

‘In college, some of the classmates bullied me so much that we had to move from the city I was living in to another one. This was carved in my mind and I couldn’t get over it,’ he said, according to Fars.

‘I bought acid and went back to my former college and waited for some of the classmates to come out. When he [Davoud] came out, I followed him and threw acid on him and I also injured my own legs by doing so.’

Victim Davoud was 22 at the time of the attack and denied ever meeting Hamid — and he claimed that the two-year age gap between them meant they could never have been in the same class.

In Iran citizens are supposed to obey Sharia law, a penal code that hands out what are perceived to be harsh punishments by Western culture for crimes, transgressions, curtailing civil rights, and violating human rights.

The eye-for-an-eye, or tooth-for-a-tooth, punishment is legal under the Sharia code of gisas, which allow retribution for violent crimes — hence why there are a number of public hangings for alleged murderers.

In November 2008 Majid Movahedi was sentenced to lose both eyes in a similar case, having been found guilty of throwing acid at Ameneh Bahramia, a woman who refused to marry him.

It is unclear whether the sentence has yet been carried out.

In October, however, Iranian authorities chopped off the hand of a convicted thief at a prison in the central city of Yazd.

In recent weeks Iran has been criticised for sentencing Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 43, to be stoned to death for adultery.

She has so far escaped the sentence because of the international outcry surrounding her case.

Iran has executed at least 200 people in the past 10 months, according the human rights website rahana.org.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Briton Faces Death Penalty in Baghdad Murder Trial: Security Contractor Charged With Killing Two Colleagues

A British security contractor charged with killing two of his colleagues has gone on trial in Baghdad.

Danny Fitzsimons is the first Western contractor on trial in an Iraqi court since a 2009 U.S.-Iraqi security agreement lifted immunity for foreign contractors.

The 29-year-old from Manchester faces the death penalty if convicted.

Iraq pressed hard for foreign contractors to be accountable for their actions after armed contractors employed by the North Carolina-based Blackwater Worldwide, now known as Xe, opened fire at a Baghdad intersection in September 2007, killing 17 civilians.

Fitzsimons is charged with two counts of premeditated murder in the deaths of two contractors, a Briton and an Australian, during an argument last year inside Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Civilian Deaths Drop in Iraq in 2010… As Suicide Bombers Kill Top Police Commander

Civilian deaths in Iraq have further decreased in 2010 — 3,976 down from 4,680 in 2009 — according to a report issued by a British organisation which monitors the statistics.

However Iraq Body Count said that the rate of decline was smaller than in previous years and warned of a lingering, low-level conflict in the years ahead in a conflict ‘notable for its sheer relentlessness’.

And, almost to serve as a reminder of how dangerous the Middle East country still is, a top police commander has been killed by a suicide attack.

The IBC said that the figures — correct up to December 25 — indicated that future security improvements would be much harder to come by; even now an average of two explosions a day resulted in civilian deaths.

‘The 2010 data suggest a persistent low-level conflict in Iraq that will continue to kill civilians at a similar rate for years to come,’ the report read.

The organisation is believed to be the only non-governmental group to have consistently recorded Iraqi civilian casualties since the war began in March 2003.

[…]

Mosul was where three suicide bombers stormed Lieutenant Colonel Shamil al-Jabouri’s compound while he was sleeping yesterday and detonated their explosives.

He was renowned in the tense northern city of Mosul for his relentless pursuit of Al-Qaeda insurgents, and the terror group had tried at least five times to kill him.

As Mr al-Jabouri slept on a couch in his office in Mosul, three men wearing police uniforms over vests laden with explosives slipped through an opening in the blast walls surrounding the compound where his building stood, police said.

Police manning one of at least four observation towers surrounding the compound shot one of the attackers in a yard and his vest exploded.

Under the cover of that blast the other two suicide bombers charged about 100 yards (90 metres) and made it into Mr al-Jabouri’s single-story building.

They detonated their vests simultaneously — one at the door of the office — killing the commander instantly and injuring a policeman sleeping in a trailer nearby.

The two blasts brought the whole building down, burying the slain commander under the rubble.

Just 10 days ago, Mr al-Jabouri led a raid that ended in the death of the top al-Qaida figure in Mosul, his colleagues said.

And two months ago he had been instrumental in stopping a gang that had been targeting jewellery stores in the city — robberies that are frequently ways for terror groups to refill their coffers.

‘We’ve lost a sword of Mosul who chased Al-Qaeda terrorists out of the city,’ said Abdul-Raheem al-Shemeri, a top security official on the Mosul Provincial Council.

An Al-Qaeda affiliate, the Islamic State of Iraq, took responsibility for the attack in a statement posted on the Internet.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Dopes of the Day: Fooled by Syria…Twice

Since I have written about how easily fooled Western politicians, officials, journalists, and academics are by Middle Eastern radicals, I’m going to try to provide examples in a regular feature called Dopes of the Day. This is a good starting point. (Be sure to read this article to the end to find out about both Dopes of the Day.)

There is a newspaper in Lebanon called al-Akhbar. Curiously, while other newspapers are in decline or starved for funds, al-Akhbar is expanding. The New York Times reporter fell for the foolish notion that this newspaper is some model of independence and enterprise. In fact, it is not exactly a secret in Lebanon that it is a hard-line, Syrian backed newspaper that repeatedly slanders the moderate forces there as well as delivers propaganda for Hizballah. And that’s where the money comes from.

So the Times is cheering a Syrian propaganda operation just as, not long ago, the Guardian went into rhapsodies about a supposedly wonderful publication in Turkey that is a front for the Islamists and producing false material that enabled the regime there to throw innocent people into prison on trumped-up charges of conspiring to overthrow the government.

Any serious investigation should have shown the true nature of al-Akhbar but the reporter couldn’t even find anyone to quote on this point, apparently not even trying to produce a balanced article, much less an accurate one.

Instead here’s what we get:

“It was the latest coup for a five-year-old paper that has become the most dynamic and daring in Lebanon, and perhaps anywhere in the Arab world. In a region where the news media are still full of obsequious propaganda, Al Akhbar is now required reading, even for those who abhor its politics.”

But perhaps this free advertising for a Hizballah and Syrian parrot can be explained by the article’s lead:

“Ibrahim al-Amine, the hawk-eyed editorial chairman of Al Akhbar, describes his newspaper’s founding ambitions this way: ‘We wanted the U.S. ambassador to wake up in the morning, read it and get upset.’“

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Iran is Now a Nuclear State: Ahmadinejad

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said Iran is now a nuclear country and that it has achieved nuclear know-how for energy purposes, a media report said. “Though the US and its allies have been exerting political and propaganda pressure and have issued resolutions against Iran over its

nuclear programme, all their efforts have failed and Iran has now become a nuclear country,” Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying by Press TV.

Addressing a gathering in northern Karaj city, the Iranian President said cooperation rather than confrontation was the only way to resolve issues related to Iran’s nuclear energy programme.

“We are open to cooperation based on our rights,” he said, warning Western countries that Iran would give a “regretting” response to anyone who “intends to prevent Iran from achieving its rights”.

He termed the sanction resolutions passed by the UN against Iran as “illegal” and said the sanctions would only “strengthen the Iranian nation” and accelerate the pace of its progress.

I excerpted bits of the recent “stackelbeck on terror” show, with the iranian CIA-informant warning the west… might be a good addition if anyone is posting on this

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yeVyHG8GB6M

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Iran Reports Arrest of 7 Al-Qaida Suspects

Iran’s state news agency reported Wednesday that security forces have arrested seven people near the border with Iraq and alleged they are al-Qaida suspects.

It was the first report in years in Iran of an al-Qaida arrest, although in the past the country has reported hundreds of such arrests. IRNA didn’t provide further details but said the seven were propagating Wahhabism, an austere version of Sunni Islam practiced primarily in Saudi Arabia.

There was no indication if those arrested were Iranians or foreigners. IRNA cited an unnamed source — described as “informed” — as saying the suspects “were identified” over the past month and were subsequently detained in the northwestern town of Sardasht. Many al-Qaida operatives are believed to have fled to Iran after the overthrow of the Taliban regime in neighboring Afghanistan in late 2001.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Iraqi Christians Killed in Series of Baghdad Attacks

The worst attack was in the central Baghdad district of Al-Ghadir, where a homemade bomb exploded around 8pm (1700 GMT), killing the two Christians and wounding three others, including one Christian, an official from the ministry said.

Al-Ghadir is an area with a significant Christian population, though many have fled following the massacre and in light of threats by al-Qaeda to target them. The number of Christians left in Iraq is estimated at between 450,000 and 500,000, including around 300,000 Roman Catholics (down from 387,000 in 1980).

Between 800,000 and 1.2 million Christians lived in Iraq in 2003. Iraq is still recovering from a massacre at a Baghdad cathedral in October. A group of Islamist extremists burst into the church of Our Lady of Salvation in Baghdad, murdering two priests, holding the congregation hostage and eventually killing more than 50 people. The pope, in his annual Christmas message, urged political leaders to express solidarity with Christians in Iraq.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Israel: Iran Nuclear Bomb ‘Still Three Years Away’

Iran’s nuclear programme has been hit by technical problems, and it could be still three years away from making a bomb, an Israeli minister has said.

The statement came a month after Iran said centrifuges used in uranium enrichment had been sabotaged.

There are suspicions, denied by Iran, that the centrifuges were targeted by the Stuxnet computer worm.

The West fears Iran’s goal is to build nuclear weapons but Iran says its programme is for peaceful energy use.

Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Yaalon said the programme had faced “a number of technological challenges and difficulties”.

“These difficulties have postponed the timetable,” he told Israeli radio.

“So we can’t talk about a point of no return. Iran does not have the ability to create nuclear weapons by itself at the moment.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Violent Deaths in Iraq Fall ‘But at Slower Rate’

The number of civilians killed by violence in Iraq in the past year was the lowest since the 2003 US-led invasion, a rights group has said.

Iraq Body Count (IBC), which collates casualty reports, said deaths dropped by 15% from 2009 to just under 4,000.

It said two bombs exploded each day on average, each killing four people.

But the group warned the number may have reached an “impassable minimum”, and that civilians were likely to die at a similar rate for years to come.

In its annual report, IBC said 3,976 people had died violently in Iraq over the past year, compared to 4,680 in 2009. Of the 2010 deaths, 66% were caused by insurgent bomb attacks.

The capital Baghdad and the northern city of Mosul were the worst affected areas.

“After nearly eight years, the security crisis in Iraq remains notable for its sheer relentlessness: 2010 averaged nearly two explosions a day by non-state forces that caused civilian deaths,” IBC said.

“As well as occurring almost daily, these lethal explosions can happen almost anywhere, with 2010’s attacks occurring in 13 of Iraq’s 18 administrative regions.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Russia


Artificial Intelligence to Transform Web: Russian Tycoon

The emergence of artificial intelligence is to transform the Internet industry and social networking over the next decade, Russia’s leading web tycoon said in an interview on Tuesday.

The low-profile Yury Milner, chairman in the rapidly expanding Mail.ru Internet firm and CEO of DST Global investment company who built minority stakes in Facebook and other Western firms, made the comments in an rare interview with Vedomosti.

“I think that in 10 years if you ask a question on a social network and you get an answer you will not know if a computer or a person has answered you,” Milner told the financial daily. “When you receive a question, you will not know if it has been asked by a person or an artificial intelligence. And by answering you help the computer create an algorithm.”

Mail.ru, which is part owned by Russian magnate Alisher Usmanov and recently enjoyed a solid IPO in London, has grown into the biggest Internet firm in the Russian-speaking world with stakes in the most prominent portals.

It rose to prominence abroad when it unexpectedly took a 2.4 percent stake in Facebook. DST Global, the investment vehicle, also has an undisclosed stake of its own that unconfirmed reports put at a total holding of 10 percent.

In the interview Milner made no comments on the size of the Facebook stake, or Mail.ru’s holdings in online games portal Zynga and deal-of-the-day website Groupon.

Milner said there had been a revolutionary change in demand for information and now there was “as much information generated in the the last two days as there was in the history of civilisation up to 2003.” He defended the company’s tight focus on consumer Internet products, and in particular social Internet, saying that “we have chosen a strategy to have a global expertise in a very narrow sector.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Dmitry Medvedev Condemns Russia’s ‘Stagnant’ Political System

In a video blog on the Kremlin’s web site, Mr Medvedev complained that the country’s political system showed dangerous signs of stagnation, a phrase that Russians use to evoke the moribund period when Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was in power in the 1970s.

“At a certain point, our political life started showing signs of stagnation,” Mr Medvedev, who assumed the presidency in 2008, said. “This stagnation is equally damaging to both the ruling party and opposition forces.”

Although he claimed in the same breath to have pushed through a raft of minor improvements in the last two years, his description of Russia’s political landscape was damning.

“If the opposition does not have the slightest chance of winning in a fair fight it degrades and becomes a marginal force. But if the ruling party has no chance of losing anywhere or ever it simply ‘bronzes over’ and eventually also degrades like any organism that does not move.” Mr Medvedev went on to say that the ruling United Russia party which is led by Mr Putin should not be packed with “dummies and performers” or serve as a mere appendix to the executive branch of government. His outburst comes ahead of a major speech he is expected to deliver next week which will be scrutinised for clues as to whether he intends to run for a second presidential term in 2012. Both he and Mr Putin, his long-time political patron, have refused to be drawn on which one of them will stand.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Russian Space Officials Fired Over Satellite Crash

President Dmitry Medvedev fired two senior Russian space officials Wednesday over the loss of three navigation satellites that crashed into the sea this month.

The GLONASS satellites, intended for Russia’s rival to the American GPS system, a project dear to the Kremlin, were lost because the Proton M rocket carrying them into orbit was loaded with too much fuel, a investigating commission found.

A Kremlin spokeswoman said the deputy head of the Russian space agency Roskosmos, Viktor Remishevsky, and the deputy head of the Russian rocket manufacturer Energia, Vyacheslav Filin, had both been fired over the calculation error.

Medvedev also issued an official reprimand to Roskosmos head Anatoly Perminov.

The satellites were to be the last of 24 needed for Russia to fully deploy GLONASS — short for Global Navigation System — next year. Putin has personally promoted GLONASS as strategically important in helping to build Russian technological independence and stimulate the production of domestic consumer devices such as smartphones and vehicle sat-navs.

He has even fitted his black labrador dog Connie with a collar bearing a GLONASS transmitter.

Experts have estimated that the crash cost Russia 5 billion roubles ($160 million) and set back GLONASS by six months.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Ignorant Wahhabis Killed Fifty Imams and Muftis in North Caucasus

Renowned islamologist Roman Silantyev cited statistics according to which about fifty Islamic spiritual leaders were killed in the North Caucuses for fighting against Wahhabism.

“Almost 50 people were killed. These people could have formed a big muftiat,” he said in the The Faith and the World program on the Voice of Russia radio.

According to the islamologist, there are few such people left in Russia: “they are killed almost every month, losses is some muslim boards are irreplaceable, the greater number of people who were able to actively fight against Wahhabism have been killed.”

“Others are demoralized and stopped opposing or just deserted to the enemy. The situation is critical,” Silantyev believes.

He is satisfied that Russian authorities ordered to give security guards to Muslim spiritual leaders in the North Caucasus, “or we can just stay without allies.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


More NATO Tankers Torched in Pakistan

Pakistani militants have attacked two NATO supply vehicles transporting fuel destined for US-led forces in Afghanistan and set them on fire in Baluchistan province.

A group of unidentified armed men opened fire on two tankers in Quetta — the provincial capital of Baluchistan Province — on Thursday morning. At least one driver was killed in the shootout, Pakistani news television channel AAJ TV reported.

The assailants later torched the tankers and fled the area in a vehicle. Their whereabouts is unknown.

Police cordoned off the area after the incident and launched a search operation to arrest the perpetrators.

The attack came a day after one person was killed and two others sustained injuries as militants attacked two NATO fuel tankers in Landi Kotal district of the border town of Torkham.

Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan militants regularly attack NATO convoys in Pakistan.

The US military and NATO rely heavily on the Pakistani supply route into landlocked Afghanistan, more so now that Taliban attacks are increasing.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan Says it Will Defend Spy Chief in US Suits

Pakistan will strongly contest two U.S lawsuits that link its spy chief and his agency to the deadly 2008 attacks in Mumbai, the government said Thursday.

The statement shows how sensitive Pakistan is to claims that its agents were involved in the assault that killed 166 people in India. It could also be evidence of pressure on the weak civilian government by the powerful spy service.

It appeared that the goal of the tough Pakistani stance was to get the lawsuits dismissed.

The suits have already caused tensions between the U.S. and Pakistan. The U.S. depends on Pakistani cooperation to fight Taliban fighters in its border area with Afghanistan, and friction over other issues could harm the alliance.

The lawsuits were filed in New York in November. The plaintiffs include relatives of victims in the Mumbai attacks.

The bloody, coordinated attacks on several sites in Mumbai, including luxury hotels, a cafe, a train station and a Jewish center, have been blamed on the Pakistani Islamic militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, a defendant in the suits.

The 60-hour siege by 10 Pakistani militants, which has been called India’s 9/11, paralyzed India’s financial capital and deeply wounded the national psyche.

The court papers repeat long-standing allegations that Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence has “nurtured and used international terrorist groups,” including Lashkar.

“Defendant ISI provided critical planning, material support, control and coordination of the attacks,” the lawsuits allege, pressing wrongful death and additional claims against the ISI, its chief Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha and others.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



West Quickly Agreed to Back Afghan Resistance in 1980: Files

Western powers met in secret soon after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and formed plans to back Islamic resistance, according to British files from 1980 released Thursday.

Senior officials from Britain, France, then West Germany and the United States met in Paris on January 15 that year to discuss the West’s response to the December 24, 1979 invasion.

The National Archives’ release of the secret papers after 30 years in the vaults comes as Western allies prepare to enter another year of conflict in Afghanistan, battling Islamist insurgents. US national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski was among those at the Paris meeting, as was Britain’s cabinet secretary Robert Armstrong, the top civil servant.

He said support for the mujahideen should be coordinated by “our friends” — a euphemism for MI6, Britain’s foreign intelligence agency, and its peers from the allies.

Armstrong reported from the Paris meeting that while they wanted to avoid sparking a border war with Pakistan in the volatile tribal region, there was still much they could do.

He said that the powers at the meeting concluded “it would be in the interests of the West to encourage and support resistance”. As long as there were Afghans willing to continue resisting the Soviet invasion and as long as the Pakistanis were willing to see their territory used, resistance should be supported, said Armstrong. “That would make more difficult the process of Soviet pacification of Afghanistan, and would make that process take much longer than it otherwise would,” he said.

Armstrong added that “the existence of a guerilla movement in Afghanistan would be the focus of Islamic resistance, which we should be wanting to continue”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Who Keeps the Faith?

by Diana West

The U.N. believes about 1 million Afghans between the ages of 15 and 64 — roughly 8 percent of the population — are addicted to drugs. The publication Development Asia estimates 2 million Afghan addicts.

Depending on whose figures you read next, some staggering number of these same addicts ends up in the Afghan National Police (ANP). Fully “half of the latest batch” of police recruits tested positive for narcotics, the Independent reported in March, drawing on Foreign Office Papers from late 2009. Also in March 2010, the Government Accounting Office (GAO) reported, depending on the province, 12 to 41 percent of Afghan police recruits tested positive. The GAO added: “A State official noted that this percentage likely understates the number of opium users because opiates leave the system quickly; many recruits who tested negative for drugs have shown opium withdrawal symptoms later in their training.” The problem was dire enough, the report continues, to place under consideration “the establishment of dedicated rehabilitation clinics at the regional police training centers.”

Pederasty, misogyny and corruption aside: This drug-addled ANP is part of the Afghan National Security Forces that the U.S. government fully expects — no, completely relies on — to secure Afghanistan against “extremist networks” and is spending $350 million per day in Afghanistan until that happens.

My question: Who’s high here? Illiterate Afghans on drugs, or educated Americans on fantasy?…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Makes Skype Illegal

All internet phone calls will be banned apart from those made over two state-owned networks, China Unicom and China Telecom. “[This] is expected to make services like Skype unavailable in the country,” reported the People’s Daily, the official mouthpiece of the Communist party.

Websites such as Facebook, Twitter and Youtube are already blocked in China and Google closed down its Chinese servers last year after heavy government pressure.

Yesterday (Thurs), Wang Chen, the deputy head of the Chinese Propaganda department, boasted that “By November, […] 350 million piece of harmful information, including text, pictures and videos, had been deleted [from the Chinese internet]”.

Some Chinese users of Twitter, the micro-blogging website, claimed they could already no longer download Skype, but the service appeared to be working normally in Shanghai.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Gang Link Sees Soccer Star Kerem Bulut Lose Bail

ONE of Australia’s brightest soccer stars is part of a gang involved in attempted murder, kidnap, drugs and robberies, police alleged yesterday.

Kerem Bulut, 18, of Berala, who plays for the Young Socceroos, was refused bail in Parramatta Bail Court yesterday, after allegedly breaching a court-imposed curfew.

Bulut, whom police allege is a member of the gang MBM or Muslim Brotherhood Movement, is accused of breaching his bail conditions when he allegedly threatened to “smash” a man in Sydney’s south west.

The curfew formed part of strict bail conditions which were set after Bulut was charged with five offences last month, including robbery in company and membership of a criminal group — MBM.

Police allege members of the MBM are involved in serious offences such as robbery, attempted murder and kidnapping. They have also been linked to numerous property and drug supply offences, police say…

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Battisti Victim’s Son Vows to Fight if Lula Grants Asylum

‘It’s right to demonstrate’ if ex-terrorist stays in Brazil

(ANSA) — Milan, December 29 — The son of a jeweler gunned down in Milan in 1979 on Wednesday vowed to fight on if the ex-terrorist convicted for his father’s murder is granted asylum in Brazil.

Alberto Torregiani, who was left paralysed from the waist down in the attack that killed his father, told ANSA the time for diplomacy was over and he and other victims’ families would organise street protests.

Outgoing Brazilian President Inacio Lula da Silva is set to decide this week on Italy’s request to extradite Cesare Battisti and the Brazilian press has reported he will turn Italy down.

“If you do things politely, it seems justice is ignored,” said Torregiani, who was 13 at the time of the attack by Battisti’s leftist militant group, and is now 44.

“It appears you get more by putting your foot down and banging your fists so that’s what we’re going to do.

“Anyone who believes in justice must not accept this decision (by Lula). We won’t do anything outrageous, we’re thinking of mobilising people.

“People demonstrate for many things, even trivial ones, so perhaps it’s right to demonstrate for this”.

Torregiani praised the Italian government’s efforts to get Battisti back to serve out a life sentence for four murders but said it was time for the victims’ relatives to take things into their own hands.

“Up till now we and the other families have just spoken about (the affair) and allowed the institutional bodies to do their work, which has been excellent.

“But clearly it isn’t enough to use diplomacy, the people’s voice must be heard”.

Torregiani said the relatives had been expecting Lula to grant asylum but stressed “we’re losing all sense of justice by letting a common criminal go free”. Lula told ANSA on Monday he wanted to resolve the Battisti issue before his successor Dilma Rousseff takes office on January 1.

The Brazilian press reported Tuesday and Wednesday that, according to its sources, the former terrorist would be allowed to stay in Brazil. In November 2009 Brazil’s supreme court turned down Battisti’s request for asylum.

The Brazilian president, who has in the past indicated he might view Battisti’s case favourably, told Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi in Washington last April that he would review the high-court decision.

But there was no word at the time on which way Lula might be leaning.

The supreme court judges said his decision should square with bilateral agreements between Italy and Brazil, but added that the Brazilian constitution gives the president personal powers to deny the extradition if he chooses to.

If Lula stops Battisti’s return in a case the Italian government has fought hard for, experts say the diplomatic repercussions could be considerable.

The 56-year-old Battisti was arrested in Brazil in April 2007, some five years after he had fled to that country to avoid extradition to Italy from France, where he had lived for 15 years and become a successful writer of crime novels.

In January 2009 the Brazilian justice ministry granted Battisti political asylum on the grounds that he would face “political persecution” in Italy.

The ruling outraged the Italian government who demanded that it be appealed to the Brazilian supreme court.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



South American Drug Gangs Funding Al-Qaeda Terrorists

South American drugs gangs are providing millions of pounds of funding for al-Qaeda terrorists by paying them to ensure the safe passage of cocaine across north Africa and towards Europe.

Islamic rebels familiar with the barren terrain of the Sahara have struck deals under which they provide armed security escorts for drug traffickers in return for a slice of their profits.

Counter-terrorism experts said that the terrorists belong to the Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) group, which has kidnapped a series of Westerners and killed a British tourist last year.

They warned that the money they receive from drugs gangs could be used to attract new recruits and plan terrorist attacks on European cities.

Olivier Guitta, a counter-terrorism and foreign affairs consultant, said that the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the Marxist rebel group, was the “force behind the agreement with AQIM”.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Migrant Numbers Will Not Fall Significantly in 2011 Think Tank Warns

Immigration to Britain is ‘unlikely’ to fall significantly next year because of the parlous state of the Eurozone, a leading think-tank warns today.

Plans to impose a cap and gradually bring down migration levels will falter because there is nothing the Government can do to stop workers from the EU coming to Britain, it says.

The Institute for Public Policy Research adds that the effect will be amplified as restrictions on some eastern European workers end next year.

As a result, net migration is unlikely to fall much below 200,000 in 2011 — about the same annual level it has been for much of the last decade, the IPPR concludes.

This runs counter to the Government’s pledge to restrict immigration from ‘hundreds of thousands to the tens of thousands’.

Since January 2007, workers from the newest EU countries, Bulgaria and Romania, have largely needed to apply for work permits to work in the UK.

That restriction is due to be lifted in December 2011, meaning that thousands more could be tempted to move to take advantage of the relatively healthy British economy.

Around 120,000 Irish people are expected to leave the Republic’s crisis-hit economy in 2010 and 2011, with many likely to head to Britain where there is no language barrier or work restrictions.

Migration could even increase if more people from other economically troubled countries such as Spain, Portugal and Greece choose to move to Britain.

They do not come under the annual cap which will be introduced in April. Meanwhile fewer Britons are moving abroad. The exodus of UK citizens fell sharply to just over 30,000 in the year to March 2010.

This compared with 130,000 in the year to March 2008. Countries favoured by British sun-lovers, such as Spain and the United Arab Emirates, were wiped out economically, making them less attractive destinations for jobseekers.

The weak pound has also made it too expensive for many pensioners and students to move abroad.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


‘Super Death Panels’ On a ‘Massive Scale’

New Obama end-of-life regs ‘more egregious’ than ones Congress rejected

At the request of several Democratic lawmakers, the administration quietly slipped language into a Medicare regulation paying doctors to provide “end-of-life” consultations with patients. Doctors will instruct patients how to write “advance directives” listing what types of treatment they wish to receive, or not receive, if they are hospitalized in such poor condition that they are unable to make health care decisions.

The new regulation was revealed by the New York Times on Dec. 26. The regulation will go into force Jan. 1.

“Nothing good can come of this,” said Judie Brown, the president of American Life League. “This will affect everybody’s parents and grandparents and preborn babies, and it will not affect anybody for the good.”

Congress must step up to cancel the regulation, Brown added. “If not, a death certificate is written for an awful lot of elderly people.”

[…]

“This new Congress has to pass a law that revokes this new Medicare regulation because we’re going to see pressure on the elderly to end their lives prematurely,” said Liberty Counsel President Mat Staver. “This regulation is more egregious than the original Obama health care legislation.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Al-Qaeda Targeting Christians in Canada, Austria

Not content with terrorizing the Christian minorities that endeavor to survive under Islamic rule, Al-Qaeda is now targeting Coptic Christians who have left Egypt for lives in Europe and North America.

The December 21 Toronto Star drew attention to the publication of a “death list” naming 200 Coptic Christians, over half of whom now live in Canada. According to the Star:

More than 100 Canadian-Arab Christians are listed on an Al Qaeda affiliated website, apparently targeted because of their alleged role in attempting to convert Muslims.

Some of those named say concerned Canadian intelligence officials have contacted them.

The Shumukh-al-Islam website, often considered to be Al Qaeda’s mouthpiece, listed pictures, addresses and cellphone numbers of Coptic Christians, predominantly Egyptian-Canadians, who have been vocal about their opposition to Islam.

In a forum on the website, one member named Son of a Sharp Sword, says “We are going to return back to Islam and all of the Mujahedeen (holy warriors) will cut off their heads.”

Three pages of the fundamentalist, Arabic-language website titled “Complete information on Coptics” sets to “identify and name all of the Coptics throughout the world who hope to defame Islam.” The website calls the Coptic Christians living abroad “dogs in diaspora,” a derogatory reference in Arabic.

The brutal persecution of Copts in Egypt — persecution which often includes forced “conversions,” rape, and even murder — has had the same effect in Egypt that similar incidents are now having in Iraq: Christians are fleeing Muslim nations for the freedom of the West. But now relocation is not enough, as Jihadists try to silence the voices of their victims with death threats.

Those who are being targeted are not even recent emigres; for example, Sherif Mansour, one of the men on the list, has operated a business in Quebec for 22 years since leaving Egypt. Again, according to the Star:

Sherif Mansour said he found out he was named on the website when intelligence officials called him.

“They asked me, ‘are you afraid?’ I said ‘Should I be?’“ said Mansour, who has run a business in Quebec for the past 22 years since emigrating from Egypt.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Henninger: Popes, Atheists and Freedom

This being the season of hope, Islamic extremists of course have been engaged in their annual tradition of blowing up Christian churches.

An attack by a radical Muslim sect on two churches in northern Nigeria killed six people on Christmas Eve. On the Philippines’ Jolo Island, home to al Qaeda-linked terrorists, a chapel bombing during Christmas Mass injured 11.

One of the central public events during these days at year’s end is the Pope’s midnight Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. In his homily the pope invariably pleads for peace, but on Friday evening a viewer could not have missed the meaning when Benedict XVI twice mentioned “garments rolled in blood,” from Isaiah 9:5.

The image, as befits Isaiah, is poetic and disturbing. Benedict surely intended it so: “It is true,” he said, “that the ‘rod of his oppressor’ is not yet broken, the boots of warriors continue to tramp and the ‘garment rolled in blood’ still remains.” He was of course referring to the sustained violence against Christian minorities by Islamic fundamentalists.

Hours before this, from a window above St. Peter’s Square, Benedict also took a pass on the holiday pabulum handed out by other world leaders this time of year by explicitly criticizing China. He said the “faithful of the church in mainland China [should not] lose heart through the limitations imposed on their freedom of religion and conscience.”

For some, the Vatican’s efforts on behalf of Christian minorities in Islamic countries or among China’s population of 1.3 billion is regarded as worthy and admirable, but only a footnote against the grand sweep of current geopolitical concerns. Iran’s bomb, China’s economic importance and all that. This is a mistake. In these times, the pope’s agenda is the civilized world’s agenda. The pope’s agenda is individual freedom.

To the extent that the goal of freedom still occupies a high place in the purposes of foreign policy, then the pope remains an important strategic ally, as he has been since Karol Wojtyla left Poland to become pope in October 1978.

The reality of the modern Church’s interests aligned with the world’s best interests emerges forcefully in the recently published second volume of George Weigel’s magisterial biography of John Paul II, “The End and the Beginning.” For this final volume, Mr. Weigel had access to material from the archives of former Communist intelligence services. The book’s first half tells the tale of Communist security agencies-the Soviet KGB, East Germany’s Stasi and Poland’s SB-coming to grips with the threat posed to their system by Karol Wojtyla, first as archbishop of Cracow and then as Pope John Paul II. One Polish Communist Party ideologist called then-Cardinal Wojtyla “the only real ideological threat in Poland.”

In 1984, after John Paul had completed two pastoral pilgrimages to Communist Poland, a conference was convened by members of the KGB, Warsaw Pact and Cuban intelligence services. Its purpose: to discuss “joint measures for combating the subversive activities of the Vatican.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101229

Financial Crisis
» Australia Leads the World in House Price Rises
» G20 and EU ‘Posturing’ Could Exacerbate Future Banking Crises
» Homeowners Cut Mortgage Debt by the Most in Over a Year
» Italy’s Debt Costs Approach Red Zone
 
USA
» ADL Slams Conspiracy Theories Linking Israel to Wikileak
» America’s ‘Islamophobia Machine’ Doing Great Damage
» Joshua Muravchik: Is Obama’s Muslim Outreach Working?
 
Europe and the EU
» Breaking: Five Arrested in Denmark/Sweden, Planned to Attack Mohammed Cartoons Newspaper in the Next Few Days
» Denmark: 5 Arrested in Plot to Attack Prophet Cartoon Paper
» Denmark: Newspaper Massacre Terror Plot is Foiled
» Five Arrested for Terror Plot in Denmark
» Five Arrested in Danish Terror Plot
» Germany: Have Berlin Mosques Become a Target?
» Germany: Ramsauer Mans Ramparts Against English
» Greece: Anarchists Call for ‘Global Uprising’
» Ireland: More Than 16,000 Motorists on Sixth Provisional Licence
» Italy: Champagne Imports Slide in 10 Yrs, -20%
» ‘Kill as Many as Possible’: Five Arrested for Planning Attack on Danish Newspaper Which Published ‘Prophet’ Cartoons
» Swedes Arrested Over ‘Muhammad Cartoon Plot’
» The English Defense League
» UK: Police to Review Security of Boris Johnson and Other Figures After Alleged Al-Qaeda Assassination Plot
» UK: Police Demand New Powers to Stop and Search Terror Suspects
» UK: Peddler of Race Hate is Accused of Swindling Benefits
» UK: Tussles at the Tills During Tesco Boycott
» WikiLeaks: US Embassy Pressured Danish Paper Not to Reprint Mohammed Cartoons
 
Balkans
» Bosnia: Only 10% of Defence Industry’s Capacity Used
 
North Africa
» Egypt Following Up Israel-Cyprus Sea Border Demarcation Deal
» Italy: Railways: Italferr to Study Transport in 21 Arab States
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Detained Journalist Questions Right to Freedom of Speech for Palestinians
» West Bank: OK to 13 Thousand Houses in Settlements
 
Middle East
» America and the Middle East: Great Sacrifices, Small Rewards
» Religion in Turkey: Diyanet Effect
» The United States, Israel and the Arabs: Please, Not Again
 
South Asia
» Trouble in Kashmir: India’s Intifada
» US Admit No Way to Stop Taliban Terrorists Through Pakistan-Afghanistan Border
 
Far East
» China Preparing for Armed Conflict ‘In Every Direction’
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Al-Qaeda Cockney Calls for Holy War in Somalia
 
Latin America
» Brazilian President to Make Battisti Decision This Week
 
General
» American Thinker: How’s That Religion of Peace Doing These Days?
» New Holiday, December 25: Christmahannukwanzadan

Financial Crisis


Australia Leads the World in House Price Rises

[…]

A survey by Canada’s Scotiabank on price movements in a dozen advanced countries ranked Australia as the “clear front-runner” for house price increases, with a gain of 9.4 per cent year-on-year for the September quarter on an inflation adjusted basis.

That put Australia ahead of France (6.8 per cent gain), Sweden (5.6 per cent), Switzerland (4.7 per cent) and Britain (4.4 per cent). Losers in the period included the US (0.4 per cent down), Spain (5.2 per cent), Japan (2.8 per cent) and Canada (1.5 per cent).

But the 9.4 per cent increase in Australian prices did represent a slowdown from the 15.9 per cent year-on-year rise posted in the first quarter of 2010, with successive rate rises and the expiry of the enhanced First Home Owners Grant in January starting to bite…

[…]

[Return to headlines]



G20 and EU ‘Posturing’ Could Exacerbate Future Banking Crises

The TaxPayers’ Alliance has published a paper accusing politicians and regulators of basing their response to the financial crisis on a “mistaken view of its causes” and “political considerations”. The paper, which was co-written with the Lagatum Institute, an academic group that focuses on wealth, attacks the key aim of politicians including Prime Minister David Cameron and Chancellor George Osborne for internationally co-ordinated regulation. It warns that “global regulation causes global crises”.

The authors, Dalibor Rohac of the Legatum Institute and Matthew Sinclair of the Taxpayers’ Alliance, said in the report: “Common capital adequacy rules, while increasing transparency, also encourage homogeneity in investment strategy and undertaking of risk, leading to a high concentration of risk. That means that global regulations can be dangerous because they increase the amplitude of global credit cycles.” The paper adds: “The Basel regulations may still be procyclical, imposing more onerous requirements on institutions at times when the system is in trouble.”

The authors claim the new regulations, including the G20-sponsored Basel rules and the Capital Requirements Directive of the EU, have been based on too narrow a view that “greed and insufficient regulation” were the causes. They argue that “regulations and poor policy choices” were also to blame — and that the authorities are in danger of making similarly dangerous mistakes.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Homeowners Cut Mortgage Debt by the Most in Over a Year

The figure was the biggest net injection of equity people have made into their homes since the first quarter of 2009.

The £6.1bn figure compares with an injection of around £5.8bn in the second quarter — revised down from £6.2bn — and £5.3bn in the first, according to the Bank of England, and is the equivalent of 2.4pc of homeowners’ post-tax income.

A total of £49.7bn has been paid down on home loans since the second quarter of 2008.

Earlier in the decade many people extended their mortgages to finance other spending, such on cars, holidays and extensions. This trend that came to an abrupt end in 2007 as the global economy was gripped by the worst recession since the Depression era.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Italy’s Debt Costs Approach Red Zone

Yields on 10-year bonds rose 10 basis points to 4.86pc after a poor auction of short-term debt in Rome. The Italian treasury had to pay 1.7pc to sell €8.5bn (£7.2bn) of six-month bills in a thin post-Christmas market, up from 1.48pc a month ago. The spike in rates came as money supply data released by the European Central Bank showed that real M1 deposits have collapsed at a rate of 2.8pc over the last six months in the EMU bloc of Italy, Spain, Greece, Ireland and Portugal, even though they are rising in northern Europe. “This is comparable with the decline in early 2008 just ahead of the plunge into recession,” said Simon Ward from Henderson Global Investors. “The eurozone periphery is locked into a ‘double dip’ that will undermine fiscal consolidation.”

Italy’s M1 contraction began later than elsewhere in southern Europe but is now accelerating. M1 typically gives advance warning of economic shifts by six to nine months.

Mr Ward said signs of recovery in the ECB’s broader M3 money data is less reassuring than it looks since the gauge was temporarily boosted by flight to liquid assets on EMU debt worries.

The poor auction in Rome may be a warning sign that EU leaders offered too little to restore confidence at their Brussels summit two weeks ago. German Chancellor Angela Merkel vetoed the creation of eurobonds or any serious move towards fiscal union, and shot down calls for an increase in the eurozone’s €440bn emergency loan fund. The ECB has so far refused to step in to the breach with overwhelming action. Willem Buiter, Citigroup’s chief economist, said the response had been “woefully inadequate”, raising the risk of fresh bank failures and a wave of sovereign defaults next year. He said the EU authorities may need a mix of measures worth up to €2 trillion to stop the rot.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


ADL Slams Conspiracy Theories Linking Israel to Wikileak

The the release of classified US diplomatic cables by WikiLeaks is “being exploited to spread false and malicious conspiracy theories against Israel,” the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) said in a statement released Wednesday.

The ADL said claims that the Israel and the “Israel lobby” in the US played a secret role in the release of the cables was “part of a disinformation campaign that has as gained traction with those catering to the far right and the left, some Arab and Islamic Web sites and others dedicated to spreading ‘anti-Zionist’ messages like Islam Times and Hezbollah’s Al Manar.

“Once again, as we saw with the 9/11 attacks and the financial meltdown, we are seeing yet another manifestation of the Big Lie against Jews and Israel,” Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director, said in the statement. “The WikiLeaks affair has given new life to the old conspiracy theories of underhanded Jewish and Israeli involvement in an event with significant repercussions for the U.S. and many nations around the world.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



America’s ‘Islamophobia Machine’ Doing Great Damage

WASHINGTON: A prominent Washington-based Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization is urging the Department of Homeland Security and the Defense Department not to use anti-Muslim extremists to train counterterrorism officials.

That request by the Council on American-Islamic Relations, CAIR, comes following a Washington Post investigative report on post-9/11 government surveillance, which stated: “Seeking to learn more about Islam and terrorism, some law enforcement agencies have hired as trainers self-described experts whose extremist views on Islam and terrorism are considered inaccurate and counterproductive by the FBI and US intelligence agencies.”

The Post released the report on the extensive security measures entitled “Top Secret America.”

The investigation was first released in July of 2010, and is a series that is being updated, with its latest installment “Monitoring America” released on Dec. 20.

As a result, Ibrahim Hooper, the Communications Director for the Council for CAIR spoke out on Iranian TV against what he called the rising Islamophobia in the US.

The investigation goes into what the Washington Post calls the “fourth branch” of government, private intelligence communities that have the goal of defeating “violent extremists” according to the report.

The organizations, 263 of which have been created or reorganized in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, receive billions of dollars from the government, and do not adhere to the usual standards of personal privacy, the report said.

Critics of the security measures find flaws, not only in the billions used to fund the operation, but the possibility of profiling innocent individuals.

“The FBI is building a database with the names and certain personal information, such as employment history, of thousands of US citizens and residents whom a local police officer or a fellow citizen believed to be acting suspiciously,” the latest report said.

This database is updated by “experts” who receive their expert status from themselves, not previous studies in institutions. They train FBI members in the understanding Islam, Muslims, and American Muslims, said the report.

“These organizations often use self-described specialists to provide training for FBI and analysts who are supposedly specialists on Islam. People who have no PhD , and who have animosity towards Islam,” said Sally Howell, PhD, a professor of history and Arab American Studies at the University of Michigan-Dearborn told reporters. “It’s distressing to see these people are empowered in America.”

Muslim activists say the problem is that when suspicious activity is reported, often by neighbors or co-workers for reasons that are not always clear, the accused individual is not informed, and the file remains open for five years. This could lead to profiling and abuse.

CAIR’s Hooper said that as a result of the rising Islamophobia in the US, Muslims and Islamic organizations are worried that US citizens are supporting and buying propaganda of the media, internet hate sites, politicians and organizations that all Muslims are dangerous.

“We are obviously concerned when law enforcement authorities around the country are being trained almost on a daily basis by people who have a hate filled anti-Muslim agenda. That’s been proven time and time again. You have a guy named Robert Spencer, the head of one of the most vicious anti-Muslim hate groups in the country, and a co-head of this group called Stop the Islamization of America, training FBI agents in Virginia. It’s absolutely unbelievable. You have people like Walid Shoebat, a born-again Christian who was a former Muslim, who said Islam is of the devil and he’s training these people. We are seeing this more and more. So it’s inevitable that the law enforcement, policies and practices will eventually reflect this anti-Muslim hatred,” said Hooper.

He continued saying that there is a very vocal anti-Muslim minority promoting the hatred of Islam and marginalization of American Muslims.

“They have an agenda, they are well coordinated, they are well financed, and they are relentless in their promotion of hate filled views. You’ve seen the group Stop the Islamization of America, you’ve got ACT for America, you’ve got any number of other local groups and activists who are mutually supportive and promoting this hate filled agenda.”

CAIR’s Hooper continued saying that there is an ‘Islamophobia machine’ of Islamophobes who are a “mutually supportive growing group of commentators, organizations, media outlets, Internet hate sites that all actively promote the false notion that American Muslims somehow want to overthrow the constitution and take over the country.

“It would be laughable in other circumstances that you would say a tiny little minority in a nation of 300 and some million is somehow going to overthrow the country, but it’s a symptom of the times we live in that people are actually entertaining this bizarre notion. So they are promoting this relentlessly.”

He insisted that these groups do not represent the majority of Americans. “The majority of Americans don’t hate Islam and Muslims. But you have a sizeable minority, and a very vocal minority pushing these kinds of bigoted views,” said CAIR’s Hooper.

           — Hat tip: Freyja’s Cats [Return to headlines]



Joshua Muravchik: Is Obama’s Muslim Outreach Working?

For two years, President Obama has labored to improve America’s standing in the eyes of the Muslim world. He hasn’t gotten anywhere with the governments of Iran, Syria, the Palestinian Authority or perhaps any other Muslim country. But with their publics, Mr. Obama is much better liked than his predecessor, which has yielded more favorable ratings for the U.S. in general.

This is worth noting — even though the people choose their government in very few Muslim-majority states — because America’s popularity affects public approval of terrorism. Even where people cannot vote, the amount of terrorism will be influenced by whether terrorists are seen as heroes or villains.

A poll out this month from the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project sheds interesting light on attitudes toward terrorism in several Muslim countries. The results are mildly encouraging for America — but not necessarily for Mr. Obama and his outreach efforts.

The survey gauges attitudes toward three crucial terrorism-related subjects: al Qaeda, Osama bin Laden and suicide bombings. The good news is that the proportion of pro-terror opinion continues to decline. The bad news is that the minority holding such views remains considerable.

[…]

A ground-breaking Gallup poll conducted in 2001 and 2002 revealed that hostility toward the U.S. was rife in the Muslim world even before the U.S. invasion of Iraq. This, I believe, reflected U.S. support for Israel and for unpopular Muslim rulers, as well as resentment that America had eclipsed the Islamic world in power and achievement, contradicting the Quran’s promise that Muslims will be supreme.

Perhaps for a brief moment after 9/11, many Muslims hoped that bin Laden had found the way to fight back against the infidels. In that case, Mr. Bush’s fierce response may have quashed such hope and restored some realism.

Of course it may be that the critical factor in changing attitudes has not been U.S. policies but the actions of the terrorists themselves — who regularly turn their bombs against Muslims in Iraq, Jordan, Pakistan and elsewhere.

The data are too slender to sustain the claim that Mr. Bush’s policies succeeded in turning much of the Muslim world against terrorism. But they are substantial enough to inform our understanding that Mr. Obama’s approach has achieved little in this regard.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Breaking: Five Arrested in Denmark/Sweden, Planned to Attack Mohammed Cartoons Newspaper in the Next Few Days

Five people were arrested on suspicion of planning a terror attack in Copenhagen: Four in Denmark and one in Sweden.

According to a press release by the Dansh security service PET, the suspects had been watched for a long time, and the investigation involved close cooperation with the Swedish security police. Some of the suspects were arrested in the Copenhagen suburbs of Herlev and Greve.

Three of the men reside in Sweden and came to Denmark tonight. The fourth lives in Denmark. They are a Tunisian citizen (44), a Lebanese born Swedish citizen (29), a Swedish citizen of unknown origin (30) and an Iraqi asylum seeker (26).

Swedish authorities meanwhile arrested a 37 year old Swedish citizen of Tunisian origin in Stockholm…

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Denmark: 5 Arrested in Plot to Attack Prophet Cartoon Paper

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Police in Denmark and Sweden halted an imminent terrorist attack Wednesday by arresting five men who planned to shoot as many people as possible in a building housing the newsroom of a paper that published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, officials said.

Denmark’s intelligence service said that after months of surveillance it arrested four men in two raids in suburbs of the capital, Copenhagen, and seized a submachine gun, a silencer and ammunition. Swedish police said they arrested a 37-year-old Swedish citizen of Tunisian origin living in Stockholm.

“An imminent terror attack has been foiled,” said Jakob Scharf, head of the Danish Security and Intelligence Service, or PET. He described some the suspects as “militant Islamists with relations to international terror networks” and said that more arrests were possible.

PET said it seized a 44-year-old Tunisian, a 29-year-old Lebanese-born man and a 30-year-old who were living in Sweden and had entered Denmark late Tuesday or early Wednesday. The fourth person detained was a 26-year-old Iraqi asylum-seeker living in Copenhagen.

The Danish intelligence service said the group had been planning to enter the building where the Jyllands-Posten daily has its Copenhagen newsdesk and “to kill as many of the people present as possible.” The four men face preliminary charges of attempting to carry out an act of terrorism. They will face a custody hearing Thursday.

“I am shocked that a group of people have concrete plans to commit a serious terrorist attack in this country,” Danish Prime Minister Loekke Rasmussen told reporters. “I want to stress that regardless of today’s event it remains my conviction that terrorism must not lead us to change our open society and our values, especially democracy and free speech.”

Danish and Swedish police, who appeared at a joint new conference with Loekke Rasmussen in Copenhagen, said they had been tailing the suspects for several months.

Anders Danielsson, the head of Sweden’s security police, said they had followed a car rented by the suspects from Stockholm to the Danish border.

“We knew that there were weapons in the car,” he said.

Zubair Butt Hussain, a spokesman for the Muslim Council of Denmark, called the plan “extremely worrying.”

The organization “absolutely condemns any act of terrorism regardless of the motives and motivations that may lie behind,” Hussain said.

There have been at least four plots to attack Jyllands-Posten or Kurt Westergaard, the artist who drew the most contentious of 12 cartoons, which were published by the daily in 2005 as a challenge to perceived self-censorship.

“The foiled plot is a direct attack on democracy and freedom of press,” Westergaard told the German tabloid Bild. “We may not and won’t let anyone forbid us to criticize radical Islamism. We may not be intimidated when it comes to our values.”

In January, a Somali man broke into Westergaard’s home wielding an ax and a knife but the artist escaped unharmed by locking himself in a safe-room in the house. In 2008, two Tunisians with Danish residence permits were arrested for plotting to kill him.

In September, a man was wounded when a letter bomb he was preparing exploded in a Copenhagen hotel. Police said it was intended for the daily, which also has been targeted in a number of thwarted terror plots in Norway and the United States.

U.S. citizen Tahawwur Rana faces trial in Chicago in February in connection with the 2008 terrorist attacks in the Indian city of Mumbai and a planned attack on the Jyllands-Posten.

The cartoons also provoked massive and violent protests in 2006 in Muslim countries where demonstrators considered the drawings as having profoundly insulted Islam. Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the prophet, even favorable, for fear it could lead to idolatry.

In 2008, the Danish Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, was targeted by a car bomb that killed six people outside the mission.

The attacks and threats have caused concern and unprecedented security measures in Denmark, a country that prides itself on personal freedom and openness.

The JPPOL media group building, which includes Jyllands-Posten, is protected by metal fences and guards at all entrances. Mail is scanned and newspaper staff need identity cards to enter the buildings and the various floors.

Lars Munch, JPPOL chief executive, said his workers were worried.

“It is appalling for our group, for our employees and their families to see their workplace threatened,” Munch said.

Scharf said “there was no need to raise the terror threat alert level” in Denmark, although Danish Justice Minister Lars Barfoed described the plot as “terrifying.”

“The group’s plan to kill as many as possible is very frightening and is probably the most serious terror attempt in Denmark,” Barfoed said.

The head of Sweden’s security police, Anders Danielsson, said that “it has been possible to avert a serious terror crime in Denmark through efficient and close cooperation between PET and the (Swedish) security police.”

Danielsson said the suspects who are residents in Sweden also are being investigated for suspected terror crimes in that country.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Newspaper Massacre Terror Plot is Foiled

Five Islamic extremists have been caught as they planned to massacre staff at the Danish newspaper that printed cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

Denmark’s intelligence service held four men in two raids in suburbs of the capital and seized an automatic weapon, a silencer and ammunition.

Swedish police said they arrested a 37-year-old Swede of Tunisian origin living in Stockholm.

“An imminent terror attack has been foiled,” said Jakob Scharf, head of the Danish Security and Intelligence Service, known as PET. He described some the suspects as “militant Islamists with relations to international terror networks” and said that more arrests were possible.

PET said it seized a 44-year-old Tunisian, a 29-year-old Lebanese-born man and a 30-year-old who were living in Sweden and had entered Denmark late Tuesday or early Wednesday. The fourth person detained was a 26-year-old Iraqi asylum-seeker living in Copenhagen.

The Danish intelligence service said the group had been planning to enter the newspaper office “to kill as many of the people present as possible.”

The four men face preliminary charges of attempting to carry out an act of terrorism. They will face a custody hearing tomorrow.

Zubair Butt Hussain, a spokesman for the Muslim Council of Denmark, called the plan “extremely worrying.”

The organisation “absolutely condemns any act of terrorism regardless of the motives and motivations that may lie behind,” he said.

There have been at least four plots to attack against Jyllands-Posten or Kurt Westergaard, the artist who drew the most contentious of 12 cartoons, which were published by the daily in 2005 as a challenge to perceived self-censorship.

“The foiled plot is a direct attack on democracy and freedom of press,” Mr Westergaard said. “We may not and won’t let anyone forbid us to criticise radical Islamism. We may not be intimidated when it comes to our values.”

The men, arrested in a security service operation, intended to shoot as many people as possible at the Jyllands-Posten daily in Copenhagen .

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Five Arrested for Terror Plot in Denmark

Five people have been arrested in Denmark and Sweden on suspicion of preparing an “imminent” terror attack on the Copenhagen offices of the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten.

The Danish security service, PET, said four men were arrested in Denmark, while the fifth was arrested by authorities in Stockholm, Sweden.

“These arrests made it possible to prevent an imminent terror attack, in which several of the suspects can be labeled militant Islamists with links to international terror networks,” Jakob Scharf, General Director of PET, said in a statement.

According to PET’s information, the suspects were “planning to try to force their way into Jyllands-Posten/Politikens building in Copenhagen and kill as many as possible of the people present there,” he said. The security service said a machine gun with live ammunition was seized in connection with the arrests, in addition to plastic strips that can be used as handcuffs.

The publication by Jyllands-Posten in September 2005 of cartoons depicting Prophet Muhammad sparked protests by Muslim communities around the world, with demonstrators setting fire to Scandinavian embassies abroad. Under Islamic tradition, images of the Prophet are banned.

Magnus Ranstorp, research director at the Center for Asymmetric Threat Studies at the Swedish National Defence College, said although this was the fourth attempt against targets related to Jyllands-Posten in one year, this was “without question the most serious.”

Ranstorp said in an interview with Dow Jones Newswires that the Jyllands-Posten office in Copenhagen, which it shares with the Politiken newspaper, is the easiest target for potential terrorists.

“They will never be able to penetrate the main Jyllands-Posten office in Viby, but the Copenhagen office only has one security guard. If you can break down two glass doors, you’re inside,” Ranstorp said.

Jyllands-Posten Chief Executive Lars Munch told the newspaper’s website he was shocked at the news of the foiled attempt.

“It is shocking for our employees and their families to once again see their place of work threatened,” Jyllandsposten Chief Executive Lars Munch told the paper’s website.

“We already have an elevated level of security and we are in contact with the PET,” he said, adding that the newspaper has provided psychological assistance for employees who may need it.

PET said the arrests were preceded by an extensive investigation conducted in close cooperation with the Swedish Security Service, Sapo.

Three of the four men arrested in Denmark were residents of Sweden, two of whom are Swedish nationals and one a citizen of Tunisia. They came to Denmark on the night between Dec. 28 and 29, according to PET. The man living in Denmark is a 26-year old Iraqi asylum applicant, while the man arrested in Stockholm is a 37-year old Swedish national of Tunisian origin.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Five Arrested in Danish Terror Plot

The suspects had planned to enter a Copenhagen office block housing several newspapers including offices of the daily Jyllands-Posten to “kill as many as possible of those around”, police said. A machine gun with a silencer, ammunition and plastic strips that could be used as handcuffs were seized.

“The detainees were preparing a terror attack against a newspaper, which according to the PET’s information was Jyllands-Posten,” Denmark’s PET security police said in a statement. “The attack was due to be carried out in the coming days.”

Jyllands-Posten was the newspaper that first published the cartoons, provoking protests against Danish and European interests in the Middle East, Africa and Asia in which at least 50 people died. Danish Justice Minister Lars Barfoed said those detained had a “militant Islamic background” and called the plan the most serious such attempt in Denmark so far.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Germany: Have Berlin Mosques Become a Target?

Several Muslim centers in Berlin have been the target of arson attacks in recent months. Police have made little progress in their investigation, but many suspect that the series of incidents has its roots in the raw rhetoric surrounding Germany’s integration debate.

The list isn’t long. In early December, a petrol bomb exploded with a loud bang against the façade of the Iranian cultural center in the Berlin district of Tempelhof, sending flames licking up the front of the building. Before that it was the Al-Nur Mosque in the Neukölln neighborhood, where the majority of Berlin’s Muslim population lives. Berlin’s Sehitlik Mosque, also in Neukölln, has been attacked four times since late summer.

Yet even if there have been no injuries in the attacks to date, city officials are concerned. Berlin’s State Criminal Police Office has established a special task force to look into a perplexing series of petrol bomb attacks that has targeted Muslim facilities in the German capital for months.. Results, however, have so far been scant. Berlin police spokesman Klaus Schubert declined to comment on the specifics of the investigation, but told SPIEGEL ONLINE “there are no indications that the attacks were intended to cause actual harm to people.”

Others, however, aren’t as sanguine. The year 2010 in Germany was one which saw an intense debate about the difficulties of integrating the country’s Muslim minority — a discourse which many observers thought crossed the line into racial and religious profiling.

Indeed, the interior minister of the city-state of Berlin, Ehrhart Körting, said recently that there may in fact be a connection between the attacks and the immigration debate. The discussion, he told the German news agency DAPD, may have established a climate “which could have encouraged right-wing extremists or Islamophobes to perpetrate such crimes.” That, he continued, “should be clear to all those responsible for creating this climate.”

The Hallmarks of a ‘Hate Crime’

Indeed, following the most recent attack on the Sehitlik Mosque on November 19, police said it bore the hallmarks of a “hate crime.”

Berlin’s Muslim population has sought to maintain its composure. A spokesman for the Iranian cultural center told SPIEGEL ONLINE that they had not increased security and that the attack “has not made a difference to those visiting the center. They do not feel nervous or unsafe.”

This upbeat attitude was reiterated by Yavuz Selim Akgül, chairman of the Sehitlik mosque. “Considering one mosque after another is being set alight,” he told SPIEGEL ONLINE, “one could imagine the general atmosphere here would be less than positive. But that’s not the case: calm prevails and attendance has not decreased.”

Security, though, is tight. Akgül’s mosque is under 24-hour guard and additional surveillance cameras are being installed. While police have removed the police guard placed in front of the mosque in the wake of the attack, a spokesman said they are closely monitoring the situation.

And it is a situation that may have to be monitored for some time. In addition to the rancorous immigration debate, Berlin has been on a high terror alert since mid-November, when German Interior Minister, Thomas de Maizière, said that the German government had “concrete indications” that Islamists were planning an attack and Germany could be a target. Heavily armed police have been patrolling Berlin streets ever since.

‘Erosion of Solidarity’

Some have criticized the terror warnings for being detrimental to the welfare of the German capital’s Muslim population. In late November, Aiman Mazyek, chairman of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, told the German press agency DPA that “not a week goes by without an attack on a mosque or a Muslim citizen. This terror hysteria exacerbates the situation and leads to an erosion of solidarity with Muslims.”

Indeed, Ehrhart Körting himself has been blasted for using the kind of rhetoric he recently condemned. In the wake of late November’s terror warnings, he told Berliners in a radio interview: “ If you suddenly see three somewhat strange-looking men who are new to your neighborhood, who hide their faces and who only speak Arabic, you should report them to the authorities.”

But it is Germany’s ongoing integration debate which has particularly inflamed tempers on both sides. It is a discussion which the country has been wrestling with for years, but a book released in August by former Berlin politician Thilo Sarrazin poured fuel on the fire.

Sarrazin, who was fired from his position on the board of the German Central Bank as a result of the book, claimed that Muslim immigrants would soon outnumber the country’s ethnic German population because of their higher birth rates. He also suggested that because immigrant children are less successful in school, immigration is making the country less intelligent. His theories found tacit agreement from many in Germany, but also ignited widespread disgust…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Germany: Ramsauer Mans Ramparts Against English

Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer is declaring war on English words creeping into everyday German usage and urging fellow politicians to follow his lead.

Ramsauer told daily Tagesspiegel on Wednesday that the growing number of Anglicisms in daily use in Germany had the effect of excluding a large chunk of the population.

The minister, who belongs to the Christian Social Union — the Bavarian sister party to Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats — described his year-long efforts to rid the German language of Anglicisms as a “success.”

Under Ramsauer’s direction, terms such as “ticket,” “laptop,” and “flipchart” have been phased out of use in the Transport Ministry and replaced with Fahrscheinen, Klapprechnern, and Tafelschreibblock.

He is now calling on cabinet colleagues to follow his example. His campaign so far had generated “thousands of letters and phone calls” offering “100 percent support.”

That had made him realise that more needed to be done.

“Listen to what people are saying. And now I know what their needs, worries and problems are. What I’ve done, really, is to address them.”

Ramsauer said he had also been persuaded by the moves by rail operator Deutsche Bahn to remove English terms from usage. Deutsche Bahn boss Rüdiger Grube was a “pragmatic and reliable man who in each respect has straightened things out in his company — including in this one.”

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



Greece: Anarchists Call for ‘Global Uprising’

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, DECEMBER 27 — The “large flames of social uprising” fanned by the rage of workers and students in Greece, France and Italy is a foretaste of “the next large-scale global uprising” against a “new form of fascism” of the powers-that-be. These were the words of the imprisoned leaders of the main Greek anarchist-insurrectionary group, Revolutionary Struggle (EA), saying that in this climate of conflict it is necessary to choose “bankruptcy” over the “austerity” imposed by the EU and the IMF as a tool for national exploitation and liquidation of the latest social victories. This analysis of events by the EA is contained in a letter from jail by Maziotis, Pola Roupa and Costas Gournas, self-declared leaders of the armed group responsible for numerous attacks including the launch of a missile against the US embassy in 2007. In the letter the leaders of the EA — which is believed to have links with the Conspiracy of Cells of Fire, which in November claimed responsibility for letter bombs targeting embassies and international leaders — say that after the US crisis “in one European city after another millions of people went into the streets to oppose the harsh neo-liberal offensive”. To move forward the fight against pension and education reform, write the three, demonstrations have been organised everywhere, and “in Greece, Italy, Spain and Ireland there turned into uprisings”, each of which “ feeding the revolt of the other while awaiting a large-scale European-wide social fire”. It is a ‘fire’ which, under the slogan “us or them”, meaning us or “the fascists who govern and control the wealth of society”, write the EA leaders, will lead — beginning from Greece — to the “next worldwide large-scale uprising”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Ireland: More Than 16,000 Motorists on Sixth Provisional Licence

A RECORD 16,200 learner drivers have renewed their provisional licence at least six times after failing or refusing to sit their driving test.

The shocking figures obtained by the Irish Independent newspaper show that attempts by Transport Minister Noel Dempsey to clamp down on long-term provisional licence holders have failed, as they continue to flout the law and drive without a qualified driver.

The figures reveal a 184-fold increase since 2003 in the number of learner drivers renewing their provisional licence six or more times.

In 2003, just 79 drivers nationwide renewed their licence six times and nine were on their seventh licence.

But despite tens of millions being spent on major road reforms and education programmes, there are now 16,197 learner drivers who are on their sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth or even 10th provisional licence.

The figures show:

  • In 2003, just 88 drivers were on their sixth or seventh licence. None had renewed it eight times or more.
  • In 2006, 12,053 were on their sixth licence, and six drivers were on their ninth.
  • Today, 1,840 are on their ninth licence.
  • Almost 1,000 drivers today have renewed their licence 10 or more times.

New figures also show that the number passing their test has fallen, with a pass rate of less than 50pc. More than half of all drivers who sat their driving test last year failed. While 60,726 passed, a further 65,090 failed, significantly down from the peak of 95,569 passing in 2001.

Risk

This gave a national pass rate of 48.3pc, a drop of more than 5pc on the 2006 rate of 53.6pc.

The figures also show that the pass rate in each centre continues to vary wildly, with those sitting the test in Sligo twice as likely to pass as those in Rathgar, Dublin. A total of 67pc passed their test last year in Sligo compared to 30pc in Rathgar.

Opposition TDs and traffic experts last night warned that provisional licence holders — who are currently under no obligation to go for even a single driving lesson — are putting the lives of others at risk.

They also warned that road safety policy is “showing regression rather than progress”.

Although the overall number on a provisional licence has fallen by almost 100,000 in the past seven years, the figures highlight a disturbing trend of drivers who are either refusing to sit their test — or are repeatedly failing it.

The problem has also been exacerbated by a loophole which has been in our system for decades. It means those with a provisional driving licence only need apply to do their test in order to renew their licence — but they do not need to sit it.

Fines

“The great bulk of drivers are doing the things they should do, like sitting their test shortly after getting their first licence,” said Conor Faughnan, public affairs manager with AA Roadwatch.

“But there’s obviously a cohort out there who are going without any lessons or tests. And it’s a growing number.”

A provisional licence must be renewed every two years. If the applicant can only show evidence of having applied for the test, they are given a one-year licence. If they show they sat the test — and failed — they get a two-year licence.

This means some people on the road have been driving for more than 20 years without passing their test.

Last year just 945 fines were issued for driving unaccompanied or without L-plates. Only 11 drivers were disqualified, while a handful of others were given a probation order or ordered to contribute to the poor box.

Labour transport spokesman Joe Costello said enforcement is the only solution to drivers repeatedly renewing their licence.

“Without legislation followed by enforcement it’s just not going to be effective,” he said.

“Gardai don’t seem to be taking it seriously.

A new measure introduced on December 6 requires all first-time applicants for a motorbike licence to undergo 16 hours of lessons. Twelve hours of mandatory lessons will apply to all new car licence applicants from April 4, 2011.

However the compulsory lessons will only apply to those applying for a licence for the first time and not those who have renewed multiple times.

Sources said compulsory lessons for would “cause a stampede”.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Italy: Champagne Imports Slide in 10 Yrs, -20%

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 20 — “Since the year 2000 French champagne imports to Italy have dropped by 20% and have been replaced by Italian sparking wine, which is used for 98% of toasting at parties,” according to a Coldiretti (national farmers association) analysis for Christmas 2010 on foreign trade in the first nine months of the year.

“The success of Italian sparkling wine over French champagne has increased at the national as well as at the international one, with Italy the top producer of sparkling wine in 2010 with a total of 380 bottles, compared with the 370 from France.” “The recovery in demand for Italian sparkling wine abroad is a good sign for new and significant growth opportunities overall for Italian wine which,” estimated Coldiretti, “could even reach 3.5 billion euros in turnover on foreign markets, where it is the top agro-food export, in 2010.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



‘Kill as Many as Possible’: Five Arrested for Planning Attack on Danish Newspaper Which Published ‘Prophet’ Cartoons

Five people suspected of planning an attack on the Danish newspaper that outraged Muslims around the world with cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad have been arrested.

Denmark’s PET security police said the suspects had planned to enter a Copenhagen office block housing several newspapers including offices of the daily Jyllands-Posten to ‘kill as many as possible of those around’.

‘On the basis of the investigation, it is the PET’s assessment that the detainees were preparing a terror attack against a newspaper, which according to the PET’s information was Jyllands-Posten,’ it said.

‘It is likewise the PET’s view that the attack was due to be carried out in the coming days.’

Jyllands-Posten was the newspaper that first published the cartoons in 2005, provoking protests against Danish and European interests in the Middle East, Africa and Asia in which at least 50 people died.

The Danish justice minister said those detained had a ‘militant Islamic background’ and called the plan the most serious such attempt in Denmark so far.

Three of the detainees were Swedish citizens, the Swedish security police force SAPO said in a statement. Four were arrested in Denmark and one in Sweden.

Police uncovered a plot last year to attack Jyllands-Posten, and in January the creator of the most controversial cartoon escaped an axe attack by a man with al Qaeda links.

Last September, a man who was later found to have a map with the address of Jyllands-Posten’s headquarters in the city of Aarhus set off a small explosion in a Copenhagen hotel.

SAPO said the suspects were not linked to an attempted suicide bombing in Stockholm two weeks ago, when a man blew himself up he was preparing to set off bombs, possibly at a train station or a department store, according to police.

In that case an email — thought to have come from the bomber — was sent just before the attack, protesting against a Swedish artist who also had drawn cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad, as well as Sweden’s military presence in Afghanistan.

SAPO said police were investigating whether any of the latest suspects was preparing attacks in Sweden.

Kurt Westergaard, the cartoonist responsible for the caricatures, was attacked in his home by an axe-wielding intruder.

Police said the 28-year-old man, who allegedly has links to Al Qaeda, was shot after he broke in.

Mr Westergaard, 74, whose five-year-old granddaughter was in the house at the time, locked himself in a specially designed safe room and used an emergency alarm.

He is now living under constant police protection.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Swedes Arrested Over ‘Muhammad Cartoon Plot’

Scandinavian intelligence chiefs said they had foiled a plot Wednesday to massacre staff at a Danish newspaper which published caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad and had arrested five suspects.

The head of Denmark’s PET intelligence service said that his officers had detained four men while a spokeswoman for Swedish intelligence agency Säpo said a fifth man had been arrested in Stockholm in connection with the same plot against the Copenhagen-based Jyllands-Posten daily.

Several of the suspects could be described “as militant Islamists with connections to international terror networks,” PET supremo Jakob Scharf said in a statement.

“These arrests have successfully stopped an imminent terror attack, where several of the suspects … were going to force their way into the (building which houses the Jyllands-Posten) in Copenhagen and kill as many people as possible,” he said.

PET said the four men arrested in Denmark were a 44-year-old Tunisian, a 29-year-old Swede born in Lebanon, a 30-year-old Swede and a 26-year-old Iraqi asylum seeker. The suspect arrested in Stockholm was a 37-year-old Swede of Tunisian background, PET added.

The first three men all lived in Sweden and travelled to Denmark overnight to Wednesday.

According to Jyllands-Posten’s online edition, the group had travelled to Denmark in a car rented in the Stockholm suburb of Kista.

“The arrests underscore the serious terror threat against Denmark and especially against institutions and people connected to the cartoon case,” Scharf added.

Jyllands-Posten published a dozen cartoons in 2005 of the Prophet Muhammad that triggered violent and sometimes deadly protests around the world.

In January, a Somali man broke into the home of one of the cartoonists and allegedly threatened to kill him with an axe and a knife.

In September, a suspect detained in Norway confessed that he was planning an attack against Jyllands-Posten. In another case the same month, a Chechnya-born man was arrested in Copenhagen for preparing to send a letter bomb to the paper.

An Islamist militant who blew himself up in downtown Stockholm on December 11th sent an email ahead of his suicide mission saying he was avenging Swedes for their “support of the pig Lars Vilks,” referring to a Swedish cartoonist who drew an image of the Prophet Muhammad with the body of a dog.

Säpo spokeswoman Katarina Sevcik said that the group arrested on Wednesday “have up to now no known connection to the events of December 11th”, and had not given Sweden cause to amend the level of terror threat.

The PET said last month that had “renewed indications that terrorist groups abroad are looking to send terrorists to Denmark to commit terrorist attacks.”

“Denmark and Danish interests are a priority terrorist targets,” the agency said at the time.

The agency had left the level of terror threat unchanged, but stressed “there is still a serious terror threat against Denmark.”

           — Hat tip: Freedom Fighter [Return to headlines]



The English Defense League

by Brian of London

The EDL has attracted attention in Israel and the UK. We leave the reader to judge for himself.

The English Defence League (EDL) has attracted some attention in Israel because of the incongruity of non-Jews waving Israeli flags at demonstrations dubbed “far right” by the press and the Israeli Embassy in London’s virtually unprecedented step of condemning a pro-Israel local group in another country. The irony is compounded by the fact that this happened immediately after the EDL held a large pro-Israel rally outside the embassy.

This distancing was presumably motivated by the attacks on the EDL in much of the British media and fear that failure to denounce the group will increase anti-Israel feelings in the United Kingdom, already at an all-time high. In fact, however, the people attacking the EDL are already Israel’s enemies while this group is one of its few friends nowadays. Moreover, the accusations of the EDL being a racist or fascist group are simply not true.

Indeed, the slander against the EDL is another example of how special treatment for Islam and radical Islamists compared to the repression of forces criticizing them so often prevails in Britain today. Here’s a little case study of how things work.

On December 11 the EDL held a demonstration in Peterborough. The EDL proclaims itself as “dedicated to peacefully protesting against radical Islam” and on that December day they largely fulfilled this role. Around 2,000 people marched through the town and listened to speeches. A handful of counter-demonstrators claiming the EDL are “fascists and racists” were kept at bay by the police. The day passed with fewer arrests than a typical Saturday night in any English town.

But not according to the police and the Crown Prosecution Service. Ten days later, an EDL leader was arrested and charged under Section 4b of the Public Order Act with “Racial Aggravation” in relation to a speech he gave in Peterborough…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



UK: Police to Review Security of Boris Johnson and Other Figures After Alleged Al-Qaeda Assassination Plot

POLICE are to review security around prominent figures amid fears al-Qaeda is plotting a wave of assassinations.

Counter-terrorism detectives have spoken to London mayor Boris Johnson and a string of religious leaders — including the Dean and Chapter of St Paul’s Cathedral — whose names were found on an alleged hitlist.

The details, which included addresses and postcodes, were found during raids which led to nine Muslim men being charged with plotting to bomb the London Eye, the Stock Exchange and Big Ben. Senior officers are alarmed that this represents a major shift in tactics by al-Qaeda, which had previously focused on “mass casualty” attacks.

The men arrested in Stoke, Cardiff and London are the first group since the IRA to be accused of targeting particular individuals and religious buildings.

Home Office officials are now preparing a major risk assessment on dozens of public figures who have previously been considered relatively safe. One counter-terrorism source said: “Every terrorism campaign in history has changed over time as those involved try to find new holes in the dam.

“We’re constantly trying to push back the water but it can spring out from unexpected directions. One of the problems with al-Qaeda is there is no rulebook.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Demand New Powers to Stop and Search Terror Suspects

Police have asked the government for a new counter-terrorism power to stop and search people without having to suspect them of involvement in crime, the Guardian has learned.

Senior officers have told the government the new law is needed to better protect the public against attempted attacks on large numbers of people, and are hopeful they can win ministers’ backing.

A previous law allowing counter-terrorism stops without suspicion, section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000, was scrapped this year by the home secretary, Theresa May, after European judges struck it down for breaching human rights.

But police, including the Metropolitan force, which leads the UK fight against terrorism, say they need a boost to their counter-terrorism powers, which they worry are now too weak.

They have asked for a law which would be much more limited than section 44. It would be restricted to a specific period of time and to a limited geographic area or a specific place or event.

The new stop and search power would need primary legislation to become law and it is believed it could be introduced within months. Police believe it will be needed to protect events such as the 2012 Olympics in London, state occasions such as trooping the colour, and major summits such as the G20 when they are held in the UK.

Stop and search powers are controversial because ethnic minority people have been targeted more than white people, triggering claims that some officers are using them in a discriminatory way.

A source with knowledge of the discussions told the Guardian: “The key thing is to get this power without its use being random. You can’t have a random power because of the judgment, but some new power is needed. The power would need to be signed off by a senior officer, maybe even a chief constable, and the home secretary. It could cover an event of high importance such as the Olympics. It would be for a limited time and in a limited geographical place, and at a time when the threat level is severe.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Peddler of Race Hate is Accused of Swindling Benefits

A notorious Muslim fanatic has been accused of fiddling the benefits system by working while claiming jobseekers’ allowance.

Abdul Rehman Saleem, known as Abu Yahya, is working on a market stall at the same time as collecting the £60 a week benefit, a friend of his estranged wife claimed.

The 35-year-old was freed from prison last year after being convicted of inciting racial hatred during protests in London against cartoon depictions of the prophet Mohammed.

Yahya is thought to have been claiming benefits while working on clothing stalls in both Stratford, East London, and another outlet at London’s New Covent Garden Market in Vauxhall.

At the same he time, he has failed to provide any maintenance for his five children with his former wife Kay.

She is the younger sister of actress Laila Rouass who has starred in Footballers’ Wives, Spooks and last year’s series of Strictly Come Dancing.

When the Daily Mail approached Kay, she refused to discuss her ex-husband or the provision he makes for their children.

But a family friend said: ‘He works illegally, claims benefits and sees virtually nothing of his children.

‘He likes to say “Allah provides” — but in reality it is the state he seems to despise so much that makes the provisions for him. The Child Support Agency claim there is nothing they can do to make him pay for his children because he is in receipt of jobseekers’ allowance.’

Yahya first came to public prominence in February 2006 when he and other thugs hijacked afternoon prayers at the Regent’s Park Mosque in north London.

They chanted ‘UK you will pay — Bin Laden is on his way’ and ‘UK, USA, 7/7 on its way’.

After burning the Union Flag, a group of 300 protesters then joined a march on the Danish Embassy in London to campaign against cartoons which had satirised the prophet Mohammed.

Yahya was one of four men who appeared in court a year later and was convicted of inciting racial hatred.

He was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment, but served little more than two years and was released in August 2009.

He also made headlines earlier this year when he carried out a poisonous rant both inside and outside the Old Bailey. Joined by Mohammed Shamsuddin, he protested at the court as 21-year-old radicalised King’s College London student Roshonara Choudhry was sentenced to life for trying to kill MP Stephen Timms in a knife attack.

Wearing Islamic robes and with their faces twisted in hate, they hurled abuse at a terrified female juror in the case who was wearing a Muslim headscarf as they shouted: ‘Shame on you, sister’.

Outside the court the pair waved banners, saying: ‘Islam will dominate the world’ and ‘British soldiers must die!’

Yahya, who is still intent on Muslims fighting a holy war, splits his time between a council-maintained flat in Bow and his mother’s home in Ilford, both in East London.

Asked last night by the Daily Mail what benefits he currently receives, Yahya would only say: ‘My circumstances have recently changed and I now do not currently receive full jobseekers’ allowance at the moment. But I am not prepared to tell you what assistance I receive from the state in regards of my housing or living costs.

‘That is something I will just not talk about — or my position with the Child Support Agency regarding making any provision for my five children.’

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



UK: Tussles at the Tills During Tesco Boycott

Shoppers scuffled at a supermarket checkout after anti-Israel protesters loaded a trolley full of products and refused to pay for them. Young demonstrators, including children, from the Muslim Public Affairs Committee (MPAC), filmed themselves choosing Israeli products at Tescos in Barkingside, Essex.

They are seen filling the trolley with dozens of packets of chicken soup powder, melons, pickled cucumbers and herbs. One girl complains that a packet of Israeli Medjool dates are “kosher” and complains there is no alternative.

A graphic states: “Every penny spent towards these products will eventually fund these”, before cutting to an image of a line of tanks. When they reach the checkout the products are scanned in and the group puts them in bags.

But when the checkout assistant asks them to pay, they say: “We do not buy products from Israel. Every time you do, a Palestinian suffers.” The assistant replies: “It’s nothing to do with me.” When the store manager arrives to deal with the problem, the protesters lecture her about “moral duty”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks: US Embassy Pressured Danish Paper Not to Reprint Mohammed Cartoons

Norwegian paper Aftenposten recently started going through the entire Wikileaks archive. Its recent finding (EN): the US Embassy in Copenhagen was very concerned when it heard Jyllands-Posten intended to reprint the cartoons a year after it’s first publishing:

Post´s public affairs counselor learned from a “Jyllands-Posten” journalist (strictly protect) last week that the paper was considering several options to commemorate the cartoons´ first anniversary September 30, including re-publishing the original cartoons or running new ones on the subject.

The American ambassador, James P. Cain, turned to the Danish government, who refused to interfere. So he called Jyllands-Posten directly:

With that, the Ambassador telephoned “Jyllands-Posten” editor-in-chief Carsten Juste, and asked straight out about his paper´s intentions for commemorating the anniversary. Juste told the Ambassador that he and his team had been considering re-publication, but concluded that such a move would be unwise, especially so soon after the controversy caused by the Pope´s Regensburg remarks. The Ambassador welcomed this news, noting that none of us wanted a repeat of the crisis earlier this year.

The Ambassador’s conclusion: The Danes give their newspapers too much freedom…

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia: Only 10% of Defence Industry’s Capacity Used

(ANSAmed) — SARAJEVO, DECEMBER 15 — The export of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s (BH) defence industry reached around BAM30 million (around 15 million euros) in the first ten months of 2010, and it was five times bigger than import, but another fact is that only 10% of its capacity is being used, a secretary for the defence industry group with the Chamber of Foreign Trade of BH said, reports Nezavisne Novine.

Emin Bajramovic further concerted at a roundtable discussion about the state and development directions of BH’s defence industry that doing business in this industry is complex because orders have been scarce, while working capital has been insufficient to put the entire capacity to adequate use. He believes the use of this industry’s capacity would increase with improvements in its organization. Until then, a majority of companies manufacturing weaponry will have outstanding debts and frozen bank accounts.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt Following Up Israel-Cyprus Sea Border Demarcation Deal

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 24 — Egypt is closely following up a maritime border demarcation agreement signed between Israel and Cyprus last week, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

Contacts are underway between Egypt and Cyprus on the matter, considering that Egypt and Cyprus had signed a maritime border demarcation deal, Hossam Zaki said.

The foreign ministry is also conducting technical and legal research to make sure that the Cypriot-Israeli deal does not affect Egypt”s economic zone in the Mediterranean Sea, he added.

On December 17, Israel and Cyprus signed an agreement that will allow them to press ahead in their search for energy sources in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Railways: Italferr to Study Transport in 21 Arab States

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Italy’s Italferr (part of Ferrovie dello Stato), has been awarded the Arab Network Railway Study in a temporary association with Dar Al Omran, a Jordanian engineering consultancy firm. The deal comes at the conclusion of an international tender launched by the Arab Fund. Tenders had come from ten of the world’s largest engineering companies (including Systra, Louis Berger, Hill International and Movares), a memo from Ferrovie dello Stato says.

Financed by the Arab Fund for Social and Economic Development, the Arab world’s leading investment fund, the Arab Network Railway Study focuses on the transportation systems of the area taken in by the twenty-one countries of the Arab League: spanning from North Africa and the countries of the Middle East to the Arab peninsular and the Gulf states. The project’s scope is to analyse and plan national and international construction, infrastructure and technology enhancement to produce a rail network capable of integrating the whole of the Arab world.

The project is due to commence in January 2011 and should run for twelve months. The team of specialists, consisting of experts from Italferr and Dar Al Omran, will engage in a dialogue with the main transport and planning associations of 21 countries of the Arab League, in order to draft an analysis. This discussion will allow investment programmes and studies, trans-national agreements, and current or planned technical and procedural standards to be gathered and classified. After carrying out transport, engineering, environmental and economic assessments, the team (with the support of the Arab Fund and the countries involved) will draft an analysis including an economic feasibility study and an assessment for the realisation of infrastructural and technological projects correlated among them, planning the operative phases based on the strategic importance of the works.

The project, which is politically and economically important for the entire area, requires the intermediate and final results to be shared with the main stakeholders involved. In particular, dedicated seminars and events in Tunisia, Egypt, the UAE and Kuwait will be planned. The project was presented today at a press conference in Cairo at Arab League headquarters.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Detained Journalist Questions Right to Freedom of Speech for Palestinians

An independent West Bank journalist detained for five days by Palestinian security forces after broadcasting a news item relating to frictions within the ruling Fatah party has questioned the extent to which freedom of speech is permitted by the Palestinian Authority.

George Canawati of Radio Bethlehem was held in an office at the city’s general intelligence service headquarters over the Muslim holiday of Eid last month, according to an account he has given to the Guardian. He was provided with a mattress to sleep on, and food, but was given no explanation for his continued detention beyond an initial three-hour interrogation.

Asked if he believed the detention was intended to intimidate him, Canawati responded by twisting his ear between thumb and forefinger. “I didn’t make a mistake [in my report],” he said. “I was professional to the true sense of the word. I will never take their pinch of ear into consideration.”

Despite requests by both phone and email for confirmation and comment from the Palestinian Authority (PA), there has been no response. This report is based on Canawati’s account alone.

On 15 November at around 2pm, Radio Bethlehem broadcast a short item saying that Mohamed Dahlan, a senior Fatah figure, had played a recording made on a mobile phone of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas to some members of Fatah’s central committee. According to Canawati’s report, the recording was of Abbas saying he wanted a Palestinian state regardless of whether it was inside or outside the wall — meaning the separation barrier Israel has constructed, much of it on Palestinian land.

Canawati — who has not heard the recording himself — based his report on a source within Fatah’s central committee. “I confirmed the news from a credible person and that is enough for me to publish a report,” Canawati said. The source was “someone I trust”, he added.

Tensions between Abbas and Dahlan have been widely reported over recent weeks, with Dahlan giving a series of interviews to the Arab and Palestinian media in which he criticised the Palestinian president. Abbas’s aides have accused Dahlan of trying to mount a coup. A private TV station connected to Dahlan was closed on the orders of the interior ministry.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



West Bank: OK to 13 Thousand Houses in Settlements

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 23 — Israel has resumed the construction of Jewish settlements in the West bank at an unprecedented speed since the end of the 10-month moratorium, which ended in September of this year. The country has approved projects for 13 thousand new houses, according to the Israeli pacifist movement Peace Now.

The organisation claims that the construction of 1712 new houses was already started in the past three months and that intense construction activities can be seen in at least 60 of the 130 existing settlements. The figures released by Peace Now are considered to be credible by some of the around 300 thousand settlers in the West Bank (to which around 200 thousand will be added in East Jerusalem), like David Haivri of the Regional Council (of settlements) in Samaria (in the northern part of the West Bank).

“The figures of Peace Now”, he said, “are credible and the calculation seems logic. The difference is that we see this as a positive thing while they give them a negative judgement”.

The Israeli NGO points out that the building activities do not only regard settlements near Israel, in areas that could become part of the Jewish State in the case of a now hypothetical peace agreement with the Palestinians but also in settlements that are located deep inside the West Bank.

Mark Reghev, spokesman of Premier Benyamin Netanyahu, has said that this development “will have no impact on the (future) peace borders”, which have to be agreed with the Palestinians. According to the newspaper Yedioth Aharonoth, the Palestinians have prepared a draft resolution to condemn the Israeli construction activities in the West Bank, which they want to present to the UN Security Council in February after the end of the US presidency of this council. Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said that he hopes “the resolution will be approved by the Security Council because we are not asking to condemn Israel but its settlement building activities”.

The international community considers the Jewish settlement in occupied territories to be illegal, or at least an obstacle for the efforts to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


America and the Middle East: Great Sacrifices, Small Rewards

THE Middle East holds a giant chunk of the world’s energy reserves, and also generates its biggest political headaches. Small wonder that the United States has long had an outsize interest in the place. Since September 11th 2001, and the rise of radical Islam as the sole violent challenge to an American-shaped international order, America’s focus on the region between the Nile and the Indus rivers has been obsessive. Yet all the attention would seem to have been in vain. America’s influence has dwindled everywhere with the financial crisis and the rise of emerging powers. But it seems to be withering faster in the Middle East than anywhere else.

Two decades ago, when America marshalled a daunting force to toss Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, it stood unchallenged in the region. Kings and presidents-for-life vied for American favour. Countries such as Iran that would not, or Somalia that could not, were ignored. When America summoned leaders to Madrid in 1991 to sort out the most intractable Middle Eastern mess, the Arab-Israeli struggle, some grumbled, but all fell into line.

Most of them still come when America beckons, but ten years ago things began to slip. Despite the commitment of successive American presidents, and despite near-consensus worldwide on the outlines of an agreement, Arab-Israeli peace has kept receding out of reach. The invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 vastly expanded America’s bootprint in the region. But the smoke of those Pyrrhic triumphs cleared to reveal America in trouble. The global “war on terror” declared by George Bush displaced al-Qaeda and prevented several serious attacks. But those successes drained America’s treasury, alienated its friends and emboldened its enemies. Recalcitrant, revolutionary Iran found itself magically enhanced.

America’s Middle East policy now looks thwarted at every turn. Its closest ally, Israel, which has received more than $27 billion in American military aid over the past decade, has rebuffed pleas, backed by offers of yet more aid and diplomatic support, to pause in its building of illegal Jewish settlements in occupied territory. Another Middle Eastern friend and aid recipient, Egypt, has cocked a snook at American requests to set an example of democratic reform. It rejected a call by Barack Obama to let international observers monitor a recent, garishly fraudulent election. Iraq, where America has expended so much blood and treasure, took nine months to form a shaky government that looks more to Iran’s liking than America’s. And Iran seems undiminished in its determination to pursue its nuclear ambitions, no matter how much America and its allies rattle sabres and pile on sanctions.

Even the popularity of Mr Obama, which surged among Arabs and Muslims after his inauguration, has fallen back. Shibley Telhami, of the University of Maryland who has long experience in polling regional opinion, notes two trends. Arabs used to distinguish between a dislike for American policies and a liking for Americans as people; now they tend to dismiss both. And when asked which leaders they admire, Arabs continue to cheer those who stand up to America and to its ally Israel. This year Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan tops the list, followed by Hugo Chávez, Venezuela’s yanqui-baiter-in-chief.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Religion in Turkey: Diyanet Effect

WAS it the result of an Islamist inquisition? For many the sacking last week of Ayse Sucu (pictured), the head of the women’s centre of Turkey’s state-run religious-affairs directorate (Diyanet), amounted to nothing less. With her loosely worn headscarf and progressive views, Mrs Sucu had become an emblem for Diyanet as it launched a series of initiatives to advance women’s rights in Turkey. Her dismissal prompted the resignation of all 28 women working in her centre.

Pro-secular newspapers have cast the affair as a further twist in the battle between western-minded Turks and the mildly Islamist ruling Justice and Development (AK) party. Some blame Diyanet’s new boss, Mehmet Gormez. Unlike his predecessor, Mr Gormez is said to espouse rigid views on the headscarf. And in a homily penned during the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha, he derided activists campaigning against the ritual slaughter of millions of sheep. All of this has sharpened fears that, with AK’s blessing, Mr Gormez will steer Diyanet, which is responsible for managing Turkey’s preachers and mosques, in a conservative direction.

As ever in Turkey’s mix of official secularism and popular piety, the truth is more complex. For one, Mr Gormez is the brains behind an ambitious project to reinterpret the Hadith, the most sacred text in Islam after the Koran. A collection of thousands of utterances said to have been pronounced by the Prophet Muhammad, the Hadith is the main guide for Muslims in interpreting the Koran. Mr Gormez’s goal is to weed out those unsavoury texts (on restricting women’s freedoms, for instance) that, in Mr Gormez’s words, obscure the original values of Islam. Outraged purists have accused him of “degenerating” Islam and fought to block his promotion. Sources close to Mr Gormez say that the row shows the idea that he engineered Mrs Sucu’s removal because of her views is ridiculous. He has even, they add, been known to prepare his wife’s breakfast.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The United States, Israel and the Arabs: Please, Not Again

NO WAR, no peace, is the usual state of affairs between Israel and its neighbours in the Middle East. But every time an attempt at Arab-Israeli peacemaking fails, as Barack Obama’s did shortly before Christmas, the peace becomes a little more fragile and the danger of war increases. Sadly, there is reason to believe that unless remedial action is taken, 2011 might see the most destructive such war for many years.

One much-discussed way in which war might arise stems from the apparent desire of Iran to acquire nuclear weapons at any cost, and Israel’s apparent desire to stop Iran at any cost. But fear of Iran’s nuclear programme is only one of the fuses that could detonate an explosion at any moment. Another is the frantic arms race that has been under way since the inconclusive war in 2006 between Israel and Hizbullah, Iran’s ally in Lebanon. Both sides have been intensively preparing for what each says will be a “decisive” second round.

Such a war would bear little resemblance to the previous clashes between Israel and its neighbours. For all their many horrors, the Lebanon war of 2006 and the Gaza war of 2009 were limited affairs. On the Israeli side, in particular, civilian casualties were light. Since 2006, however, Iran and Syria have provided Hizbullah with an arsenal of perhaps 50,000 missiles and rockets, many with ranges and payloads well beyond what Hizbullah had last time. This marks an extraordinary change in the balance of power. For the first time a radical non-state actor has the power to kill thousands of civilians in Israel’s cities more or less at the press of a button.

In that event, says Israel, it will strike back with double force. A war of this sort could easily draw in Syria, and perhaps Iran. For the moment, deterrence keeps the peace. But a peace maintained by deterrence alone is a frail thing. The shipment to Hizbullah of a balance-tipping new weapon, a skirmish on the Lebanese or increasingly volatile Gaza border — any number of miscalculations could ignite a conflagration.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Trouble in Kashmir: India’s Intifada

Faced with new violence from increasingly militant youths in Kashmir, can India calm tensions before it gets any worse?

[DF — Audio clip]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



US Admit No Way to Stop Taliban Terrorists Through Pakistan-Afghanistan Border

The porous border between Afghanistan and Pakistan that Taliban fighters slip across to attack British troops is impossible to seal, a top military commander has admitted.

The 1,600-mile rugged frontier, dotted with mountain passes and treacherous routes, would take ‘an inordinate amount of resources’ to secure, said the U.S. colonel.

Instead, it is more useful for coalition soldiers to protect Afghan towns and villages that are vulnerable to insurgent raids.

Military chiefs have been concerned about the steady flow of terrorists and arms — including components for deadly roadside bombs — across the lawless border, especially into Helmand and Kandahar provinces in southern Afghanistan where nearly 10,000 UK troops are based.

The Taliban often pass along little-known routes and back over the border into Pakistan to take injured fighters to hospitals.

Colonel Viet Luong, of the U.S. Army, said Western diplomats should also try to foster greater cooperation from the tribes inside Pakistan who often provide Islamist fighters safe passage across the frontier.

His remarks came as the Ministry of Defence announced that another UK soldier had been killed in the war — the 103rd this year.

The bomb disposal expert, who served with 23 Pioneer Regiment, The Royal Logistic Corps, was clearing a road with the Counter-Improvised Explosive Device Task Force in Lashkar Gah district when he was caught in a blast on Tuesday.

He was the 348th British serviceman or woman to die in the conflict since it begun in 2001.

Col Luong, who oversees troops in a part of eastern Afghanistan that includes the volatile Khost province, said: ‘It’s naive to say that we can stop enemy forces coming through the border.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Preparing for Armed Conflict ‘In Every Direction’

“In the coming five years, our military will push forward preparations for military conflict in every strategic direction,” said Liang Guanglie in an interview published by several state-backed newspapers in China. “We may be living in peaceful times, but we can never forget war, never send the horses south or put the bayonets and guns away,” Mr Liang added.

China repeatedly says it is planning a “peaceful rise” but the recent pace and scale of its military modernisation has alarmed many of its neighbours in the Asia-Pacific, including Japan which described China’s military build-up as a “global concern” this month. Mr Liang’s remarks come at a time of increasingly difficult relations between the Chinese and US armed forces which a three-day visit by his counterpart Robert Gates is intended to address. A year ago China froze substantive military relations in protest at US arms sales to Taiwan and relations deteriorated further this summer when China objected to US plans to deploy one of its nuclear supercarriers, the USS George Washington, into the Yellow Sea off the Korean peninsula. China also announced this month that it was preparing to launch its own aircraft carrier next year in a signal that China is determined to punch its weight as a rising superpower. The news came a year earlier than many US defence analysts had predicted.

China is also working on a “carrier-killing” ballistic missile that could sink US carriers from afar, fundamentally reordering the balance of power in a region that has been dominated by the US since the end of the Second World War.

A US Navy commander, Admiral Robert Willard, told Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper this week that he believes the Chinese anti-ship missile, the Dong Feng 21, has already achieved “initial operational capability”, although it would require years of testing.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Al-Qaeda Cockney Calls for Holy War in Somalia

A BRIT has appeared in a video for an extreme Islamic group calling for holy war in Somalia.

The masked man speaks with a London accent in the publicity stunt for al-Shabab, an ally of Osama Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda.

Experts say it is the first clear evidence UK citizens are joining the terror group.

And the video will stoke fears of a UK terror plot emerging from Somalia. Clutching an AK-47, the Brit, named as Abu Dujana, calls on Muslims worldwide to join their fight to turn the African country into a hardline Muslim state.

He says: “For us to fight for our beliefs is the best thing that can happen to us. The fact we may be killed in this path is nothing but a glad tiding.”

Dujana said he left the UK as it ignores what “Allah obliges and forbids”. In September, MI5 said it believed several British Muslims had travelled to fight with al-Shabab. The terrorists killed 74 people in bomb blasts in Uganda in July. It controls large parts of Somalia where it imposes harsh Sharia law. A girl of 13 who had been raped was stoned to death.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazilian President to Make Battisti Decision This Week

Extradition of ex-terrorist a ‘juridical’ question, Lula says

(ANSA) — Brasilia, December 27 — Outgoing Brazilian President Inacio Lula da Silva told ANSA on Monday that he will decide this week on Italy’s request to extradite former Italian terrorist Cesare Battisti.

Speaking to the press at the end of his second and last term, Lula said he wanted to resolve the matter before his successor Dilma Rousseff takes office on January 1, 2011.

According to the popular Brazilian leader, “this is not a problem regarding sovereignty, it is a juridical question. When the attorney general gives his opinion, then I will make my decision”.

“I have never said what my opinion is. Once (Attorney General) Luis Inacio (Lucena Adams) expresses his view I will act accordingly”.

In November 2009 Brazil’s supreme court turned down Battisti’s request for asylum and ordered him sent back to Italy where he has been convicted in absentia for complicity in four murders committed by a leftist militant group in the 1970s.

The Brazilian president, who has in the past indicated he might view Battisti’s case favourably, told Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi in Washington last April that he would review the high court decision.

But there was no word on which way Lula might be leaning.

The supreme court judges said his decision should square with bilateral agreements between Italy and Brazil, but added that the Brazilian constitution gives the president personal powers to deny the extradition if he chooses to.

If Lula stops Battisti’s return in a case the Berlusconi government has fought hard for, experts say the diplomatic repercussions could be considerable.

The 56-year-old Battisti was arrested in Brazil in April 2007, some five years after he had fled to that country to avoid extradition to Italy from France, where he had lived for 15 years and become a successful writer of crime novels.

In January 2009 the Brazilian justice ministry granted Battisti political asylum on the grounds that he would face “political persecution” in Italy.

The ruling outraged the Italian government who demanded that it be appealed to the Brazilian supreme court.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


American Thinker: How’s That Religion of Peace Doing These Days?

Only a few days remain until 2011, and still there is no end to Islamic hatred in the world.

Christmas was celebrated in an unusual way in Indonesia this year. Since sharia forbids the construction of any new churches, hundreds of members of Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church in Parung, West Java, Indonesia decided to celebrate Mass “in a tent set up in the parking lot of the Marsudirini Elementary School.” Although on paper, Indonesia’s constitution states that “no one has the right to prohibit any religious community from practicing its faith” the rising influence of Islamic radicals is obliterating all this.

In Pakistan in July of 2010, “a dozen masked men shot five Christians to death as they came out of their church.” In May, “church leaders had received a threatening letter from the Islamic extremist group Sip-e-Sahaba warning the Christians to leave the area as ‘they [were] polluting [the] land.’“

In the Washington Times, Jeffrey Kuhner writes about ongoing anti-Christian pogroms in the Middle East. A word usually ascribed to the mass destruction of Jews, it is now being applied here, as “Christians have endured bombings, murders, assassinations, torture, imprisonment and expulsions. These anti-Christian pogroms culminated recently with the brutal attack on Our Lady of Salvation, an Assyrian Catholic church in Baghdad. Al Qaeda gunmen stormed the church during Mass, slaughtering 51 worshippers and two priests. Father Wassim Sabih begged the jihadists to spare the lives of his parishioners. They executed him and then launched their campaign of mass murder.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



New Holiday, December 25: Christmahannukwanzadan

A combination of the main holiday terms; Christmas, Hannukah, Kwanza, and Ramadan. To be used in this age of correctness where people may be offended by wishing one person a seasonal greeting but leaving another person out, thereby offending their race or creed. “ Happy Christmahannukwanzadan everybody…and I think that covers everybody “

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101228

Financial Crisis
» Central Bank Ups Bond Purchasing Over Christmas Period
» China’s Real-Estate Frenzy
» EU Industry Chief Voices Need to Block Chinese Takeovers
» GAO Sees Problems in Government’s Financial Management
» No Jobs for More Than Three Out of Four Unemployed Workers
» Re-Evaluating ‘Free Trade’ With China
» UK: Big Brother Town Halls Squander £315m on CCTV in Three Years, Despite Massive Job Cuts
 
USA
» 20 Police Surround, Slam, Arrest Unarmed Man
» Andrew G. Bostom: Bill O’Reilly’s Mindslaughter
» Colorado State Sen. Suzanne Williams (D-Aurora) Quote of the Day
» DNA Test Urged to See if Lincoln’s Assassin Escaped Death
» Eden Prairie Oks Changing School Lines
» Frank Gaffney: the Denuclearizers’ Dangerous Agenda
» Indiana Grandmother, A Muslim Convert, Being Investigated for Possible Terror Link
» Mr. Kissinger, Have You No Shame?
» Shock Audio: New Black Panther Leader & Farrakhan Colluded With Ahmadinejad to Overthrow America
» Weighing Untapped Market Against Terror Fears
 
Canada
» Dying Man’s Access to Life-Saving Drug Soon Ends
 
Europe and the EU
» Dreams and Nightmares of Europe in the 2040s
» France: Scandal of the Deadly Diabetes Drug Subsidised by French State
» Germany: Celtic Tomb Hailed as Great Archaeological Find
» Germany: Airports Demand Racial Profiling to Fight Terror
» Heavy Rains in Italy, Landslips in Liguria
» Hungary’s ‘Orbanization’ Is Worrying Europe
» Ireland: Stampede to Grab €900 ($1,200) Bags at BT
» Italians Seek Car Alternatives, But Not to Save Planet
» Italy Bans Plastic Bags, France Postpones Tax
» Occult Business Hooks 12.5 Million Italians
» Opposition to the Euro Grows in Germany
» Sweden: Blasts in Stockholm: Muslims to be Affected Most
» UK: Big Freeze Presents Old Problem for Modern Boilers
» UK: David Cameron Must Face the Challenge of Islamisation
» UK: Islam Takes Over Catholic School
» UK: London is Home to Hamas Hub, Says Israel
» UK: Labour MP Condemns Petition Plans
» UK: Man and Woman Charged With Murder of 15-Year-Old Boy Found Dead in a Bath on Christmas Day
» UK: Online Petition Plans to Go Ahead
» UK: Paedophile Dressed as Policeman Tried to Abduct Schoolboy by ‘Taking Him for Questioning’
» UK: PCSO: £1.2m Per Crime: The Cost of Just One Force’s ‘Plastic Plods’
» UK: Political Views ‘Hard-Wired’ Into Your Brain
» UK: Top Gear Stars Cause Religious Storm After Dressing Up in Burkas on Boxing Day Special
» Wales: Neighbours Left Shocked by Arrests of Terror Suspects
 
Balkans
» The Demolition of the Yugoslav Tribunal
» Two Nations Under Islamic Duress — Serbia and Israel
 
North Africa
» Morocco: 6 Arrested for Planning Attacks Abroad
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Appeal by Netanyahu, No Violence Against Foreigners
» Britain Risks Israeli Anger by Extending Diplomatic Recognition to Palestinians
» Palestinians Reject Interim Peace Deal
» Xenophobic Alarm Over Sudanese House Fire
 
Middle East
» Britain Forms Plan for Gulf Evacuation in Event of War With Iran
» Caroline Glick: The Wars of 2011
» Dubai: Mother Gives Birth in Airport Toilet, Strangles the Baby, Dumps Its Corpse in a Bin… Then Catches Flight Out
» Iran Hangs ‘Mossad Spy’ For Relaying Military Secrets to Arch-Enemy Israel
» Love the Vuvuzela and Don’t Take a Nap: Muslim Scholars Issue 350,000 New Year Fatwas
» Sheikh Confirms SARG Involvement in Escalating Situation in Days Prior to Rioting 8. 2. 2006
» Syria: Country’s First Casino Opens in Damascus
» Syria Helped Orchestrate 2006 Mohammed Cartoon Riots, WikiLeaks Cables Reveal
» World Traveler: Scholar and Convert to Islam Now Calls Turkey Home
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Clash of Cultures
» Football: Indonesians Cry Foul on Twitter After Losing Match to Malaysia
» India Issues Nationwide Terror Alert
 
Far East
» China Has Carrier-Killer Missile, U.S. Admiral Says
» China Cuts Rare Earth Export Quotas
» China Moving Closer to Deploying Ballistic Missile That Can Sink an Aircraft Carrier
 
Australia — Pacific
» Why Did a Stranger Shoot Me, Daddy? — Mariam Alkadmani’s Aguish Over Attack
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Ivory Coast on the Brink
» Sudan: Lawrence Solomon: Birth of an (Oil) Nation, Loss of an Islamic Prize
 
Latin America
» Leak: Mexican Army Mistrusts Other Gov’t Agencies
 
Immigration
» Sixty ‘Gazans’ Reach Shores of Southern Italy
» Turkish-Germans Struggle With Dilemma of Double Identity
» UK: The Muslim Population Has Grown From 1.65 Million to 2.87 Million Since 2001, Say Researchers. What Does This Mean for Liberal Britain?
 
Culture Wars
» Law School Gagging Speech
» Turkish Academic Women Discuss Glass Ceiling for Their Gender
» UK: Why Does Dr Rowan Williams Never Stand Up for Christianity?
 
General
» Delaying Sex Makes Better Relationships, Study Finds
» English Doomed as Global Language, Academic Says
» Future Shock? Welcome to the New Middle Ages
» Keep Universal Human Rights Intact
» Political Leanings Revealed by the Eyes
» See No Sharia
» The Metal Marvel That Has Mended Brains for 50 Years

Financial Crisis


Central Bank Ups Bond Purchasing Over Christmas Period

The European Central Bank on Monday announced that its purchase of eurozone government bonds jumped to €1.121 billion over the past week.

The increase, almost twice the previous week’s purchase of €603 million in government bonds, comes despite the low level of trading over the Christmas period, as Frankfurt maintains its eurozone vigilance in Frankfurt even amid turkey dinners and carols.

Total government debt purchases by the ECB amount to €73.5 billion since it began a buying programme in May when the Greek government hit the wall in its attempts to sell public debt to investors.

The ECB debt purchase scheme is intended to ease pressure on government borrowing costs.

Despite the jump in the last week, purchases still remain far below the scale of similar actions in May, when the central bank was intervening with buys of sometimes over €10 billion each week.

Since the height of the Greek crisis, the purchasing programme had been significantly reined in.

However, with the return of eurozone turbulence, the ECB in December upped its public debt acquisitions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



China’s Real-Estate Frenzy

Rising property prices and a torrid pace of lending are signals of an inflationary bubble

Last week I sold an apartment in Beijing for more than 2.5 times what I paid for it five years and three months ago. When I asked the buyer why he was optimistic about real estate, he explained that land was limited in Chinese cities and government policies would keep the market going up.

So far that argument has proven right. Understanding government policy has long been the key to making money in China’s property and stock markets. The atmosphere at the Beijing tax and land bureaus brought to mind California during the gold rush.

It’s impossible to say definitively that a market has strayed into bubble territory until after the collapse. But prices rising out of the reach of average buyers is one indicator. Housing prices in the U.S. peaked at 6.4 times average annual earnings this decade. In Beijing, the figure is 22 times.

If the froth is confined to housing, as it was more or less in the U.S., China can muddle through. But it is not. Consider the problem of leverage.

Those who doubt that Chinese housing is in a bubble often point to the lack of leverage. And it’s true that on paper Chinese banks only lend a prudent amount to buyers, so that if the market falls by a third, they will still be “above water.”

Many buyers, such as the one who bought my apartment, pay in cash. Even given the probability that banks sometimes break the rules, it’s clear that leverage as traditionally understood doesn’t drive Chinese home sales. But there is still plenty to be worried about, because the leverage comes from elsewhere.

Real estate is just the preferred way to store wealth. There are no property taxes, so an empty apartment doesn’t cost a lot to maintain. Registered in the name of a family member, it also doesn’t attract a lot of attention from the authorities who try to track down income, not all of it legal, that is not reported for tax purposes.

The wealth itself comes from the credit machine that drives China’s investment-led economy. Fixed-asset investment grew 23.5% this year, and it is forecast to grow 20% next year. After 2008, Beijing paid lip service to the need to rebalance the economy in favor of consumption instead of investment. Meanwhile it doubled down on investment, with a stimulus package for 2009, equivalent to 15% of GDP, that was made up mostly of bank loans. The torrid pace of lending continued this year…

           — Hat tip: Zenster [Return to headlines]



EU Industry Chief Voices Need to Block Chinese Takeovers

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — Europe should establish a new authority with powers to block foreign takeovers of strategic European businesses, EU industry commissioner Antonio Tajani has argued.

The authority is particularly necessary as Chinese companies increasingly look to grow their overseas investments, the Italian politician said in an interview with German business daily Handelsblatt on Monday (27 December).

“Chinese companies have the means to buy more and more European enterprises with key technologies in important sectors,” remarked Mr Tajani.

“It is a question of investments but behind that there is also a strategic policy, to which Europe should respond politically,” he said.

As a result, Europe should establish “an authority tasked with examining foreign investments in Europe” using the the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US as a model.

Under the proposal, the European authority would determine “if the acquisition (of a company) with European know-how by a private or public foreign company represented a danger or not.”

A number of European and American firms have been frustrated in recent years by the speed at which their Chinese competitors have acquired new technologies developed outside the Middle Kingdom.

For its part, China has gradually sought to remove its own restrictions on foreign investment but considerable limitations still apply.

Reacting to the EU suggestion for a new authority, German economy minister Rainer Bruederle warned against overly quick decisions.

“Of course one can have an evaluation procedure taking into account security and public order concerns. But we shouldn’t take hasty actions,” Mr Bruederle told the Handelsblatt paper on Tuesday.

“Europe profits from the openness of its markets and offers attractive conditions for foreign investors,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



GAO Sees Problems in Government’s Financial Management

The U.S. Government Accountability Office said it could not render an opinion on the 2010 consolidated financial statements of the federal government, because of widespread material internal control weaknesses, significant uncertainties, and other limitations.

“Even though significant progress has been made since the enactment of key financial management reforms in the 1990s, our report on the U.S. government’s consolidated financial statement illustrates that much work remains to be done to improve federal financial management,” Acting Comptroller General Gene Dodaro said in a statement. “Shortcomings in three areas again prevented us from expressing an opinion on the accrual-based financial statements.”

The main obstacles to a GAO opinion were: (1) serious financial management problems at the Department of Defense that made its financial statements unauditable, (2) the federal government’s inability to adequately account for and reconcile intragovernmental activity and balances between federal agencies, and (3) the federal government’s ineffective process for preparing the consolidated financial statements.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



No Jobs for More Than Three Out of Four Unemployed Workers

This morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released a mildly encouraging October report from the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS), showing that job openings increased by 351,000 in October, while revisions to earlier data reveal that there were 82,000 more job openings in September than previously reported.

The total number of job openings in October was 3.4 million, while the total number of unemployed workers was 14.8 million (according to the Current Population Survey). This is the highest number of monthly job openings since August 2008. The ratio of unemployed workers to job openings improved to 4.4-to-1 in October, an increase from the revised September ratio of 4.9-to-1. The trend in the job-seekers ratio has been improving over the last few months, but it is important to remember that the current ratio is still over 50% higher than its peak (2.8-to-1) during the early 2000s recession.

It is important to note that the job-seekers ratio does not measure the number of applicants for each job. There may be a mass of applicants for every job posting, since job seekers apply for multiple jobs. Instead, the 4.4-to-1 ratio means that for every 4.4 unemployed workers, there is only one job available—or for about every three out of four unemployed workers, there simply are no jobs.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Re-Evaluating ‘Free Trade’ With China

Although China is called a major trading partner, it treats U.S. companies like suckers, cheating them coming and going. Beijing even intimidates U.S. businessmen so they don’t dare criticize China’s unfair trade tactics.

Take, for example, the attitude of CEO Jeffrey R. Immelt of General Electric, the company now laying off hundreds of U.S. workers and giving those jobs making light bulbs to Chinese workers. He won’t comment about the current U.S. case in the World Trade Organization accusing China of giving illegal subsidies to Chinese wind-turbine makers.

A few years ago, GE caved in to the Chinese government’s demand that it build a large wind-turbine factory in China. Since GE owns a crucial patent for wind turbines, this demand was based on the Chinese anti-free trade policy called indigenous innovation (which China expert James McGregor calls “a blueprint for technology theft on a scale the world has never seen before”).

China then developed its own wind-turbine manufacturers and is now directing purchasers to buy from those Chinese firms instead of from GE. That’s the reality in what free traders naively believe is the world’s fast-growing market for U.S. goods.

China wants to be the world’s biggest exporter based on stealing U.S. know-how and subsidizing local manufacturers. It blatantly violates international trade laws and has no plans to be a market for U.S. products; China’s principal imports are and will continue to be U.S. jobs.

[…]

In 2010, after GE had handed over technology in everything from rail locomotives to antipollution equipment to gain access to the Chinese market, Immelt was singing a different tune: “I really worry about China. I am not sure that in the end they want any of us to win, or any of us to be successful.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Big Brother Town Halls Squander £315m on CCTV in Three Years, Despite Massive Job Cuts

Councils have spent £315million on spy cameras — despite slashing jobs and public services.

Their commitment to keep the streets under surveillence seems undiminished by the cuts being made to bring the nation’s finances back into check.

A survey of 336 councils shows why Britain has been dubbed the ‘big brother’ capital of the world.

They spent a total of £314,835,170 on installing and operating CCTV cameras from 2007 to 2010.

Campaigners for civil liberties branded the findings ‘scandalous’ and said the money would have been better spent on schools, hospitals and other vital services.

However, Britain’s largest police force says that CCTV helps its officers solve six crimes every day by identifying suspects from it.

The hundreds of millions spent on CCTV is the latest sign that the march of Britain’s ‘Surveillance Society’ seems virtually unstoppable.

Surreptitious and unaccountable surveillance practices — aided by weak legal protection — have mushroomed faster than anywhere else in the world.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


20 Police Surround, Slam, Arrest Unarmed Man

Neighbor’s claim of crossbow shot sparks bloody front-porch melee

Twenty police officers surged into a mobile home neighborhood in Lincoln, Neb., and slammed an unarmed man to the ground because a neighbor reported he was shooting a crossbow, and the resulting melee left two officers hurt, the man’s wife and 4-year-old tossed out of their home and the Internet forum pages aglow with the flames of argument over weapons rights.

“Why the need for 20 cops? What’s with America and overcompensation through excessive force?” wrote one participant at Fark.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Andrew G. Bostom: Bill O’Reilly’s Mindslaughter

It is somewhat ironic that immensely popular Fox News host Bill O’Reilly epitomizes willful blindness to Sharia, or Islamic Law, encroachment in the US. Mr. O’Reilly has been pilloried by the left for both his undeniably accurate statements that the cataclysmic acts of jihad terrorism on 9/11/2001 were committed by Muslims and, more broadly, his commonsensical recognition of the global plethora of jihad-related “Muslim problems” outside the U.S.

Nonetheless, Mr. O’Reilly is in lockstep with his media and political antagonists when it comes to glib, ignorant denial regarding the pervasive support for Sharia by mainstream Islamic religious organizations, and Muslim religious leaders, in America.

Mr. O’Reilly’s uninformed statements illustrate the contemporary equivalent of what Robert Conquest, the preeminent scholar of Soviet Communist totalitarianism, appositely characterized as “mindslaughter” — a brilliantly evocative term for delusive Western apologetics regarding the ideology of Communism and the tangible horrors its Communist votaries inflicted. Conquest, in his elucidation of Western vulnerability to totalitarian ideologies, wrote that democracy itself is “far less a matter of institutions than habits of mind” — the latter being subject to constant “stresses and strains.” He then notes the disturbingly widespread acceptance of totalitarian concepts amongst the ordinary citizens of pluralist Western societies.

Many in the West gave their full allegiance to these alien beliefs. Many others were at any rate not ill disposed towards them. And beyond that there was…a sort of secondary infection of the mental atmosphere of the West which still to some degree persists, distorting thought in countries that escaped the more wholesale disasters of our time.

But Conquest evinces no sympathy for those numerous “Western intellectuals or near intellectuals” of the 1930s through the 1950s whose willful delusions about the Soviet Union “will be incredible to later students of mental aberration.” His critique of Western media highlights a tendency which has persisted and intensified over the intervening decades and through to the present.

O’Reilly’s personal see-no-Sharia-mindslaughter was displayed vividly when he offered to wield a hammer on behalf of the Ground Zero Mosque project. His statement revealed a basic ignorance of mosque promoter Feisal Rauf’s expressed ideology, including the imam’s Sharia-based conception of “peace” itself — more accurately, a global Pax Islamica. Subsequently, O’Reilly has reiterated his brazen — albeit clueless — denial of aggressive Sharia promotion in the U.S. He hectored courageous victims of Sharia-promoting jihadism such as Brigitte Gabriel and Dr. Zuhdi Jasser on this specific point (“They are not getting anywhere in the U.S. …. The Muslim Brotherhood is making no inroads in the U.S.”) and later repeated this empty-headed pronouncement as a putative “rebuttal” to Dr. Monica Crowley’s concern about stealth jihadism:…

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]



Colorado State Sen. Suzanne Williams (D-Aurora) Quote of the Day

You’d think after your car swerves into the oncoming lane, you get into a head-on collision, you kill a pregnant woman and the baby (delivered by C-section) is currently in critical condition, your public statement wouldn’t be all about yourself.

Colorado State Sen. Suzanne Williams (D-Aurora) was injured in a head-on crash Sunday in Texas. The passenger in the other car died. The Texas Department of Public Safety (TDPS) says Williams’ Honda CRV veered into on-coming traffic for an unknown reason.

“It’s a tragedy that I now have a personal experience with a highway accident,” Williams told 9NEWS over the phone from Texas. “It’s been very traumatic.”

It may be a meaningless observation from someone who wasn’t there, but I think it was more traumatic for Brianna Michelle Gomez and her baby.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



DNA Test Urged to See if Lincoln’s Assassin Escaped Death

Descendants of Abraham Lincoln’s assassin are pushing for a DNA test finally to resolve whether John Wilkes Booth escaped his well-recorded shooting death and lived for 40 years in Texas and Oklahoma.

Booth, an actor and Confederate sympathiser, shot the 16th President of the United States in the back of the head during a performance of Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theatre in Washington DC.

The shooting took place on April 14, 1865, just days after the surrender of Confederate General Robert E Lee, as the American Civil war approached its end.

Booth fled on horseback but was tracked down 12 days later to a farm in northern Virginia where he was shot dead by Union soldiers while hiding in a barn.

However, like the assassination of President John F Kennedy a century later, the Lincoln shooting has its own conspiracy theory, that Booth was not the man in the barn and escaped to live for nearly four more decades under a pseudonym.

Booth’s descendants now want that theory tested using modern DNA techniques.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Eden Prairie Oks Changing School Lines

The move, closely watched by other metro districts, addresses integration. Summary.

The Eden Prairie School Board on Tuesday endorsed a plan to move as many as 1,100 elementary school children to new schools next fall, largely to desegregate the increasingly diverse district.

In a gymnasium packed with 200 people, the board voted 4-3 to let district administrators, led by Superintendent Melissa Krull, move the children to address capacity issues as well as disparate concentrations of students with economic needs. It’s expected to result in the district’s most extensive boundary changes in a decade.

Eden Prairie’s decision has been widely anticipated by metro-area districts facing similar changes in student demographics, as they address the segregation of poverty and race in their schools.

The plan has been strongly opposed by many parents who fear the loss of neighborhood K-4 schools. While voicing public protests, they had urged school leaders to come up with a better plan.

At the meeting, board member Chuck Mueller addressed calls to delay approval of a plan, saying, “Our kids are the ones to ultimately suffer. To not act and consider this, I would think, is irresponsible.”

Board members who voted against the district’s evidence backing the plan said it wasn’t because they were against a plan to integrate schools, but rather that they don’t believe this is the right way to do that. Some also questioned if the changes will be sustainable.

“There are other options out there,” said board member Ranee Jacobus, who voted against it.

Board member John Estall said, “I don’t think this is going to fix our problems.”

The school district expects to release a new boundary map by Jan. 15.

In Eden Prairie, home to 9,700 students, district administrators say they need to balance uneven capacity in schools and reduce a more than 33 percent gap among elementary schools in the number of low-income students.

The plan, championed by Krull, would move grades five and six from an intermediate school into K-4 elementary schools. Boundary lines would be redrawn to balance concentrations of poverty, which aligns with race.

At Tuesday night’s meeting, two petitions were presented to the board — one in favor of the plan, the other against it.

Parent Ahmed Jama was the only person to speak on behalf of the plan. “We need to change in order to educate all of our students,” he said.

About six parents spoke against it, pleading with the board to rethink other options to integrate the district and close the achievement gap while keeping schools K-4. “There’s many other things we could do to close the gap,” said parent Lora Peterson. “Please listen to the community now. All kids in Eden Prairie deserve a better plan.”…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: the Denuclearizers’ Dangerous Agenda

Hold on to your hat. No sooner had the Senate finished approving the so-called New START Treaty by the closest margin of any bilateral arms control agreement with Moscow than the accord’s principal architect served notice of her ambitious plans for further denuclearizing the United States. Unfortunately, the disarmament agenda Assistant Secretary of State Rose Gottemoeller is helping President Obama pursue will make the world more dangerous, not safer for America and its interests.

As with Mr. Obama, who reportedly first espoused the idea of ridding the world of nuclear weapons while a radical undergraduate at Columbia, Ms. Gottemoeller is no newcomer to the idea of “global zero.” In the 1990s, she even lent her name to a report recommending that the United States engage in nuclear disarmament unilaterally, if necessary. During the Clinton administration, then-Secretary of Defense William Cohen declined to give her a top Pentagon post in the face of intense controversy about her views. She subsequently secured a consolation prize in the form of a succession of senior positions in the Department of Energy…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Indiana Grandmother, A Muslim Convert, Being Investigated for Possible Terror Link

A 46-year-old Indiana grandmother is under investigation for her possible ties to suspected and convicted international terrorists, FoxNews.com has learned.

Muslim-convert Kathie Smith, 46, a U.S. citizen living in Indianapolis who has blogged about her granddaughter, last year married a suspected German jihadist, and has been flying back and forth between the U.S. and Germany as recently as two weeks ago.

A pro-jihadist video featuring Smith and her husband — alongside photos of members of the Islamic Jihad Union charged with plotting failed terror attacks against U.S. targets in Germany — is being investigated by the Indiana Intelligence Fusion Center. The center is a counterterror intelligence clearinghouse staffed by law enforcement officers from local and federal agencies, including the FBI and Department of Homeland Security.

“Certainly, it’s being looked at and evaluated by Indiana State Police, which runs Indiana Intelligence Fusion Center, “ Indiana Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Emily Norcross told FoxNews.com, adding that the video would be passed along to appropriate law enforcement for further investigation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Mr. Kissinger, Have You No Shame?

Ignore the recent excuses. Henry Kissinger’s entire career was a series of massacres and outrages.

Until the most recent release of the Nixon/Kissinger tapes, what were the permitted justifications for saying in advance that the slaughter of Jews in gas chambers by a hostile foreign dictatorship would not be “an American concern”? Let’s agree that we do not know. It didn’t seem all that probable that the question would come up. Or, at least, not all that likely that the statement would turn out to have been made, and calmly received, in the Oval Office. I was present at Madison Square Garden in 1985 when Louis Farrakhan warned the Jews to remember that “when [God] puts you in the ovens, you’re there forever,” but condemnation was swift and universal, and, in any case, Farrakhan’s tenure in the demented fringe was already a given.

Now, however, it seems we do know the excuses and the rationalizations. Here’s one, from David Harris of the American Jewish Committee: “Perhaps Kissinger felt that, as a Jew, he had to go the extra mile to prove to the president that there was no question of where his loyalties lay.” And here’s another, from Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League: “The anti-Jewish prejudice which permeated the Nixon presidency and White House undoubtedly created an environment of intimidation for those who did not share the president’s bigotry. Dr. Kissinger was clearly not immune to that intimidation.” Want more? Under the heading, “A Defense of Kissinger, From Prominent Jews,” Mortimer Zuckerman, Kenneth Bialkin, and James Tisch wrote to the New York Times to say that “Mr. Kissinger consistently played a constructive role vis-à-vis Israel both as national security adviser and secretary of state, especially when the United States extended dramatic assistance to Israel during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.” They asked that “the fuller Kissinger record should be remembered” and, for good measure, that “the critics of Mr. Kissinger should remember the context of his entire life.” Finally, Kissinger himself has favored us with the following: At that time in 1973, he reminds us, the Nixon administration was being pressed by Sens. Jacob Javits and Henry Jackson to link Soviet trade privileges to emigration rights for Russian Jews. “The conversation at issue arose not as a policy statement by me but in response to a request by the president that I should appeal to Sens. Javits and Jackson and explain why we thought their approach unwise.”

But Kissinger didn’t say something cold and Metternichian to the effect that Jewish interest should come second to détente. He deliberately said gas chambers! If we are going to lower our whole standard of condemnation for such talk (and it seems that we have somehow agreed to do so), then it cannot and must not be in response to contemptible pseudo-reasonings like these.

[…]

So our culture has once again suffered a degradation by the need to explain away the career of this disgusting individual. And what if we did, indeed, accept the invitation to “remember the context of his entire life”? Here’s what we would find: the secret and illegal bombing of Indochina, explicitly timed and prolonged to suit the career prospects of Nixon and Kissinger. The pair’s open support for the Pakistani army’s 1971 genocide in Bangladesh, of the architect of which, Gen. Yahya Khan, Kissinger was able to say: “Yahya hasn’t had so much fun since the last Hindu massacre.” Kissinger’s long and warm personal relationship with the managers of other human abattoirs in Chile and Argentina, as well as his role in bringing them to power by the covert use of violence. The support and permission for the mass murder in East Timor, again personally guaranteed by Kissinger to his Indonesian clients. His public endorsement of the Chinese Communist Party’s sanguinary decision to clear Tiananmen Square in 1989.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Shock Audio: New Black Panther Leader & Farrakhan Colluded With Ahmadinejad to Overthrow America

On September 27, 2010, New Black Panther leader Malik Zulu Shabazz and Louis Farrakhan met with illegitimate Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to build an alliance, secure raw materials and overthrow America.

The Blaze posted this shocking audio:

In September is was reported that Louis Farrakhan met with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in New York City at the Warwick Hotel’s banquet hall.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Weighing Untapped Market Against Terror Fears

Companies find opportunity in marketing to U.S. Muslims, but some face ugly reaction

In the ballroom of an upscale hotel a short train ride from New York, advertisers, food industry executives and market researchers mingled — the men in dark suits, the women in headscarves and Western dress. Chocolates made according to Islamic dietary laws were placed at each table. The setting was the American Muslim Consumer Conference, which aimed to promote Muslims as a new market segment for U.S. companies. While corporations have long catered to Muslim communities in Europe, businesses have only tentatively started to follow suit in the U.S. — and they are doing so at a time of intensified anti-Muslim feeling that companies worry could hurt them, too. American Muslims seeking more acknowledgment in the marketplace argue that businesses have more to gain than lose by reaching out to the community.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Canada


Dying Man’s Access to Life-Saving Drug Soon Ends

Ontario’s health ministry has yet to decide if it will pick up the cost of a $500,000-a-year drug that is keeping a dying Guelph-area man alive.

Lucas Maciesza has a deadly, extremely rare blood disorder. The disease causes the body to attack oxygen-rich red blood cells and leaves patients prone to internal bleeding.

The American-made drug Soliris has been hailed as a near cure for the disorder but the costs are prohibitive — $500,000-a-year — and patients are on it for life.

After a series of Star stories and public outcry that reached the Ontario Legislature, the London Health Sciences Centre stepped up to the plate and decided to pay for Maciesza’s Soliris as a temporary measure until the health ministry made a funding decision.

LHSC has purchased approximately $75,000 to date for Soliris.

In a maddening twist, Ontario did agree to cover the costs of Soliris for a North Bay woman, Norma Metz, on compassionate grounds. She suffers from the same disorder, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

Meanwhile, as the province takes its time deciding, the hospital can only afford to pay for the drug until mid-January, according to Lucas’ father, Rick Maciesza.

“Then we are back to we either take him off it or we figure out how to fund it,” said the senior Maciesza. “The drug is working fantastic. But we are on pins and needles.”

This issue is something the ministry is continuing to work on actively over the holidays, said Neala Barton, press secretary for Health Minister Deb Matthews.

In a statement, Matthews said when it comes to deciding what drugs are paid for by the public, the province works “very hard to find the right balance between being compassionate and being responsible.”

Medical experts, not politicians, make the final decisions on what drugs to cover, Matthews added.

“The ministry is looking carefully at all the available evidence related to Soliris and will respond to the family’s request as quickly as possible,” she said.

But Maciesza’s life hangs in the balance…

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Dreams and Nightmares of Europe in the 2040s

“She’s training to wear a burqa,” says my husband looking tenderly at our six-month-old daughter, who has pulled her security blanket up to her eyes. We like to joke about a future Europe, and the absurd details of a world inhabited by a generation of children born in 2010. What will life be like when the internet has become a symbol of a bygone age, like telegrams and faxes are today, when current notions of the future will be as comical as science-fiction scenarios from the era of silent film? And once you start, you can’t stop.

Try it and see how it feels! You might even say it’s an obligation. Isn’t every responsible European supposed to prepare for the future? Responsible Europeans are not primitive, nor are they fatalists who live from day to day. They have internet access, bicycles and toilets that flush, but that is not to say that if you don’t have these things you are some kind of inferior being.

Some Europeans even wear burqas, and that does not make them backward or fatalistic, but if it seems that way, perhaps that is just because we live on a continent that is not always supportive of Muslims. However, if you look at the internet, you can see that Muslims are fully integrated in the virtual world, and often more at home there than they are in their native countries — especially if their native country happens to be France or Germany.

Today, you can’t open a newspaper without coming on yet another contribution to the “debate on Muslims”, even in my native Czech Republic where the disciples of Islam are so thin on the ground you would be hard pressed to bump into one on the streets of a major city. “And what of it?” ask our homegrown rightwing windbags. “All these Muslims can go to the devil!” In fact, in my country we have such a shortage of Muslims that the demagogues have been forced to project their ire into attacks on the Roma, the Vietnamese and occasionally on women.

Even the most conformist magazines, the ones with the pretty pictures and the homes and gardens features, will tell you that the future of Europe belongs to women. Read it and weep. There is nothing outlandish in this assertion and anyone who gets hot under the collar about it either has a problem with women, or they imagine that female politicians in the future Europe will all be wearing burqas — a dress code that will present a major obstacle to effective government. But all of this presupposes that there will be something left to govern. Perhaps the question of clothing will turn out to be a side issue.

The European subspecies is slowly dying out, according to some, and the blame should be laid firmly on the shoulders of emancipated women. As soon as they get educated and as soon as you give them decent financial conditions, what do these bitches do? They decide they don’t need to have so many children. Some feminists claim that men are to blame, because they invented the pill, so they could separate the pleasures of the flesh from any risk of procreation. But would a collective return to condoms reverse this trend? Not likely.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



France: Scandal of the Deadly Diabetes Drug Subsidised by French State

French politicians of both the right and left are facing severe embarrassment and legal recriminations with the forthcoming publication of an official report on what could become the worst health scandal in the country’s history.

President Nicolas Sarkozy has promised “the most complete transparency” on how a drug which is now suspected to have killed up to 2,000 people was officially approved, and subsidised, for 33 years by the French health service.

Despite repeated warnings from scientists in France and abroad, the Mediator drug was prescribed to 5,000,000 French people, originally to fight diabetes and later as an appetite-suppressing, slimming pill. A report from the French health inspectorate, due in mid-January, will investigate why successive French health ministers, of the left and right, failed to heed advice that the drug — produced by the French pharmaceutical giant, Servier — was at best useless, and at worst highly dangerous.

Separate French press investigations have focused on an alleged campaign of intimidation and disinformation by the Servier company to keep the drug — and a lucrative predecessor, eventually banned in the US in 1997 — on the market.

[…]

Mediator contains a substance called benfluorex, which has been alleged in a series of scientific investigations to attack the cardio-vascular system and, in particular, to damage the valves of the heart. Despite a series of warnings, the drug remained legal — and its use was even officially subsidised by the French health service — until late last year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Germany: Celtic Tomb Hailed as Great Archaeological Find

In a discovery described as a “milestone of archaeology,” scientists have found a 2,600-year-old aristocratic burial site at the Celtic hill fort at Heuneburg in Baden-Württemberg.

The noblewoman’s tomb, dating from early Celtic times, measures four metres by five metres, and is exceptionally well-preserved. It contained gold and amber jewellery that makes possible for the first time the precise dating of an early Celtic grave.

Using heavy cranes, the excavation team lifted the entire burial chamber out of the ground as a single block of earth and placed it on a special truck so that it could be carried off for further analysis.

The dig leader and state archaeological chief Dirk Krausse labelled the find a “milestone of archaeology.”

Judging by the ornamentation in the chamber, the archaeologists believe the tomb was built for a woman from the nobility of the Heuneburg fort, though this couldn’t be said with certainty until further investigations could be made under laboratory conditions.

Click here for a photo gallery of the dig.

This will be done by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Stuttgart. Initial results are expected to be announced in June 2011.

The Heuneburg hill fort site is considered one of the most significant archaeological sites in central Europe and possibly the oldest settlement north of the Alps.

It has been the focus of intense interest because it reflects socio-political developments in early Celtic Europe when, after about 700 BC, wealth, population and political power began to be concentrated in small areas.

It was the area of a large settlement from about 700 BC and became one of the key centres of power and trade in southern Germany.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Airports Demand Racial Profiling to Fight Terror

The incoming head of Germany’s main airport lobby group is demanding the nation’s transit authorities use racial profiling to weed out terrorists at security checks.

Christoph Blume, the head of Düsseldorf Airport, told daily Rheinische Post on Tuesday that air passengers should be divided into different risk categories, meaning they would be subject varying degrees of scrutiny by airport security.

“That way, the security system could become more effective to everyone’s benefit,” said Blume, who will take the helm of the ADV airport association next month.

He said profiling passengers according to characteristics such as race, religion and country of origin would allow German airports to avert a further tightening of security.

While highly controversial because of its discriminatory nature, racial profiling has also found growing support in some quarters. However, critics fear it would stigmatize entire groups of passengers simply on their looks, faith or from where their trip originated.

“Such suggestions sound too much like the wish to save some time,” said Bernhard Witthaut, the head of the GdP police union, in Berlin on Tuesday. “But it’s better to spend half an hour in line than end up dead.”

But Blume said airports would soon no longer be able to cope with the threat of terrorism.

“Each new incident leads to extra checks and security measures. This creates a security escalation that will eventually hit its technical and operational limits,” Blume told the paper.

However, Blume still supported the introduction of so-called “naked scanners” that can reveal dangerous objects under clothing at German airports. Currently, backscatter scanners are being tested only in Hamburg before officials decide this spring whether to expand their use nationwide.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Heavy Rains in Italy, Landslips in Liguria

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 24 — Bad weather has been hitting Italy since early this morning and is creating great disturbances. The Veneto region has been particularly affected and has caused several watercourses to swell, including the Bacchiglione River, which nearly swept two people away in the province of Padua, who were saved by fire-fighters. The same river is also causing concern in Vicenza, where it has returned to below its banks. Lipari, one of the Aeolian Islands, has seen heavy seas bring water to the streets of the centre, creating problems for both pedestrians and business owners. Maritime connections with Milazzo have also been stopped. There are also problems with travel between Naples and the islands. Heavy rains have also hit Liguria, where in the province of Savona there has been a large landslip that cut through a provincial road in Murialdo. Also in Liguria, in Lerici, a landslip hit the sea front, threatening a home.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hungary’s ‘Orbanization’ Is Worrying Europe

The move by Hungary’s right-wing government to muzzle the media is the most recent example of a disturbing political trend in the country that was once hailed as a model for post-commununist development. Should Europe impose sanctions just as Hungary is about to assume the rotating EU presidency?

The Hungarians have been Europe’s heroes twice in the last few decades. The way they fearlessly faced off against Soviet tanks in 1956 and fought for their ideals remains unforgotten. In 1989, they courageously opened the borders that separated Eastern Europe from freedom. And in the initial years following the fall of communism, many saw Budapest as a possible model for the successful development of a democracy and market economy. Hungary, the land of the Magyars, was also a land of hope.

But that seems long ago now. The rotating chairmanship of the European Union, which Hungary assumes on Jan. 1, will not represent the culmination of a successful story. In fact, the opposite could be the case. Because of its policies, Budapest could now “be in for some serious problems,” Martin Schulz, the parliamentary leader of the Social Democrats in the European Parliament said last Tuesday. Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn went a step further, accusing the Hungarian government of violating “the spirit and text of the EU treaties.” “The question arises,” he continued, “as to whether such a country deserves to lead the EU. If we don’t do anything, it will be very difficult to talk to China or Iran about human rights.”

A great deal of anger has been building up. The fact that Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has just cold-bloodedly pushed through a law that muzzles the press, only a few days before he steps onto the pan-European stage, is just the final straw. It has been a last, and possibly decisive step towards autocracy.

No other European politician will have as much power to implement such drastic measures against critical media as Orbán, whose right-wing populist Fidesz Party has a two-thirds majority in parliament. The new, 170-page law attempts to regulate all television and radio stations, newspapers and Internet sites. It even applies to blogs and foreign media available in Hungary.

At the center of the control mechanisms is a new government agency staffed exclusively with Fidesz members. It has the power to impose fines of up to €750,000 ($983,000) for articles with objectionable content — and it alone will decide what is deemed objectionable. The staff of public media organizations will be placed under government supervision.

Outraged opposition politicians demanded to know how this differs from censorship in the days of former Communist Party General Secretary János Kádár, and demonstratively taped their mouths shut in parliament. Some Hungarian newspapers have published empty front pages in protest at the law.

Government representatives assured critics that the new law would not be applied in a restrictive manner. But when a journalist of government-owned radio station MR1-Kossuth Radio used a minute of silence to protest the change in the treatment of the press, he was suspended.

There are many reasons for Hungary’s descent into the ranks of countries that are only partially democratic, but archconservatives and the radical right wing are not the only ones responsible for this adverse development. The Hungarian left has committed a form of gradual suicide. For several parliamentary terms it had the chance to shape Hungary, most recently between 2006 and the spring of 2010. But hopeful steps were quickly abandoned as corruption and nepotism shaped the political scene. Former Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány highlighted the dilemma in a 2006 speech, when he said: “No European country has done something as boneheaded as we have … We have lied in the morning, at noon and at night.” It was only the failure of the Socialists that enabled the triumph of the conservative challenger, a seducer of the people.

A Populist Who Learns Fast

Viktor Orbán, 47, is seen as an exceptional political talent. The son of lower middle-class parents from the provinces, he studied law in Budapest and spent a year studying the history of English liberalism at Oxford. He dabbled in journalism and later worked for a government-run management-training institute. A free thinker, Orbán did not think much of the church and despised the communist political establishment. When he and a few fellow students founded Fidesz (“League of Young Democrats”) in 1988, he initially wanted the new party to admit no one older than 35.

He won a seat in parliament in 1990, but then suffered a setback in the next election. Orbán took it in his stride and aligned the party more closely with the national conservatives and those who did not benefit from the fall of communism. He took advantage of the inferiority complexes of his fellow Hungarians and pandered to their dreams of the return of a greater Hungary. In 1920, the Treaty of Trianon had deprived Hungary, one of the losers of World War I, of two thirds of its former territory.

Orbán, a master of the art of power politics, quickly learned lessons from his first, relatively unimpressive stint as prime minister, from 1998 to 2002. Colleagues say he is obsessed with the media and wants to become another Silvio Berlusconi, but without the scandals. However, Orbán, a control freak, insists on installing loyal supporters in all posts, even those of only moderate importance. He is able to gauge public opinion and sense the moods of voters — anti-American, anti-Zionist and anti-capitalist.

During the election campaign at the beginning of 2010, he almost completely abandoned any attempt to distance himself from the xenophobic Jobbik Party, which agitates against the Roma. The radical right-wing party won close to 17 percent of votes, or almost as many as the discredited Socialists. Orbán’s Fidesz Party won the election with 52.8 percent of votes, which is enough for a two-thirds majority in parliament…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Stampede to Grab €900 ($1,200) Bags at BT

SHOPPERS IN Dublin made up for lost time yesterday as Brown Thomas on Grafton Street opened its doors for the start of its winter sale at 9am — 24 hours late.

Within minutes Miu Miu handbags, circa €900 a pop, were being whisked off to new homes and the accessories department — read handbag department — was thronged with women seeking that 50-per-cent-off dream purchase.

The store had to postpone the opening of its sale after a malfunctioning sprinkler system on the second floor had flooded and damaged a significant proportion of the ceilings and floors over the second, first and ground floors.

Managing director Stephen Sealey said his staff had been brilliant and had worked through Sunday night into yesterday morning to clean up, while contractors had been magnificent in completing a job that could have taken a week, in 24 hours.

Ceilings had to be repaired, temporary lighting installed and new carpets laid to ensure the whole store opened at 9am. It appeared totally unblemished by the experience. Mr Sealey described a “stampede” for the handbags when the doors opened yesterday, and said one table of Miu Miu handbags was stripped bare in 30 seconds.

By lunchtime the store was uncomfortably busy, with hundreds of people, mainly women, inspecting DKNY handbags down from €234 to €140.40 and Alexander Wang leather bags reduced from €860 to €516.

One woman expressed her disappointment that a €1,200 Miu Miu handbag was not in the sale. “It is this season but the woman said it’s being ‘carried forward’,” she frowned to her companion.

The ladies’ shoe department was busier than Dublin airport’s departures floor and there were queues of up to half an hour for a changing room on some floors.

Outside, those clutching the signature carrier bags declared themselves not really disappointed the store had to postpone its sale. Evelyn Murray, from Dublin, was carrying two large BT bags, having bought cosmetic bags and a handbag. “The handbag I wanted wasn’t reduced, so I’m a bit sad about that. I wouldn’t have come in anyway on St Stephen’s Day. It’s not a day for shopping.”

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Italians Seek Car Alternatives, But Not to Save Planet

Over a quarter of drivers reducing mileage

(ANSA) — Rome, December 21 — Italians are looking for more ecological transport alternatives to traditional, gas-driven cars, but not to save the planet, a report presented Tuesday said. A snapshot of automobile use in Italy by the social and economic research think tank CENSIS said the trends are driven by hard economic times, expensive gasoline and expedience.

The study presented at the Touring Club in Rome, Automobile 2010, found drivers who reduced car use in 2010 grew by 5.6% over 2009 to 26.6%.

Instead they are using public transport, motorcycles, bicycles and their own two feet more.

Use of public transport grew 8.3% over 2009 to 49.5% of respondents, whereas two-wheeled transport, motorized or not, crept up in the low single digits. Nearly 18% of Italians use motorcycles or scooters and 18.7% use bicycles.

The report warned the trend away from car use does not indicate new, altruistic or healthier preferences among Italians, but expediency, albeit ill-conceived according to CENSIS.

Short-distance city driving consumes more gasoline per kilometer than highway travel, yet 90.4% of respondents still prefer the car for daily commutes.

“The perception that gasoline costs too much fuels an absurd paradox,” the report stated. “For moving the shortest distances, people don’t forgo the car, whereas for long journeys, which require more gasoline, they take public transport (more). “(People) are not renouncing their daily use of the automobile. “(They are) showing it an affection and trust that no other means deserves, and one that not even the economic crisis and the increased cost of gasoline manage to scratch,” said the report.

Gasoline prices irk people far more than other automobile costs, with 68% of respondents complaining that they are too expensive — an increase of 4.5% over 2009. Insurance comes next with 55.8% of respondents unhappy, a decline of 1.5% over 2009. The cost of fuel has boosted the popularity of diesel, now favored by 20.2% of respondents.

Meanwhile, demand for new cars remains weak, with just 3.9% of respondents intent on buying a new model in 2011. Nearly 8% are contemplating a new scooter or motorcycle. Reintroducing government economic incentives to encourage new car purchases finds favor with 47.5% of respondents, whereas eliminating road tax strikes a chord with 24.3%.

Respondents say they are more interested in value than discounts, with 41.1% saying the price-quality ratio motivates their purchases compared to 31% who said they were determined by price alone.

Italian men and women have very different ideas on what constitutes value, however. Women want cars to be maneuverable and practical, whereas men want them powerful and luxurious.

Foreign cars have found favor over Italian, almost entirely represented by Fiat. A little over 42% of respondents said they own Italian cars, versus 54.7% who own foreign makes.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Bans Plastic Bags, France Postpones Tax

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, DECEMBER 23 — While Italy is declaring war on non-biodegradable plastic bags, confirming a ban set to take effect in January 2011, France is still running behind schedule, with the Senate postponing a tax from 2011 to 2014. Recently, the French Senate voted on an amendment setting a 10 euro per kilo tax starting in 2014 to be levied on supermarkets, while the Chamber of Deputies had already asked for the same measure to be taken already next year as part of the 2011 Budget. Initially, at the end of November, the Senate asked not to tax plastic bags, but then did an about-face at the last minute. French President Nicolas’ Sarkozy’s government has always stated that it is against the tax.

The WWF have asked MPs not to allow this “schizophrenia” to hinder the measure. After abandoning the carbon tax and the environmental label for products, criticised the WWF, “this policy of environmental regression marks another triumph of the versatility of coherence,” said the WWF. Major retailers say that they “greatly disapprove of the Senate’s decision”. For the MPs, the tax on non-biodegradable bags is a “purely dissuasive device”: the threat to levy new taxes will lead to their progressive elimination. According to a study, the number of plastic bags in France has already decreased.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Occult Business Hooks 12.5 Million Italians

Around six billion per year spent on psychics, faith healers

(ANSA) — Rome, December 21 — More than 12.5 million Italians flock to psychics, faith healers and clairvoyants every year, roughly 35,000 per day, a study by a consumer group that helps the occult industry’s victims said on Tuesday. Telefono Antiplagio’s annual report, Magic and Occultism 2011, found Italians spend at least six billion euros per year, much of it under the table, on advice, insights into the future and solutions from roughly 120,000 purveyors of occult services.

The group added that these estimates are conservative. “This data refers only to regional estimates based on 20,000 operators who advertise. The (real) numbers are actually higher,” said Giovanni Panunzio, the founder of Telefono Antiplagio. “There are another 100,000 operators who work through word-of-mouth”. Telefono Antiplagio said it receives about 1,000 calls annually on a helpline it has run for 17 years for people who have been swindled or damaged by the industry. Fifty-one percent of the users are adult women, while 38% are adult men and the rest are teenagers or even children. Clients have an average age of 42 and most do not hold a high-school diploma.

Sentimental troubles drive 52% of people to turn to occult practitioners, while economic issues account for 24%, health problems 13%, and trouble with the law and requests for protection generates the rest, the survey said. “A crisis is the main reason a person turns to magic,’ explained psychiatrist Paolo Cianconi. “There is a physical, psychological, social need, which is also tied to an attraction toward powers alternative to (normal) human ones, to find support in the mysterious to resolve problems”.

Lombardy residents are particularly susceptible to the sector’s allure, the study found. About 180,000 Milan residents shell out 90 million euro per year to magicians of various types, it said.

The most skeptical region seems to be Valle d’Aosta, which is on the Italian side of Mont Blanc, where around 2,000 people spend about one million euro on the occult per annum. The Telefono Antiplagio report warns Italians intent on using occult practitioners “not to speak with charlatans about one’s private life, not to meet them alone and to record any conversations with them”. The group alleged that psychics and other occult consultants frequently commit fraud, extortion and medical malpractice, as well as exploiting the mentally handicapped and violate clients’ privacy. The report also advises against cash transactions and encourages victims to have the courage to file criminal charges.

Panunzio went as far as to call on publishers who sell advertising space to occult operators to stop doing so. “We understand it’s a business, but if they’d renounce this income, it would be a noble gesture,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Opposition to the Euro Grows in Germany

Surveys show that many Germans are worried about the future of the euro, but the country’s political parties are not taking their fears seriously. The number of grassroots initiatives against the common currency is increasing, and political observers say a Tea Party-style anti-euro movement could do well.

As a playwright, Rolf Hochhuth knows how to use timing to achieve the greatest possible impact. In the 1960s, he criticized the pope for remaining silent about the Holocaust. When everyone in the world was talking about globalization, he took to the theater stage and unmasked consulting companies like McKinsey as exploitation machines.

Now Hochhuth is campaigning against the euro — and his stage is Germany’s Constitutional Court. “Why should we help rescue the Greeks from their sham bankruptcy?” he asks. “Ever since Odysseus, the world has known that the Greeks are the biggest rascals of all time. How is it even possible — unless it was premeditated — for this highly popular tourist destination to go bankrupt?”

In the spring, he joined a group led by Berlin-based professor Markus Kerber that has filed a constitutional complaint against the billions in aid to Greece and the establishment of the European stabilization fund, which was set up in May 2010. Hochhuth wants the deutsche mark back. “I don’t know if this is possible. I only know that Germany lived very well with the mark.”

It’s an opinion that suddenly places this nearly 80-year-old man in a rather unusual position, at least for him: on the side of the majority of Germans.

Better Off with the Mark

Unnerved by shaky, debt-ridden countries and bailout packages worth billions, the majority of Germans want the mark back. In a survey conducted in early December by the polling firm Infratest dimap, 57 percent of respondents agreed with the statement that Germany would have been better off keeping the mark than introducing the euro. Germans, it seems, are gripped once again by their historic fear of inflation: According to the Forschungsgruppe Wahlen polling institute, 82 percent of the population is worried about the stability of their currency.

Now, a network of euro critics is capitalizing on this atmosphere. A group consisting of an aging playwright, a recalcitrant professor, a frustrated member of parliament with the business-friendly Free Democratic Party (FDP), the grandson of a former chancellor and a former top manager have decided they don’t want the euro anymore — at least not the way it is now. They are still only united by little more than a common issue, but it wouldn’t be the first loose association of individuals that ended up becoming a political party.

“The return of the mark? I can imagine that we could see the rise of a German Tea Party focusing on precisely this issue,” says Thomas Mayer, chief economist at Deutsche Bank, referring to the conservative American political movement.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel of the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) faces a dilemma as to how to deal with ordinary Germans’ concerns about the euro. If she takes their fears seriously, she will have to assume a hard-line stance toward countries that are drowning in debt like Greece and Portugal. But if she plays the iron chancellor, she will have no choice but to break with the Europe-friendly traditions of former CDU chancellors like Konrad Adenauer and Helmut Kohl.

Scope for a Protest Movement

For the time being, no political party has focused on the currency concerns. In reaction to the crisis, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble, who is also a member of the CDU, has urged closer cooperation in European politics — which is precisely the opposite of what many people want. The center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), which stylizes itself as the party of the common man, is a strong proponent of euro bonds — joint European government bonds that critics say would place the burden primarily on German taxpayers.

By contrast, the conservative Christian Social Union, the CDU’s Bavarian sister party, can’t make up its mind as to which of two party members it should take inspiration from: Theo Waigel, who paved the way for the euro when he was Germany’s finance minister, or Peter Gauweiler, who has challenged its constitutionality in court.

Pollsters like Matthias Jung from Forschungsgruppe Wahlen say that they can imagine the formation of a protest movement coalescing around euro-related fears. “The government has to prove that the bailouts for Greece and Ireland serve our own needs in Germany,” says Jung. “If the billions in aid are not convincingly justified, it will lead to a legitimation crisis.”…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Blasts in Stockholm: Muslims to be Affected Most

Almost two weeks have passed since the Swedish people for the first time realized the real threat of radical terrorism reaching their country as well as their northern neighbors. “A Christmas gift” for “Sweden and Swedish people” was sent by a 28-year old Swedish citizen with an Iraqi background, Taymour Abdelwahab, who exploded a car and himself on central Stockholm’s streets. The attack was a clear signal that terrorism is not just for the United States and Great Britain but even relatively liberal and neutral countries such as Sweden. Full of police and security posts, and nervous, suspicious pedestrians — this is how Stockholm, one of the most ecological cities in the world, is looking before Christmas this year.

Despite the fact that no terrorist organization has claimed responsibility for the attack, the Swedish newspaper “Aftonbladet” quoted a terrorism expert saying that Abdulwahab didn’t act alone and had allies — likely in Iraq, who supplied him with explosive materials and training for the attack. The Swedish security police (SÄPO), however, is still mostly silent on the details, stating that the investigation is continuing. Nevertheless, it remains unclear why Sweden was chosen as a first target for an attack in Scandinavia.

The Swedish approach towards Muslims and Islamic countries in particular is now exposed. Scrolling through European countries’ policies towards Muslims, Sweden deserves to be much higher up the list in comparison with her Danish neighbor or numerous other Western European countries for its relations with followers of the Muslim faith. The fact is recognized by Muslims themselves who believe that instead of “saving Muslim brothers and sisters” lives, Taymour Abdelwahhab has complicated the situation much more.

“Sweden is the best country for Muslims compared with other European states. The explosions will be a turning point for social relations between Muslims and Swedes: They will look at Muslims as a source of danger and fear” stated Imam Mahmoud Khalfi, a representative of the Islamic Association of Sweden. The Imam is sure that the Muslims will suffer not less than Swedes after the failed terror attack in Stockholm. “It will open the door for new troubles for Muslims who live here and Muslims themselves will be the offer,” Imam Khalfi thinks. “For Muslims it was a big surprise and, for sure, the reaction [in the Swedish community] will be negative.”

Like many others, Imam Khalfi does not see the justification the suicide bomber talked about in his voice message to “Sweden and Swedish people” sent to the central news agency TT and security police twenty minutes before the blasts. First, the bomber cited the presence of the Swedish military contingent within the ISAF in Afghanistan. The Swedish government since autumn has been discussing the withdrawal of the soldiers after 2014 — and restricting its involvement to civil affairs and police and armed forces training. On the other hand, the Green Party of Sweden together with their colleagues from the Left Party and Social Democrats have been calling to withdraw all forces from Afghanistan from 2013.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Big Freeze Presents Old Problem for Modern Boilers

British Gas records 100,000 broken boiler call-outs as extreme cold stalls even most modern condensing boilers

Amid what is likely to be the coldest December for a century the last thing you need — or expect — is for your modern, expensive boiler to grind to a frozen halt. For thousands of people in recent weeks that is what has happened.

The second extremely cold winter in a row has exposed what plumbers say is a flaw with condensing boilers, the only sort permitted to be installed since 2005 under government regulations. These are significantly more energy-efficient than traditional boilers because rather than expelling hot waste gases from a flue they use some of this energy to heat water.

However, this process condenses moisture in the gases. The waste liquid is usually expelled into the drains via a slim plastic pipe running down an external wall — a pipe which is prone to freezing in particularly cold weather, stalling the entire system.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: David Cameron Must Face the Challenge of Islamisation

The leader of Ukip, Nigel Farage MEP, must have groaned when he learned that the French National Front is now modelling itself on his party. Marine Le Pen, who is poised to take over leadership of the Front National (FN) from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, describes it as a “patriotic” party that has more in common with Ukip than the BNP. Given the sinister resonances that the words “National Front” have in Britain, Miss Le Pen has presented Ukip’s opponents with a seasonal gift. “Ukip — backed by the French National Front” is a rhetorical swipe worthy of David Cameron’s description of the party’s supporters as “fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists”.

We should not, however, be too quick to dismiss reports that a sanitised Front National has succeeded in reaching out to a new constituency. The FN’s selling point is its opposition to the “Islamisation” of French public life — but not, it is careful to add, to Islam itself. Miss Le Pen claims that pork is being taken off the menu in French schools and that state funds are being used to build “ostentatious mosque cathedrals”. She may never be elected president, but over a quarter of French voters approve of her; at no point in the history of the Fifth Republic has an aggressive Right-wing party enjoyed such support among the middle classes.

It may seem inconceivable that British politics could move in the same direction. But we should not be too relaxed about the fact that populist Right-wing parties have never broken into the mainstream of our politics. Two points need to be made.

First, that Muslims have migrated to Britain in enormous numbers over the past 40 years; one of the heaviest waves of immigration was encouraged by the last government. The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life estimates that there are 2,869,000 Muslims in Britain, an increase of 74 per cent on its previous figure of 1,647,000, which was based on the 2001 census. No demographic statistics are reliable in an era of open borders, but such an expansion is unprecedented. The second point is that — different political traditions notwithstanding — Britain is beginning to experience French-style anxiety about Islamisation. The fact that many terrorists are Muslims may lead to unfair assumptions about the loyalty of British Muslims. But, at a time when — according to some surveys — around 40 per cent of the Muslim community support the establishment of Sharia, fears of social fracture are understandable. Meanwhile, government attempts to ease tension by empowering to unelected “community leaders” have caused huge resentment. It is worth noting that the Oldham and Saddleworth by-election next month was caused by the disqualification of a Labour MP caught stirring up anti-Muslim sentiment.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Islam Takes Over Catholic School

A CATHOLIC school faces being taken over by a mosque after it was revealed that 95% of its pupils are Muslim.

It is believed to be the first case of its kind in Britain.

Church leaders say it is no longer “appropriate” for them to run Sacred Heart RC Primary School which has just six Christian pupils.

Just 10 years ago more than 90% of pupils were Catholic. But now most are of Asian origin, do not speak English as their first language and follow Islam.

The school in Blackburn, Lancs, could be handed to the nearby Masjid-e-Tauheedul mosque.

Harry Devonport of Blackburn with Darwen Council Children’s Services, said the decision to abandon the school was made by the Diocese of Salford.

Diocese education director Geraldine Bradbury said: “We have never experienced a change to this extent before. We would not be serving the local community by insisting that we run the school. It brings things like having a Catholic headteacher and devoting 10% of the timetable to RE.

“It would be wrong of us to insist on putting a school community through that.”

The mosque runs an Islamic girls’ secondary school. Head Hamid Patel said: “Given that almost all of the pupils are Muslim, it makes sense.”

Other organisations are in the race to run the school — in a predominantly Asian populated area of the town — including the Church of England diocese.

But the Tauheedul mosque is favourite to take over. A report to the local council said any attempt to turn Sacred Heart into a non-religious community school would be rejected because of the Coalition Government’s “stated preference for new faith schools and free schools”.

Mr Devonport added: “There will be no disruption for children at the school.”

           — Hat tip: TSJ [Return to headlines]



UK: London is Home to Hamas Hub, Says Israel

Israel’s defence ministry has accused a London-based Palestinian centre of “terror-affiliated activities” and being the organisational arm of the militant Islamic Hamas movement in Europe. Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip and advocates violent opposition to the Jewish state, is designated by the European Union as a terrorist organisation.

An Israeli defence ministry statement issued on Tuesday said that the Palestinian Return Centre in Ealing, north London, organises conferences in Europe at which it plays taped speeches by Hamas leaders who are banned from entering the EU.

“The centre is involved in initiating and organising radical and violent activity against Israel in Europe, while delegitimising Israel’s status as a nation among the European community,” the statement said. “Among other terror-affiliated activities, the centre organises many conferences in various European countries for Hamas and Muslim Brotherhood activists from all around the world,” it added. On its website, the centre describes itself as “an independent consultancy focusing on the historical, political and legal aspects of the Palestinian Refugees.”

Israel however, says it is is “part of the broader Hamas activism and support network within Europe, which is especially strong in England.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Labour MP Condemns Petition Plans

Moves to give the public a say on what new laws are debated in Parliament would put power in the hands of “the obsessed and the fanatical”, a Labour MP has said.

“This seems to be an attractive idea to those who haven’t seen how useless this has been in other parts of the world when it’s tried. If you ask people the question ‘do you want to pay less tax?’, they vote yes,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“If we get the e-petitions in there will be some asking for Jeremy Clarkson to be prime minister, for Jedi and Darth Vader to be the religions of the country. The blogosphere is not an area that is open to sensible debate; it is dominated by the obsessed and the fanatical and we will get crazy ideas coming forward.”

Ministers are examining how to ensure support is not artificially boosted by repeat votes and how best to incorporate social networking sites and other websites in the process.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Man and Woman Charged With Murder of 15-Year-Old Boy Found Dead in a Bath on Christmas Day

A man and woman were today charged with the murder of a 15-year-old boy who was found dead in a bath on Christmas Day.

Eric Baikubi, 27, of Newham, East London, and a 27-year-old woman of the same address will appear before magistrates in London later today.

Officers discovered the badly-injured teenager at a flat in Newham, East London, about lunchtime on Saturday, after being told he had drowned in a bath.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Online Petition Plans to Go Ahead

Moves to give the public a say on what new laws are debated in Parliament would put power in the hands of “the obsessed and the fanatical”, a Labour MP said today.

The Government is pressing ahead with plans to allow petitions attracting significant voter support to be debated in Parliament — with those attracting the most signatures even translated into Bills.

Details of the system — which was among promises set out in the Tory/Lib Dem coalition agreement in May — are yet to be set out or agreed with Commons business chiefs including Speaker John Bercow.

But it is expected that the new backbench business committee will be asked to co-ordinate the timetabling of debates on public-inspired demands for action submitted via the DirectGov website.

It could also be asked to help find backbench MPs willing to lead the cause of any legislation drafted on the basis of the most popular cause.

The guarantee of a formal debate for any petition securing 100,000 or more signatures and the chance of seeing a proposal put into law was among ideas suggested by David Cameron while in opposition to improve voter engagement in the wake of the expenses scandal.

It was strongly criticised however by Paul Flynn, a Labour member of the Commons public administration committee.

“This seems to be an attractive idea to those who haven’t seen how useless this has been in other parts of the world when it’s tried. If you ask people the question ‘do you want to pay less tax?’, they vote yes,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“If we get the e-petitions in there will be some asking for Jeremy Clarkson to be prime minister, for Jedi and Darth Vader to be the religions of the country.

“The blogosphere is not an area that is open to sensible debate; it is dominated by the obsessed and the fanatical and we will get crazy ideas coming forward.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Paedophile Dressed as Policeman Tried to Abduct Schoolboy by ‘Taking Him for Questioning’

A shopkeeper stopped a convicted paedophile as he tried to abduct a schoolboy while posing as a police officer.

Brandon Cunningham, 20, put on a stab vest and impersonated a CID detective when he approached the 15-year-old boy as he bought sweets from a newsagents.

He searched the teenager and ‘arrested’ him before taking his house keys and marching him away for questioning.

Harekrishna Patel, the quick-thinking shopkeeper who knew the boy, stepped in when he became suspicious.

He confronted Cunningham and when he was unable to produce a police ID badge he called for the real police who came and arrested him.

[…]

‘As the youth was searched and taken away, Mr Patel had a feeling something was not right and set off in pursuit, confronting Cunningham who was unable to produce police ID, so he intervened by holding on to the bogus officer until the police arrived.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: PCSO: £1.2m Per Crime: The Cost of Just One Force’s ‘Plastic Plods’

Police community support officers cost up to £1.2m for each crime they detected last year, shocking new figures reveal.

In Nottinghamshire £7m was spent on paying 265 PCSOs’ wages — with the team detecting just six crimes in 2009/10.

Meanwhile 311 support officers with a wage bill of £9.3m in South Wales only detected eight crimes in 2009.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Political Views ‘Hard-Wired’ Into Your Brain

Scientists have found that people with conservative views have brains with larger amygdalas, almond shaped areas in the centre of the brain often associated with anxiety and emotions.

On the otherhand, they have a smaller anterior cingulate, an area at the front of the brain associated with courage and looking on the bright side of life.

The “exciting” correlation was found by scientists at University College London who scanned the brains of two members of parliament and a number of students.

They found that the size of the two areas of the brain directly related to the political views of the volunteers.

However as they were all adults it was hard to say whether their brains had been born that way or had developed through experience.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Top Gear Stars Cause Religious Storm After Dressing Up in Burkas on Boxing Day Special

Jeremy Clarkson and his Top Gear co-stars have sparked religious outrage after dressing up in burkas on the Boxing Day special.

Clarkson and Richard Hammond decided to dress in niqabs, a form of the burka where everything but the eyes are covered, in order to disguise themselves on the road.

They also got James May in on the act when they greeted him from hospital after he fell and hit his head on rocks in the Syrian desert.

But their joke backfired after they were slammed by Muslims for mocking their religion.

Islamic extremist Anjem Choudary, said: ‘The burka is a symbol of our religion and people should not make jokes about it in any way. ‘It would have been equally bad even if they’d not been in a country mainly populated by Muslims.’

On the Boxing Day episode of the show, the trio were driving across the Middle East to follow the path of the Three Wise Men.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Wales: Neighbours Left Shocked by Arrests of Terror Suspects

NEIGHBOURS of the charged trio yesterday spoke of their shock.

The accused were described by residents in Riverside as Muslim family men who generally kept to themselves.

Gurukanth Desai, Omar Sharif Latif and Abdul Malik Miah all lived within a few minutes’ walk of each other in the city suburb.

Police returned to the men’s homes on Boxing Day and in the early hours of yesterday morning, but it is understood the properties have been empty since last Monday’s arrests.

Neighbours of 26-year-old Desai, who lived at Albert Street, said he had moved into the terrace house five months ago with his wife and three young children.

A neighbour, who did not want to be named, said. “When they came here we thought they were good family people. He was a really nice guy and spoke very politely.”

Another Albert Street resident added: “I know he was a family man and I just thought they were a normal family.”

Neighbours of Omar Sharif Latif said the 26-year-old lived at Neville Street with his parents, brother and sister.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Balkans


The Demolition of the Yugoslav Tribunal

Edward S. Herman

A review of Germinal Chivikov’s book Srebrenica: The Star Witness (orig. Srebrenica: Der Kronzeuge, 2009, transl. by John Laughland) — “a devastating indictment of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY).”

The book shows that the Tribunal “does not behave according to the traditions of the rule of law”—it is a political rather than judicial institution, and has played this political role well. It is not the first work to effectively assail the Tribunal—Laughland’s own book Travesty (Pluto: 2006), and Michael Mandel’s How America Gets Away With Murder (Pluto: 2004) are powerful critiques. But Civikov’s book is unique in its intensive and very effective focus on a single witness, Drazen Erdemovic, and the ICTY’s prosecutors and judges handling of that witness. Erdemovic was the prosecution’s “star witness,” the only one in the trials of various Serb military and political figures to have claimed actual participation in a massacre of Bosnian Muslim prisoners. It is therefore of great interest and importance that Civikov is able to show very convincingly that this key witness was a charlatan, fraud, and mercenary, and that the ICTY’s prosecutors and judges effectively conspired to allow this witness’s extremely dubious and contradictory claims to be accepted without verification or honest challenge.

Erdemovic was a member of a Bosnian Serb military unit, the “10th Sabotage Unit,” an eight-man team of which he claimed shot to death 1,200 Bosnian Muslim prisoners at Branjevo Farm north of Srebrenica in Bosnia on July 16, 1995. Erdemovic confessed to having personally killed 70-100 prisoners. He was initially arrested by Yugoslav authorities on March 3, 1996, and quickly indicted, but was turned over to the ICTY at pressing U.S. and ICTY official request on March 30, 1996, supposedly temporarily, but in fact, permanently. He was himself eventually tried, convicted, and served three and a half years in prison for his crimes. This was a rather short term for an acknowledged killer of 70-100 prisoners, but longer than he had anticipated when he agreed to testify for the ICTY—he had expected complete immunity, as he told Le Figaro reporter Renaud Girard (“Bosnia: Confession of a War Criminal, “ Le Figaro, March 8, 1996). He claimed to have an agreement with the ICTY whereby “in return for his evidence he will be allowed to settle in a Western country with his family. He will enter the box as a witness, not as an accused, and will thus escape all punishment.” But his earlier arrest, indictment and publicity in Yugoslavia may have made some prison term necessary for the ICTY’s credibility. He ended up after his prison term in an unknown location as a “protected witness” of the ICTY. But even before his own sentencing he had begun his role as star witness in the ICTY’s (and U.S. and NATO’s) trials of accused Serbs. He appeared in five such trials, and from beginning to end was taken as a truth-teller by prosecutors, judges, and the mainstream media.

One of the most remarkable and revealing features of the Erdemovic case is that although he named seven individuals who did the killing with him, and two superiors in the chain of command who ordered or failed to stop the crime, not one of these was ever brought into an ICTY court either as an accused killer or to confirm any of Erdemovic’s claims. These co-killers have lived quietly, within easy reach of ICTY jurisdiction, but untroubled by that institution and any demands seemingly imposed by a rule of law. The commander of his unit, Milorad Pelemis, who Erdemovic claimed had given the order to kill, made it clear in an interview published in a Belgrade newspaper in November 2005, that the Hague investigators have never questioned him. He had never gone into hiding, but has lived undisturbed with his wife and children in Belgrade. Nor have ICTY investigators bothered with Brano Gojkovic, a private in the killer team who Erdemovic claimed was somehow in immediate command of the unit (a point never explained by him or prosecutors or judges). Civikov points out that only once did the judges in any of the five trials in which the star witness testified ask the prosecutors whether they were investigating these other killers. The prosecutors assured the judges in 1996 that the others were being investigated, but 14 years later the Office of the Prosecutor had not questioned one of them. And from 1996 onward the judges never came back to the subject.

As these seven were killers of many hundreds in Erdemovic’s version, and the prosecutors and judges took Erdemovic’s version as true, why were these killers left untouched? One thing immediately clear is that the ICTY was not in the business of serving impartial justice even to the point of arresting and trying wholesale killers of Bosnian Muslims in a case the ICTY itself called “genocide.” But ignoring the co-perpetrators in this case strongly suggests that the prosecutors and judges were engaged in a political project—protecting a witness who would say what the ICTY wanted said, and refusing to allow any contesting evidence or cross-examination that would discredit the star witness. Civikov points out that the only time Erdemovic was subject to serious cross-examination was when he was questioned by Milosevic himself during the marathon Milosevic trial. And Civikov shows well that the ICTY presiding judge in that case, Richard May, went to great pains to stop Milosevic whenever his questions penetrated too deeply into the area of Erdemovic’s connections or credibility…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]



Two Nations Under Islamic Duress — Serbia and Israel

In the 14th century, the Byzantine Empire began to crumble, finally falling to the Ottoman Turks in 1453. But in 1389, the Ottoman Turkish sultan, Murad, 1, began to lead his forces against the armies of the Serbian prince Lazar.

The Serbian prince had already been active in resisting increasing Muslim raids against Christian lands in the Balkans and had called his barons, knights and warriors together to ask them if they should fight or become slaves, dhimmis, to the Muslims. The decision was made to fight although their forces would number some 35,000 against a Turkish Muslim host of 100,000. But better to fight than to be enslaved.

The place chosen to make a stand against the Muslim Turks was at Kosovo Polje (the Field of Blackbirds) in Kosovo — the heartland of the Serbian nation. It was in June, 1389, on St. Vitus Day, (Vidovdan), that the rival forces met.

Prince Lazar reviewed the serried ranks of his foot soldiers and the mass of his cavalry, but he saw facing him a Muslim horde with a sea of waving flags upon which were emblazoned the Islamic crescent. He called upon all Serbs on that day saying: “Whoever is of Serbian descent and fails to come and fight in Kosovo, may his name be cursed for as long as his lineage should last.”

The battle began at first with Serbian successes and the great Serbian hero, Milos Obilic, killed the Turkish Muslim sultan, Murad. For a while the Turks were in disarray but they managed to recover and by their sheer weight of numbers ground down and defeated the Serbian army.

It was not a mere military defeat but the end of Serbian independence and the beginning of 500 years of Christian suffering under the Muslim yoke. But worse still, the Serbian heartland of Kosovo was lost. For the Serbian people, the blood shed at the Battle of Kosovo in the Field of Blackbirds marks Kosovo as eternally Serbian.

Another year in history that haunts the memory of a different people, who also suffered the loss of their heartland, is the year 70 AD. It was in that terrible year that the Roman general, Titus, finally came with overwhelming force against the people of Judea and the Jewish capital city, Jerusalem.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Morocco: 6 Arrested for Planning Attacks Abroad

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, DECEMBER 27 — Moroccan security forces have arrested six Moroccans who are suspected of planning terrorist attacks in the Maghreb country and abroad. The news was announced today by the country’s Interior Minister, who did not specify when and where the arrests were made.

The six are experts in the fabrication of explosives. They had planned to use explosives for attacks in non further specified countries and against foreign interests in Morocco, as well as Moroccan institutions and security structures.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Appeal by Netanyahu, No Violence Against Foreigners

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 22 — Today Israeli premier Benyamin Netanyahu invited his people to abide by the laws, not attack foreign workers and not to raise animosity against minorities. The appeal was made in the wake of repeated manifestations of xenophobia and hostility against Arabs and clandestine African workers in recent weeks.

In his message, which was also broadcast on YouTube and Facebook, Premier Netanyahu stated: “I ask the Israeli people, and I insist on it, not to take justice into their own hands and not to resort to violence or incitement. We are a State that respects people as such. On our behalf we will act to solve the problem of abiding to the law. It is what we do and it is what I ask the Israeli people to do”.

The premier assured that his government is actively committed to solve the problem of the presence of thousands of African clandestine people by building a wall along the border with Egypt, by sending them back to their countries of origin, and in other ways that have not been specified.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Britain Risks Israeli Anger by Extending Diplomatic Recognition to Palestinians

Britain is expected to risk Israeli protests by upgrading the status of the Palestinians’ diplomatic representation in London in response to the progress made in state-building preparations by its leadership in the West Bank.

Although the move would be symbolic rather than practical, it is being contemplated at a sensitive time because of deepening Israeli unease over Palestinian efforts to achieve international recognition ahead of negotiations or peace agreement.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Palestinians Reject Interim Peace Deal

Mr Netanyahu publicly endorsed a fallback alternative to a comprehensive peace agreement for the first time in an interview on Monday night. Avigdor Lieberman, his far-Right foreign minister, says an interim agreement would avoid having to reach a deal on the most divisive core issues, such as sovereignty over Jerusalem and the fate of Palestinian refugees.

But Nabil Abu Rudeina, an aide to the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, made it clear that an interim agreement was not an option as far as the Palestinians were concerned.

“Jerusalem is a red line as it is to be the capital of a future Palestinian state,” he said. “Going back to talk about a state without determining its borders is unacceptable, and it will not lead us to a true peace.”

With the Middle East peace process currently at an impasse, Mr Netanyahu told Israel’s Channel 10 television that he was ready to “go all the way” if the Palestinians were serious, but other options were possible. “There could be a situation in which talks with the Palestinians hit a brick wall over the issues of Jerusalem and the right of return [for refugees], and in that case the result would be an interim agreement.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Xenophobic Alarm Over Sudanese House Fire

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, DECEMBER 20 — A fire believed to be a case of arson in an flat in Ashdod (south of Tel Aviv) in which five Sudanese suffered smoke inhalation has raised alarm among Israeli activists involved in the defense of Africans in Israel.

According to reports in the daily paper Yediot Ahronot, unknown individuals attacked the flat over the night between Saturday and Sunday by hurling a flaming tyre which had been filled with highly flammable liquid. The newspaper added that the flat soon filled with thick smoke which forced its Sudanese occupants to flee. The incident (the first of its kind so far) immediately alarmed the organisation Anu Plitim (We Are Refugees), which provides assistance to workers and refugees from Africa that are attempting to put down roots in Israel. According to the organisation’s director, Shira Penn, the attack in Ashdod might be the consequence of a xenophobic campaign launched over the last few months by nationalistic Israeli rabbis. Yediot Ahronot said that some estimates put the number of Sudanese inhabitants in Ashdod — a city with over 100,000 overall — at about 2,000. There was recently a protest staged in disapproval of their presence in the city.

In order to put an end to illegal immigration of Africans to Israel, Benyamin Netanyahu’s government has recently started building a 240km barrier along the Israeli-Egyptian border.

Every month about 1,200 people enter Israel illegally through this border.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Britain Forms Plan for Gulf Evacuation in Event of War With Iran

The Coalition government under David Cameron ordered an immediate review of British military planning in the Gulf after the election last May. The Daily Telegraph can reveal that new proposals are being drawn up to coordinate military activity in the region with local allies hostile to Iran, particularly the United Arab Emirates.

Planners have realised they had to tear up existing emergency plans for local British residents. Since the previous review in the 1990s, the expatriate population has grown to more than 100,000 in the UAE alone, while a million British tourists, from businessmen on stopovers to England footballers with marital problems, come to Dubai every year. It is feared they might be at risk if, as it has promised, Iran retaliates for any military strikes on its nuclear sites with missile attacks on “western interests” in the Gulf.

Royal Navy warships, along with their American and French counterparts, regularly patrol the Gulf and tie up in UAE ports, while Iran has also threatened to mine the strategically crucial Straits of Hormuz. The region’s gearing up for the possibility of a war stands in contrast to the relaxing tourists on beaches or the opulent expat villa compounds.

In the last year, the United Nations, the US and Europe have all imposed heavy sanctions on Iran. The Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, was one of a number of regional Arab leaders revealed in Wikileaks cables to have been pressing for even tougher action. Diplomats say he has also been the key mover, along with William Hague, the foreign secretary, in demanding an upgrading of Britain’s traditional military ties with its former colonial protectorates in the Gulf.

He has also personally raised the issue of the safety of the foreign population, which makes up 70 per cent of the UAE’s 4.5 million residents.

The new military co-operation plan, whose full terms remain secret, will be signed off in the first half of 2011, when Mr Cameron is expected to visit. It is regarded as such a priority that it is being protected from defence cuts.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Caroline Glick: The Wars of 2011

On Sunday thousands of Israel haters gathered in Istanbul to welcome the Turkish-Hamas terror ship Mavi Marmara to the harbor. Festooned with Palestinian flags, the crowd chanted “Death to Israel,” “Down with Israel” and “Allah akbar” with Hizbullah-like enthusiasm.

The Turkish protesters promised to stand on the side of Hamas when it next goes to war with Israel. They may not have to wait long to keep their promise. Over the past two weeks Hamas has steeply escalated its missile war, launching over 30 missiles at Israel. Last week, a missile that narrowly missed a nursery school wounded a young girl.

Since Operation Cast Lead two years ago, Iran has helped Hamas massively increase its missile and other military capabilities. Today the terror group that rules Gaza has missiles capable of reaching Tel Aviv. It has advanced antitank missiles. As Hamas spokesman Abu Obeida said Saturday, “We are now stronger than before and during the war, and our silence over the past two years was only for evaluating the situation.”…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Dubai: Mother Gives Birth in Airport Toilet, Strangles the Baby, Dumps Its Corpse in a Bin… Then Catches Flight Out

The mother — believed to be Ethiopian and in her thirties — caught a flight before the infant’s body was discovered by a cleaner at Dubai International Airport.

She was identified using security camera footage and is being hunted by police.

The woman allegedly severed the baby boy’s umbilical cord with her bare hands and strangled him with a cloth before dumping him.

The infant was discovered when a woman passenger informed one of the airport’s cleaners about a pool of blood in the bathroom.

Traces of blood led to the bin where the baby was found, soaked in blood, tied up with his umbilical cord in a tightly wrapped plastic bag.

The boy was still gasping for breath but a rescue team and volunteers could not revive him.

‘At around 3.35am I went to the toilet to clean up the blood around a toilet bowl,’ the cleaner told the Khaleej Times newspaper.

‘After that I decided to empty the waste bin which was covered with paper rolls.

‘When I lifted it I found it to be a little heavier, so I got curious and started removing the tissue papers.

‘I was stunned to see a baby all blue on the face and gasping for breath.’

It is unclear whether the woman was a UAE resident, tourist or passenger in transit.

A security source said it appeared the woman had strangled the infant, whose body was undergoing further tests.

‘Most likely the woman wanted to get rid of the baby as it was a child outside wedlock,’ said the source. ‘It seems that the woman had intended to leave the UAE before the delivery but was faced with a different reality in the airport.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Iran Hangs ‘Mossad Spy’ For Relaying Military Secrets to Arch-Enemy Israel

Ali Akbar Siadat, an Iranian, was found guilty of relaying sensitive data to Mossad, having worked for the Israeli intelligence agency since 2004.

He was arrested four years later when he tried to leave Iran with his wife.

Iran and Israel have been enemies since the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran and Tehran periodically announces the arrest of people suspected of spying for Israel, which Iran refuses to recognise.

‘Ali Akbar Siadat, who spied for Israel’s Mossad, was hanged inside the Evin prison (in Tehran) this morning,’ the official IRNA news agency quoted a statement from the judiciary as saying.

‘He was convicted of corruption on Earth, confronting the Islamic Republic and strengthening the Zionist regime (Israel).’

‘Siadat confessed receiving $60,000 for transferring classified information to Mossad on Iran’s military activities,’ said IRNA. He is also said to have been given $7,000 each time he met with his handlers.

The statement said he had been given ‘special equipment including a laptop’ to contact Mossad.

IRNA said Siadat met Israeli agents in Turkey, Thailand and the Netherlands among other countries. He is said to have given them information on Iran’s military drills, military bases, military aircraft as well as missile systems operated by the Revolutionary Guards.

A convicted Iranian, Ali Ashtari, was hanged in Iran in 2008 for working with Mossad. The electronics salesman was convicted of relaying information on the country’s nuclear programme. Israel denied any links with the case.

And in 2000, a court convicted 10 Iranian Jews of spying for Israel in a closed-door trial and sentenced them to prison terms ranging from four to 13 years. All were released before serving out their full sentences after international pressure.

Over the past decade, Iran has stepped up its domestic military production, including missiles capable of reaching Israel and beyond — aiming, Tehran says, to defend the country from Israel and the U.S. amid Iranian concern they might strike its nuclear facilities.

Iran often accuses Israel and the United States of trying to destabilise the Islamic Republic.

Israel, believed to be the only country in the Middle East with nuclear weapons, sides with the United States and its allies in accusing Iran of seeking to build atomic weapons of its own.

Iran denies this, saying it wants to use nuclear power to generate electricity.

Israel has not ruled out military strikes on Iran if diplomatic efforts fail to resolve the stand off over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Iran has vowed to retaliate to any strikes with missile salvoes on Israel and U.S. targets in the Gulf.

IRNA also said Ali Saremi, a member of the exiled opposition group the Mujahideen Khalq Organisation, was hanged for various offences, including ‘moharebe’ or waging war against God.

Under Iran’s penal code, imposed since its 1979 Islamic revolution, espionage and waging war against God can carry the death penalty.

IRNA also reported that another Iranian, identified as Ali Sarami, was hanged on Tuesday in Evin after being convicted of membership in an exiled opposition group, the Mujahedeen-e Khalq Organization.

It said he had been arrested several times since 1982 for membership in the group but had continued his activities each time. He was detained in 2007 for the last time and was sentenced to death, IRNA reported.

MEK in a statement Tuesday claimed Sarami’s wife and daughter as well as two other supporters were arrested while protesting outside Evin prison after his execution.

It said Sarami, 63, has spent a total 24 years in prison from various incarcerations under the shah and clerical rule. Though arrested in 2007, his death sentence came after mass opposition protests that were held in December 2009, the group said.

The MEK said that before his arrest, Sarami visited a son who is staying at Camp Ashraf, an MEK base in neighboring Iraq. Iranian authorities have arrested other people in the past in part for visiting relatives in the camp.

Amnesty International reported in August that in addition to Sarami, six others in Iranian prisons are facing execution after being sentenced to death for MEK links.

The MEK is a bitter opponent of Iran’s ruling clerics. It was founded in the 1960s and opposed the rule of the U.S.-backed shah, but then after his fall in the 1979 Islamic Revolution, it carried out attacks against the cleric-led government that came to power.

MEK and its affiliates were deemed foreign terrorist organizations by the U.S. State Department in 1997.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Love the Vuvuzela and Don’t Take a Nap: Muslim Scholars Issue 350,000 New Year Fatwas

The monotonous drone of vuvuzelas that irritated almost all football fans during the World Cup is OK, and it doesn’t matter how much noise a donkey makes, it musn’t be touched.

But buy a car raffle ticket and you could be in big trouble, and taking an afternoon nap gets the thumbs down.

That’s according to 350,000 Islamic religious decrees, called fatwas, being issued by Muslim scholars on their Website in Abu Dhabi.

They cover a vast range of personal and religious questions submitted online, over the phone or via text to the General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowments.

Vuvuzelas are permissible in soccer stadiums providing they don’t exceed 100 decibels which could damage people’s hearing, and it is illegal to kill a noisy donkey, bird or other animal, no matter how annoying they are.

Body paint, henna and make-up are allowed because they are deemed to be temporary, but tattoos are ruled out because they are permanent.

Car raffles are out because they are ‘a kind of gambling’, and a afternoon nap is banned because the time could be used more productively.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Sheikh Confirms SARG Involvement in Escalating Situation in Days Prior to Rioting 8. 2. 2006

[SARG = Syrian Arab Republic Government]

1. (C) Summary: An influential Sunni sheikh provided details February 6 that seem to confirm SARG involvement in escalating the situation that led to the violent rioting in Damascus two days earlier, including communications between the PMs office and the Grand Mufti. He also noted that SARG authorities now seem intent on identifying a few scapegoats to be blamed for the incidents. The Danish Ambassador confirmed to us separately that the Minster of the Awqaaf had inflamed the situation the day before the rioting, with his remarks at Friday prayers in a mosque. End Summary…

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Syria: Country’s First Casino Opens in Damascus

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, DECEMBER 27 — The first casino in Syrian history opened near Damascus on December 25, though the news was given only today, according to reports in the Lebanese An Nahar this morning. Citing well-connected Syrian sources, the authoritative Beirut-based daily noted that the first casino authorised in Syria was inaugurated Saturday evening in a building along the road leading to the airport (30 km south of the capital) near a luxury hotel complex built near the international airport. An Nahar reports that the Damascus casino, managed by the joint Syrian-international company Ocean Club, and currently “open on an experimental basis”, offers the most common games used for gambling, such as Roulette, Baccarat, Blackjack and slot machines. Entrance to the new structure costs nine dollars (just over 6 euros) per person, with the fee inclusive of an alcoholic drink, and the aim is to attract wealthy local clients as well as those from Iraq and Jordan who for years have crowded round the green tables of Lebanon’s casino, the most famous one in the entire Middle East. An Nahar noted that in the 1970s the wealthy Syrian family of entrepreneurs Hububati had managed a gambling house in Damascus which was “similar to a casino”, and that Khaled Hububati had reportedly renewed the old administrative permit, becoming the “main partner” of Ocean Club.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria Helped Orchestrate 2006 Mohammed Cartoon Riots, WikiLeaks Cables Reveal

The government of Syria was active in organizing the 2006 riots that erupted across the Arab world following the publication of controversial cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, Oslo daily Aftenposten reported Monday, quoting US diplomatic cables released by website WikiLeaks.

The cartoons were originally published in neighboring Denmark in 2005. Their publication resulted in violent protests, including attacks on several embassies in Damascus in early February 2006. Embassies targeted included those of Norway, Denmark and Sweden.

A US diplomatic cable published by Aftenposten said the Syrian premier had, “several days before the demonstrations, instructed the Grand Mufti Sheikh Hassoun to issue a strongly worded directive to the imams delivering Friday sermons in the mosques of Damascus.”

The riots ended when Syria “felt that ‘the message had been delivered’,” the cable said, quoting a Sunni sheikh whose name was blacked out.

The incident resulted in the evacuation of Norwegian diplomats and demands for compensation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



World Traveler: Scholar and Convert to Islam Now Calls Turkey Home

A practicing Muslim since the age of 12, Isa Kocher claims to have gone through all the religions before finally settling on Islam due to its philosophy based on peace. A Swiss national but a New Yorker at heart, said the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York were the most difficult days of his life, noting that the World Trade Center held great meaning for him in an artistic sense.

The World Trade Center held great meaning for him in an artistic sense, says Isa Kocher, who now lives in Istanbul’s Ikitelli district, an industrial quarter at the periphery of the city.

A Swiss national but a New Yorker at heart, Isa Kocher is a scholar, U.S. war veteran and self-declared eccentric now living in Istanbul’s Ikitelli, an industrial quarter on the periphery of the city.

A practicing Muslim since the age of 12, Kocher claims to have gone through all the religions before finally settling on Islam due to its philosophy based on peace.

“I chose to believe in Islam because the word stands for peace. Not the peace obtained from smoking marijuana — peace is a struggle. I get angry everyday so I’m not a pacifist by nature, but by choice. It’s not easy but it’s the only choice, you can’t win by fighting because there’s always someone bigger than you,” he said.

Isa Kocher was exposed to Islam by reading the works of Washington Irving and made the proclamation of faith (shahada) for the first time at the 12. Later, he attended prayers at a mosque in Tribeca, New York, where he made tea and rice every night.

Kocher’s belief in Islam is based on the idea that all human beings have their own unique and personal relation to the divine. “I have no right to stand between anyone and the divine. God is God — whatever color you paint Him,” he said.

As a Muslim, Kocher said the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York were the most difficult days of his life, noting that the World Trade Center held great meaning for him in an artistic sense. Moreover, however, he described the event as the day democracy collapsed.

“It was the end of the world and everything that I believed in. I’m still a practicing Muslim but my beliefs are not based on anybody’s system,” he said.

Artist and a Democrat

Kocher has lived and traveled in countries around the world and has adopted several children scattered across the globe.

Just in Turkey alone, he said his varied CV includes having worked on Internet public relations for the Democrats Abroad, as well as teaching positions at a variety of private Turkish universities in a variety of positions.

Kocher has also exhibited his works of art three times at Istanbul’s Akbank Sanat Gallery and is also continuing to work on various photography projects and poetry publications.

Apart from his global journeys, Kocher said he has also traveled widely in Turkey, commenting on the hospitality of the Turks he encountered, claiming that he had never stayed in a hotel during his voyages.

“Every time I attended prayer in a mosque, I found that my bags had been moved from the mosque to somebody’s home,” he said.

He also commented on his profound love of Turkish culture and said one of his favorite hobbies was visiting saints’ tombs and building constructed by Ottoman master Mimar Sinan.

He also said living in Istanbul was hard if one was not rich and described how some locals in Ikitelli did not know how to react to him when he first started living in the area.

“They feel more reassured when they know that I’m a professor and that I’ve been to hajj and that I speak many languages. During the Muharram feast [a feast commemorating the beginning of the Islamic year] I made some Ashure [a traditional dessert] for everyone in the neighborhood. There’s about 25 kilos of it, so there was enough to go around,” he said.

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

South Asia


Afghanistan: Clash of Cultures

The struggle in Afghanistan has turned into a clash of cultures different from what had generally been expected. Both the NATO effort and the Taliban opposition have changed significantly in the course of the last nine years, resulting in a much changed situation.

NATO forces moved into Afghanistan to crush the Taliban and oust al Qaeda from its strongholds and training camps. These forces quickly took control of the country, but strongly rejected any suggestion of “nation building,” though NATO was instrumental in setting up democratic political institutions. But the results were a big disappointment to the Afghan population, to the Muslim World, and, indeed, to the NATO governments. NATO effectively empowered a corrupt, ineffective government that was widely despised by the population and served as a focal point for a resurgent Taliban. NATO has come to realize that Afghan stability does in fact demand nation building, or at least something like it. The threat of al Qaeda in Afghanistan has long ago faded into insignificance. The task has shifted into an effort to bring Afghanistan into the modern world, setting an example of Western support for Muslim development.

The Taliban have also changed significantly. Initially they were a medieval theocracy, reminiscent of the Spanish Inquisition, ruthless and uncompromising defenders of ascetic, medieval religious tenets. The widespread disappointment with the NATO transformation provided an opening for their resurgence. In the process, the Taliban have shifted from a claim of authority based on religious purity to authority based on force and intimidation. They live off opium production which they once sternly suppressed. They extensively employ suicide tactics alien to mainstream Muslim beliefs and to Afghan traditions. They have carried out widespread killings of respected community leaders and often innocent bystanders. They have turned into religious thugs opposing the movement of society into the modern world. Their reliance on terror tactics provides a vivid demonstration that their religious tenets have been rejected by the overwhelming majority of Afghans.

Afghanistan has become a focal point of the interaction between the West and the Muslim World. It is the embodiment of the Clash of Civilizations foreseen by Samuel Huntington. But the clash has turned out to be different from what was envisioned. It is not a clash between religious cultures. Rather, Afghanistan starkly demonstrates that it has become a clash

between medieval fundamentalism and modern civilization.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Football: Indonesians Cry Foul on Twitter After Losing Match to Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, 27 Dec. (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Furious Indonesians have flooded Twitter with accusations that Malaysia unfairly won a key regional football match after fans in Kuala Lumpur apparently distracted Indonesian players with laser beams.

At least four of the top 10 words and phrases most popularly used on the social network site were linked to tirades against Malaysia soon after the home team beat Indonesia 3-0 Sunday night in the first leg of the ASEAN Football Federation Cup final.

The match was halted for five minutes shortly after halftime when Indonesia’s goalkeeper and another player complained that bright green lights were directed at them from laser pens used by an unidentified few among the 85,000-strong crowd.

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



India Issues Nationwide Terror Alert

Indian authorities have deployed thousands of security personnel following warnings that Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based militant group, is planning an attack over the New Year weekend.

Police officers and paramilitaries were on high alert across the country, including in India’s financial capital, Mumbai, Indian officials said. House-to-house searches were under way in some areas of the city, which was attacked by Lashkar-e-Taiba in November 2008. Airports and railway stations, the city of Ahmedabad in the western state of Gujarat and the popular beach resort state of Goa were also on high alert following the warning, said to be based on “human” intelligence and received in recent days.

Most of the locations covered by the alert had been visited by David Headley, a Pakistani-American and member of Lashkar-e-Taiba who travelled widely in India before the Mumbai attack, one official told the Guardian. Headley was tasked by the extremist group with surveillance of targets in Mumbai itself but also visited Goa and the city of Pune, where there was a blast in February.

According to a secret report by Indian investigators of their interrogation of Headley in June, the undercover militant brought back film and notes on potential targets in India such as Jewish centres and tourist resorts favoured by Israelis which he passed on to his handlers.

In his interrogation, Headley claimed that he frequently combined missions for Lashkar-e-Taiba with missions for the main Pakistani spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI). His last trips to India before his arrest in Chicago in October last year were on behalf of a veteran Pakistani militant with links to al-Qaida called Ilyas Kashmiri, he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Has Carrier-Killer Missile, U.S. Admiral Says

China’s military is deploying a new anti-ship ballistic missile that can sink U.S. aircraft carriers, a weapon that specialists say gives Beijing new power-projection capabilities that will affect U.S. support for its Pacific allies.

Adm. Robert F. Willard, commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, disclosed to a Japanese newspaper on Sunday that the new anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) is now in the early stages of deployment after having undergone extensive testing.

“An analogy using a Western term would be ‘initial operational capability (IOC),’ whereby I think China would perceive that it has an operational capability now, but they continue to develop it,” Adm. Willard told the Asahi Shimbun. “I would gauge it as about the equivalent of a U.S. system that has achieved IOC.”

[…]

The new weapon, the “D” version of China’s DF-21 medium-range missile, involves firing the mobile missile into space, returning it into the atmosphere and then maneuvering it to its target

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



China Cuts Rare Earth Export Quotas

BEIJING (Reuters) — China announced on Tuesday it will cut its export quotas for rare earth minerals by more than 11 percent in the first half of 2011, further shrinking supplies of metals needed to make a range of high-tech products after Beijing slashed quotas for 2010.

China produces about 97 percent of rare earth elements, used worldwide in high-technology, clean energy and other products that exploit their special properties for magnetism, luminescence and strength.

The rare earth issue may further strain relations between China and the United States, which have been battered this year by arguments over everything from Tibet and Taiwan to the value of the Chinese currency. Chinese President Hu Jintao is due to visit the United States next month.

[…]

China slashed the export quota by 40 percent in 2010. The export restraints on rare earths has inflamed trade ties with the United States, European Union and Japan in particular.

In Washington, the U.S. Trade Representative’s office expressed concern over the latest announcement.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



China Moving Closer to Deploying Ballistic Missile That Can Sink an Aircraft Carrier

China aspires to become a global military, according to the commander of the U.S. Pacific Command.

The nation is developing a ballistic missile designed to sink an aircraft carrier, which could spell the end to the U.S.’s naval supremacy.

But China’s Foreign Ministry insists his military is one of peace, saying: ‘We pose no threat to other countries.’

The Chinese military are also expected to launch their first aircraft carrier next year — a year earlier than anticipated by US experts.

Admiral Robert Willard told Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper he believes the Chinese anti-ship ballistic missile program has achieved ‘initial operational capability.’

This means a workable design has been settled on and is being further developed.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Why Did a Stranger Shoot Me, Daddy? — Mariam Alkadmani’s Aguish Over Attack

SCHOOLGIRL Mariam Alkadmani was last night struggling to understand how she became the target of a gunman who knocked on the door of her family home and sprayed it with bullets.

One minute she was cooking potatoes with her mother, the next she was lying on her kitchen floor with a gunshot wound to her leg.

In what her family can only assume was a terrible case of mistaken identity, one of the bullets ricocheted and struck Mariam in the right thigh as she stood in the kitchen of the family’s Greenacre home, in Sydney’s southwest, on Monday night.

Speaking from her bed at The Children’s Hospital, Westmead last night, Mariam told The Daily Telegraph: “I didn’t understand what was happening or why. It all felt like one big nightmare.

“I didn’t even feel any pain when I was hit because we were all panicking. I was in shock. None of us ever want to go back home.”

Mariam was in shock after the shooting, in which a man fired 11 bullets into the house she shares with her parents and seven brothers. Her father Mouhamad said his daughter was in pain after surgery to have the bullet removed.

As his relatives cleaned blood from the kitchen floor yesterday, Mr Alkadmani, a travel agent, said he was glad Mariam was recovering well and would be released from hospital in a few days. “But the shock, I don’t know, this will take a long time to recover from,” he said.

Mariam’s 16-year-old brother Karem — who was standing next to his father when he answered the door — said he had to tell his sister she had been shot: “She didn’t know she got shot, so I told her to sit down and gave her a cloth and wrapped it.”

Mr Alkadmani said he did not see the shooter, who had hidden as he demanded to see a person named “Zach” or “Zachary”.

He began shooting after he was told he had the wrong address and Mr Alkadmani closed the door. The bullets ricocheted off walls, one hitting Mariam.

His 16-year-old son Karem saw his sister bleeding and crawled on the ground toward her.

“He keeps shooting, shooting, shooting until he finished the magazine and that’s it,” Mr Alkadmani said.

He said the gunman then ran from the house.

He said he could not understand why the gunman, a man described as being large to obese and of Pacific Islander appearance, had terrorised his family, which police have described as being respectable and the apparent victims of mistaken identity.

“Why, why just tell me, I’m asking the killer why he shoot at us without any reason,” he said.

Mr Alkadmani said there was no way he or his family could return to the home and would now live with relatives.

“If he (the gunman) got kids, he want someone to kill his kids? Just tell me why,” Mr Alkadmani said.

“I’ve been in Australia for 18 years and I haven’t been in touch with any type of trouble.”

Bankstown Police are hunting for the gunman and have made a public appeal for information…

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Ivory Coast on the Brink

By Elizabeth Kendal

AUSTRALIA (ANS) — Like Sudan and Nigeria, Ivory Coast sits atop a volatile ethnic-religious fault-line. Whilst the less-developed North has long been predominantly Muslim, the South — Ivory Coast’s economic and political engine — has historically been predominantly Christian and African Traditional Religion (ATR). Decades of mass immigration (1960-1993) from the neighbouring Muslim states of Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea might have been great for the economy, but they have tipped the demographic balance so that Ivory Coast — officially about one-third Muslim — is actually majority Muslim.

The civil war that erupted in September 2002 was portrayed by the international media as a crisis of democracy and human rights caused by Southern xenophobia and Islamophobia. In reality, Ivory Coast’s crisis is the consequence of decades of mass Muslim immigration coupled with political ambition and an internationally-sponsored Islamic agenda. The civil war was fought essentially between those who want all Ivory Coast’s Muslim immigrants naturalised — giving Ivory Coast a Muslim majority overnight — and those who do not. Though he denies it, former Prime Minister Alassane Ouattara, a Northern Muslim, was doubtless behind the September 2002 failed coup that triggered the war. Ouattara and his party, the Rally of the Republicans (RDR), have been playing the race and religion cards for political gain. Ouattara’s intent has been to have all the Muslim immigrants naturalised (over 4 million: estimated to comprise between 30 and 40 percent of the total population) so that he (their champion) can dragnet the Muslim vote. Ouattara has long had his eye on the presidency.

The civil war left Ivory Coast totally polarised, split between a virtually ethnic-religiously cleansed, rebel-controlled Muslim North and a government-controlled predominantly Christian, non-Muslim South. Since the war the North has been in serious decline with AIDS, poverty and lawlessness increasing exponentially. In November 2004 Ivory Coast’s Christian president, Laurent Gbagbo, launched surprise airstrikes against rebel positions in the North in an attempt to reunify the country. However, former colonial power France (which backs the rebels for economic gain) intervened, razing all IC’s airforce planes, destroying runways and sending tanks against the Presidential Palace, around which loyalists formed a human shield.

The West had insisted that Ivory Coast could be reconciled, reunified and essentially saved by means of democratic elections, such is their faith in ‘democracy’ and the inherent goodness of man. In reality, the divisions are so profound and the stakes are so high that, unless genuine reconciliation occurred first, elections could only trigger conflict. Elections were held on 28 November 2010, with both Gbagbo and Ouattara claiming victory. The US, European Union and African Union have recognised Ouattara as the winner and called for Gbagbo to respect democracy and step down. Russia meanwhile is blocking a UN statement that would recognise Ouatarra, saying that this is not the UN’s role. Ivory Coast’s non-Muslims are traumatised, fearing that their homeland — once the most prosperous ‘Christian’ nation in West Africa, home to the region’s largest cathedral, home-base to most of West Africa’s regional Christian ministries — is about to come under Muslim political domination.

(COMMENT: Ivory Coast’s crisis — the consequence of decades of Muslim mass immigration — is a foretaste of what several states in democratic Europe may be facing in a generation or two.)

           — Hat tip: RB [Return to headlines]



Sudan: Lawrence Solomon: Birth of an (Oil) Nation, Loss of an Islamic Prize

South Sudan votes for independence on January 9th, potentially touching off wars between Africa’s Islamic North and Christian south

In January, the Western world will welcome a new nation, South Sudan. The Islamic world will not. The coming independence of South Sudan, which holds most of the oil in the country now called Sudan, marks a loss of territory and of wealth for the Islamic world. Worse for Islam and Sudan, more losses may follow in black African areas that refused to become Islamicized.

Sudan, Africa’s largest country, is Islamic and Arabic in the north, Christian or animist and black in the south. Following an independence referendum January 9, the black south, an area the size of France, is expected to secede, taking with it 80% of Sudan’s five-billion barrels of oil and thus most of Sudan’s foreign exchange. Under the terms of an existing agreement, the revenue from oil, which is now being piped north through Sudan for export, is being split 50-50 between north and south. But Sudan, which many expect to declare war on South Sudan after the referendum, has good reason to worry that the existing agreement will be scrapped.

For one thing, South Sudan will be building a southeast oil pipeline, through neighbouring Kenya to a port on the ocean. Once built, South Sudanese oil need not flow north through Sudan, and Sudan will lose its ability to take its share. To add to Sudan’s worry, China — Sudan’s chief financier and the destination for 65% of Sudanese oil exports — has reversed its opposition to South Sudan’s independence and is now bidding to build the new pipeline.

More significantly, the West is hostile to Sudan because of its alliances with Iran and other radical Islamic regimes and because of its atrocities in Sudan’s Darfur region. It is the West that engineered South Sudan’s secession by arranging a referendum under UN auspices and it is the West that has secretly helped arm South Sudan. Last week, Russia joined the club of non-Islamic nations aligned against Sudan, reversing its opposition to South Sudan’s independence and, seeing an opportunity for its own oil industry, bringing combat helicopters to South Sudan to help provide the fledgling country with security. Others aiding South Sudan include Christian Kenya, through which most of its arms arrive, Christian Ethiopia, and Israel, which has played an outsized role in establishing South Sudan.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Leak: Mexican Army Mistrusts Other Gov’t Agencies

A leaked U.S. diplomatic cable published Saturday depicts the leader of Mexico’s army “lamenting” its lengthy role in the anti-drug offensive, but expecting it to last between seven and 10 more years.

The cable says Mexican Defense Secretary Gen. Guillermo Galvan Galvan mistrusts other Mexican law enforcement agencies and prefers to work separately, because corrupt officials had leaked information in the past.

The copy of the Oct. 26, 2009 cable describes a meeting between Mexico’s top soldier and former U.S. national intelligence director Dennis Blair.

Mexico’s Defense Department “runs the risk of losing public prestige and being criticized on human rights issues as its mandate is extended,” the cable quotes the general as saying, “but he (Galvan Galvan) nevertheless expects the military to maintain its current role for the next 7 to 10 years. Galvan did suggest that increased U.S. intelligence assistance could shorten that time frame.”

The cable published Saturday by The New York Times also quotes the general as saying that Mexico’s army “would be willing to accept any training the U.S. (government) can offer,” and noted that two Mexican army officers had been posted to the El Paso, Texas Intelligence Center, to speed the sharing of information.

Galvan Galvan is quoted in the cable as saying Mexican authorities are pursuing fugitive drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, but noted the capo moves between 10 to 15 locations to avoid arrest and has a security detail of up to 300 men.

The Mexican president’s office was not immediately available for comment on the cable’s release. Contacted about another cable earlier, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Lawrence Payne said the agency cannot comment about the WikiLeaks cable, because such cables are considered classified.

In a joint statement Saturday, the Defense Department and civilian law enforcement agencies said they were pursuing Guzman’s Sinaloa cartel “equally intensely and systematically” as any of Mexico’s other four major drug cartels.

More than 30,000 people have been killed in drug violence in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown against powerful cartels in late 2006.

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

Immigration


Sixty ‘Gazans’ Reach Shores of Southern Italy

Rome, 27 Dec. (AKI) — A boat carrying 60 people claiming to be Palestinians landed early Monday on Italy’s Adriatic coast about 60 kilometres north of Bari.

Members of group that arrived on the beach in the city of Barletta said they were fleeing the Gaza Strip.

The police intercepted them after being altered to their presence by local residents.

All 60 were males and said they reached Italy’s porous shore after leaving a larger vessel in groups of 10 aboard a dingy.

Police have detained the men in a local detention centre to confirm their identities.

Immigrants have in the past claimed to be Palestinians fleeing persecution in Gaza as a way of being granted refugee status. In some cases, immigrants have been found to be from other areas like Egypt.

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



Turkish-Germans Struggle With Dilemma of Double Identity

The son of Turkish parents who migrated to Germany in the 1960s, Aydin Bilge grew up caught between two worlds. Raised by his grandmother in Turkey, Bilge moved to Germany once his parents had become financially stable enough to send for him.

“It was hard for me to adapt to Germany. I was subjected to xenophobia here,” he told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review. But when Bilge, who described himself as “both Turkish and German,” traveled to Turkey in 2005 to search for his identity, he did not receive a much warmer welcome. He had married a Turkish woman, but his mother-in-law did not approve of him because he was “Almanci” (a Turk who works in Germany).

“I was seen differently just because I was dressed differently and wore earrings. I returned to Germany. I lost my happy marriage,” Bilge said.

This sense of belonging to nowhere, of struggling with a double identity that sometimes feels like a lack of one at all, haunts many Turkish-Germans, particularly members of the second generation of Turks living in Germany, the most sizeable Turkish migrant group in Europe. Next year will mark the 50th anniversary of the beginning of mass immigration of Turkish workers, mostly from rural areas, to meet the additional labor demand during the economic restructuring of Germany known as the “economic miracle.”

Nearly half a century after West Germany signed a bilateral recruitment agreement with Turkey in 1961 to create a formal guest-worker program, many Turks still feel labeled due to their cultural background in Germany, where they are the subjects of ongoing integration debates.

The meaning of integration and an integrated immigrant are not easy to define, however. One official explained integration as speaking the language, having the ability to participate in education, social life and the job market and accepting German laws and basic values. “We are not talking about assimilation,” the official said. “But there are certain basics that immigrants should comply with.”

Even the word “integration” is enough to rile some members of the Turkish community. “People are telling us about integration. What does it mean? What do they expect us? Shall I go out in the street and shout ‘I am German’?” said Dursun Sahin, the vice president of the Turkish-German Businessmen’s Association.

“Integration is not a one-way street. We are coming from a different culture. If they want to send the Turks back, then they should not talk about integration,” he said. “Next year will be the 50th anniversary of Turks living in Germany. We have been paying taxes for 50 years.”

Some Turkish immigrants say they are discriminated against in German society because of their backgrounds and names, even if they speak very good German and dress like everyone else. “Many Turkish-origin people are sending out CVs for jobs but although they meet the required qualifications, they are not called for interviews. It has been discovered that their CVs were not even looked at by German employers because of their Turkish names,” said Ilknur Gümüs from the Intercultural Center for Counseling and Meeting in Berlin.

Debates over integration

“One out of four people in Germany has a migration background,” said Barbara John, a lecturer at Humboldt University in Berlin. “The door for guest workers opened in 1955. It was assumed they would come and stay for two years and then go, but that was not the case.”

The assumption that Turkish migrants would work in Germany temporarily and then return to Turkey was also shared by the guest workers themselves, who centered their life plans around their eventual return. A recent study carried out by the Istanbul-based Koç University’s migration department revealed that second-generation Turks were affected personally and emotionally by their families’ plans to return.

“The return orientation of the ‘guest worker’ generation had consequences not only for the persons directly concerned but also for their families and especially for their children, the so-called 1.5 and second generations,” the study read.

Today immigrant groups in Germany are mostly associated with debates over integration, a policy prioritized by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government. Saying language is the primary obstacle before foreigners’ integration, German officials have allocated 10 percent of Germany’s GDP to education in 2011, versus a global average of 4.9 percent, and migrants will benefit from the increase significantly. Since 2005, the German government has spent a total of 1 billion euros on education but lingered below the global average each year.

“We have done a lot for the integration of foreigners. A comprehensive effort began a few years ago,” said one German official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We are late but not too late. I would have preferred earlier, of course.”

The integration debate was rekindled recently when a former member of the German Central Bank, Thilo Sarrazin, wrote a book saying foreigners — especially Muslims — were coming to Germany to take advantage of the German welfare system. Sarrazin’s book, which is on its way to being the most successful political book in the country since World War II, is seen as “very insulting,” “humiliating” and “biased” among German government circles, but it has at least brought the issue of integration back to the agenda again.

One immigrant’s story

Aydin Bilge’s story is in many ways a typical one. His family migrated to Germany in the 1960s as part of the guest-worker program, but since his parents did not speak any German, his mother did not want to give birth in a German hospital and instead returned to Turkey in her ninth month of pregnancy. When Bilge was three weeks old, his parents left him in Turkey, in the care of his grandmother. Speaking about the identity problems he faced after his parents brought him back to Germany, Bilge said there were no incentives at that time for immigrants to learn the language or integrate socially. He said he also holds the Turkish government responsible for not defending the rights of the Turkish community in Germany. “But I don’t blame anybody,” he said. “I have a problem with my own identity. I’ve been suffering for 30 years.”

Germany’s integration paradox

As the German government keeps the integration issue high on the agenda and generates policies to avoid the creation of parallel societies, or “ghettos,” German society is growing more xenophobic, making it harder to accept differences.

The bad consequences of migration were related to bad management of the issue, according to Professor Ahmet Içduygu, director of the Migration Research Program at Istanbul’s Koç University, who claimed the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States marked a breaking point that encouraged the return of assimilation policies amid rising Islamophobia not only in Germany but across Europe.

“In this new century, there has been a return to old policies. German laws are becoming conservative; they include culture and language tests and do not allow double citizenship,” he said. “But you cannot ignore the realities of life. People communicate, which is different from the past. Assimilation is no longer easy.”

German officials admit integration is a two-way street, meaning that while Turks try to adapt themselves to German rules and laws, German society should also show more readiness to accept differences.

“We will not make concession on our culture. Integration does not mean assimilation. We do not want to get assimilated,” said Aydin Bilge, a member of the second generation of Turks living in Germany. “The Germans should also move closer to us and explore our culture. We need to find a middle road. In the end we are all in the same boat.”

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



UK: The Muslim Population Has Grown From 1.65 Million to 2.87 Million Since 2001, Say Researchers. What Does This Mean for Liberal Britain?

There is a remarkable statistic in today’s main Daily Telegraph leader: The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life estimates that there are 2,869,000 Muslims in Britain, an increase of 74 per cent on its previous figure of 1,647,000, which was based on the 2001 census. No demographic statistics are reliable in an era of open borders, but such an expansion is unprecedented.

The figure of 2.87 million was first published by Pew in a little-noticed press release last September, announcing a report on Muslim Networks and Movements in Western Europe. The Pew Centre, based in Washington DC, is one of the most respected demographic research bodies in the world; its methodology is scrupulous and its approach non-partisan. The new total for British Muslims means that, so far as this country as concerned, Pew’s major 2009 report Mapping the Global Muslim Population is already spectacularly out of date. Here’s a map showing the updated distribution of the Muslim population in Europe:

The material about global Islam in the 2010 report is fascinating, but it’s the revision of British figures that took me by surprise. Why was it not more widely reported in the autumn? And what are the implications for society? For an analysis that puts the statistics in context, let me recommend this article from the British Religion In Numbers website, which makes the point that the 2001 figure was probably an underestimate.

Pew’s UK figure for 2010 is 2,869,000, which is equivalent to 4.6% of the population. In absolute terms, the UK has the third largest Muslim community on the continent, after Germany (4,119,000) and France (3,574,000).

In percentage terms, the UK is in ninth position, after Belgium (6.0%), France, Austria and Switzerland (5.7%), The Netherlands (5.5%), Germany (5.0%), Sweden (4.9%) and Greece (4.7%). UK Muslims account for 16.8% of all Muslims in Western Europe.

There have been other indications of a dramatic increase in the numbers of British Muslims: the UK Labour Force Survey recorded a rise from 1,870,000 in 2004 to 2,422,000 in 2008. So Pew’s findings aren’t unsupported by independent data. Common sense suggests explanations for the increase: a high Muslim birth rate and large-scale immigration. But I’m not sure that common sense tells us what this demographic earthquake means in practice for British public life.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Law School Gagging Speech

A Law student at Syracuse University is facing possible expulsion for “harassment,” but he doesn’t know who his accusers are or even why he’s in trouble.

The source of all the trouble is a fake news blog called SUCOLitis. It’s like The Onion, but it focuses on making fun of life in law school. In one post, the “Faculty Committee on Aesthetic Standards” names the Class of 2013 “Most Attractive in History.” In another, a beer bong is elected class president.

Harassment? Far from it. Very far, under any meaningful definition.

Humor, parody and satire are huge parts of our culture, and our society benefits from a wide range of social criticism, even when it’s anonymous.

That’s right: Nobody has taken responsibility for the anonymous blog. But one student, Len Audaer, appears to be facing prosecution anyway.

Law professor Gregory Germain (the “prosecutor” of this case in the school’s judicial system) began investigating Len two months ago, and has kept Len completely in the dark for the whole two months. Who are the accusers? Which blog post was harassing? Len doesn’t know. How could he even start to defend himself?

Knowing that universities can’t defend in public what they try to do in private, Len sought to draw attention to these abuses. But Germain is now seeking a gag order that would severely hurt Len’s efforts to publicize his situation. Germain wants to require any journalist reporting on the case to sign away the right to publish any case document unless the document is published whole. No excerpts, no quotations.

Germain knows full well that this would essentially prevent Audaer from appealing to the court of public opinion, leaving him no choice but to silently accept the findings of a campus judiciary that seems determined to get him.

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE, where I work) has stepped in to protect Len’s rights. While Syracuse is a private university not bound by the First Amendment, it promises students “the right to express themselves freely on any subject.” It also promises students “the right to fundamental fairness.”

It’s fundamentally unfair to threaten a student with expulsion for his protected speech for months while refusing to give him any of the evidence or name his accusers. We’ve asked Syracuse’s chancellor, Nancy Cantor, to honor Syracuse’s promises — but thus far she has done nothing.

Syracuse is teaching the next generation of lawyers that the right not to be offended trumps the rights of free speech and due process. Such bad lessons about fair procedure and free speech undermine some of the most important values in our democracy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkish Academic Women Discuss Glass Ceiling for Their Gender

Women are expected to become more masculine and suppress problems in their domestic life if they have any desire of advancing in their academic career, according to an expert speaking on gender issues in academia.

“Women in academia spend more time in positions ranked lower than professor because of their domestic labor load waiting for them outside of school. Let alone academic publishing, they hardly find time for research in this ‘publish or perish’ world,” Sibel Kalaycioglu, an associate professor at Middle East Technical University, or ODTÜ, said during a conference hosted in Ankara by Hacettepe University Women’s Research and Implementation Center, or HÜKSAM. The event was organized to raise awareness about the problems and gender issues women face in academia.

“Also, these women tend to feel like they have to postpone marriage and children, or even decide not to have children at all, if they want to achieve success in their career,” she said.

Women are underrepresented in every aspect of working life, Kalaycioglu said. “Only with a quota granted to them can women be fully represented in political life or in non-governmental organizations, which is very insulting.”

Turkey’s patriarchal society is the reason stereotypes exist regarding women’s roles, Kalaycioglu said.

“We learn our gender role from the beginning of our life. Even in primary school textbooks, some stereotyped roles are determined for women and men. For example, the picture of an idea family features a working father and a mother doing housework,” she said.

“Such stereotypes are so engrained in our culture that even young people consider jobs as feminine or masculine,” said conference visitor Aslihan Ögün Boyacioglu, from Hacettepe University’s sociology department, adding that all university students should take courses on gender issues.

Professor Seza Özen, from Hacettepe University’s Medical Faculty, said she was concerned most about role models on television. “People are continually exposed to role models created according to patriarchal culture norms.”

Özen said creating more effective role models and even implementing positive discrimination for women in the workforce would contribute to increasing women’s participation in Turkey’s workforce.

“Female and male academics may publish the same number of articles and they may be equal in some terms, but there is a glass ceiling for women. They have the chance for advancement, but they also have responsibilities other than work,” said Professor Sevkat Bahar Özvaris, from Hacettepe University’s Medical Faculty. “Giving birth is the main reason women take time off work. Men usually take time off for reasons such as career development.”

Kalaycioglu said Turkey ranked 126 out of 134 countries in the Gender Gap 2010 index in terms of the economic contribution of women and equal opportunities between the genders. “For a country like Turkey, which granted the right to elect and to be elected to women for the very first time among Western countries, this is a pity,” she said.

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



UK: Why Does Dr Rowan Williams Never Stand Up for Christianity?

The narrative of victimhood comes easily to followers of Islam. They constantly bemoan the prejudice they have to endure and the oppression they suffer in the bigoted western world, where Islamophobia is supposedly rampant. Every terrorist atrocity, every blood-soaked massacre is justified by reference to imagined grievances. But by far the greatest persecutors of other faiths are Muslim hardliners themselves. The great Caribbean writer VS Naipaul once described Islam as “sanctified rage”. The proof of those words has been graphically illustrated by a growing catalogue of barbarities committed by Islamic militants against Christians, none of them more shocking than the mass murder committed in a Catholic Church in Baghdad at the end of October, when 58 people were gunned down during an act of worship. “All of you are infidels,” said one of the killers before opening fire on the congregation.

This kind of lethal oppression against Christians is happening all over the Muslim world. In Nigeria there has been a spate of attacks on Christian churches and clerics. In the Philippines, 11 people were injured this week in the bombing of a Catholic chapel. The totalitarian nature of Islam, which is as much a political ideology as a religious creed, means that freedom of worship is drastically restricted for other believers.

One Pakistani woman, Asia Bibi, is now facing the death penalty for the crime of blasphemy after she allegedly insulted the prophet Mohammed. Asia Bibi says she did no such thing but only tried to defend her faith when Muslim co-workers on a farm accused her of being “unclean” and tried to convert her to Islam.

Yet western political leaders, through a mixture of cowardice and denial, have refused to challenge the Islamic culture of persecution. In any other sphere, they make an absolute fetish of their devotion to the causes of equality and anti-discrimination.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

General


Delaying Sex Makes Better Relationships, Study Finds

Delaying sex makes for a more satisfying and stable relationship later on, new research finds. Couples who had sex the earliest — such as after the first date or within the first month of dating — had the worst relationship outcomes. “What seems to happen is that if couples become sexual too early, this very rewarding area of the relationship overwhelms good decision-making and keeps couples in a relationship that might not be the best for them in the long-run,” study researcher Dean Busby, of Brigham Young University’s School of Family Life, told LiveScience.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



English Doomed as Global Language, Academic Says

British linguist Nicholas Ostler says the English language’s days as the global lingua franca are numbered despite even as it enjoys unheard-of global dominance. In his recent book “The Last Lingua Franca: English until the Return to Babel” he reaches the conclusion after tracing the rise and fall of one-time international languages Aramaic, Phoenician, and Persian. Ostler majored in Latin at Oxford University and has a doctorate in Sanskrit from MIT. The reasons are what he calls the “Three Rs” — ruin, relegation and resignation. Language is surprisingly easily influenced by political factors, he says, and the influence of English will weaken with the diminishing power of the world’s sole superpower, the U.S.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Future Shock? Welcome to the New Middle Ages

Imagine a world with a strong China reshaping Asia; India confidently extending its reach from Africa to Indonesia; Islam spreading its influence; a Europe replete with crises of legitimacy; sovereign city-states holding wealth and driving innovation; and private mercenary armies, religious radicals and humanitarian bodies playing by their own rules as they compete for hearts, minds and wallets.

It sounds familiar today. But it was just as true slightly less than a millennium ago at the height of the Middle Ages.

In recent years it has become conventional wisdom that the post-cold-war world will see rising powers such as China and Brazil create what international relations experts call a “multi-polar” order. Yet for the next 10 or 20 years, it not at all clear that the future many imagine will come to pass — namely that the relative US decline will continue, Europe will muddle along, China and India will grow ever stronger, and other straight-line projections.

In fact, the world we are moving into in 2011 is one not just with many more prominent nations, but one with numerous centres of power in other ways. It is, in short, a neo-medieval world. The 21st century will resemble nothing more than the 12th century.

You have to go back a thousand years to find a time when the world was genuinely western and eastern at the same time. Then, China’s Song dynasty presided over the world’s largest cities, mastered gunpowder and printed paper money.

At around the same time India’s Chola empire ruled the seas to Indonesia, and the Abbasid caliphate dominated from Africa to Persia. Byzantium swayed and lulled in weakness both due to and despite its vastness. Only in Europe is this medieval landscape viewed negatively.

This was a truly multi-polar world. Both ends of Eurasia and the powers in between called their own shots, just as in our own time China, India and the Arab/Islamic community increasingly do as well.

There is another reason why the metaphor is apt. In medieval times, the Crusades, and the Silk Road, linked Eurasia in the first global trading system — just as the globalised routes of trade are doing today.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Keep Universal Human Rights Intact

December 10th, 1948, can be viewed as a milestone in the history of humankind. On that day, the United Nations proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which was mainly a reaction to the total disdain for these rights during World War II.

Freedom

Article 1 of this declaration underlines its fundamental point: that all people are born free, and have equal rights and dignity. This equality is legally specified in article 7, saying that all people, without exception, have the right to equal protection from the law. It was the conviction of the UN that these principles of equal and permanent rights for all would form the basis for justice and peace in the world.

This declaration was independent of any religious or cultural context since human nature, despite religious and cultural differences, is seen as one. This inter-cultural consensus gave the declaration its universal value, and made it binding under international law.

Doubts

The universal value of human rights, however, has come increasingly under open scrutiny in the past few decades. In the post-war optimism of 1948 there was a conviction that the permanence of human rights worldwide could be implemented in order to lay the basis for a peaceful and just society.

In 2010, however, it is unfortunately increasingly clear that exactly the opposite has taken place, and that the principles of freedom and equality are gradually being torn down in the free world where they originated. Under the absurd motto that freedom and human rights are a bad match.

Since 1980, the attack on human rights has come from two sides: from the so-called non aligned countries, and from the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC), which represents 57 Islamic countries. Especially the latter has been trying for years to weaken the declaration, or to fundamentally change it.

A bad match

This attack is based on challenging the universal validity of human rights, as specified in the declaration. This is interpreted as a western secular concept with Judeo-Christian origins, matching badly with Islamic tradition. The west thus supposedly takes advantage of its hegemony to force this concept upon other cultures. On this basis, a process has been ongoing to systematically revise the UDHR in the light of Islamic law, or the Sharia.

This process kicked off on September 19th, 1981, when the Islamic Council of Europe came out with a general declaration of human rights of Islam. This declaration started off by saying that “Islam codified human rights 14 centuries ago by law (sharia).” Thus, Islam in fact invented human rights. Then the 57 OIC countries further worked out this principle in 1990 in their “Declaration of Cairo on Human Rights in Islam.”

Sharia

The Cairo declaration made it clear that it was meant as a guide for the 57 Islamic member states to use the Sharia as their main, or only, source of legislation. The Cairo declaration states in its preamble that God created Moslem societies as the best among nations, led by God’s perfect law (Sharia), and that this perfection requires Islamic nations to lead the human race.

This perfection also means that no other culture can be included since these other cultures are, by definition, less than perfect. God’s perfection according to the Sharia cannot, of course, be compared to something like the UDHR, which is merely the work of mortals.

In the Cairo declaration, the UDHR is encapsulated within the Islamic concept of the subservience of man to the will of God, which is found in the Sharia. What this means, in practice, is made clear towards the end of the declaration which concludes that “all rights and freedom are subject to the Sharia’s regulations.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Political Leanings Revealed by the Eyes

It may be time to take the phrase “political viewpoint” literally. A new study suggests that liberals are more likely than conservatives to follow other people’s eye movements.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



See No Sharia

Robert Conquest, the preeminent scholar of Soviet Communist totalitarianism, in his elucidation of Western vulnerability to totalitarian ideologies wrote that democracy itself is “far less a matter of institutions than habits of mind” — the latter being subject to constant “stresses and strains.” He then notes the disturbingly widespread acceptance of totalitarian concepts amongst the ordinary citizens of pluralist Western societies:

Many in the West gave their full allegiance to these alien beliefs. Many others were at any rate not ill disposed towards them. And beyond that there was … a sort of secondary infection of the mental atmosphere of the West which still to some degree persists, distorting thought in countries that escaped the more wholesale disasters of our time.

But Conquest evinces no sympathy for those numerous “Western intellectuals or near intellectuals” of the 1930s through the 1950s whose willful delusions about the Soviet Union “will be incredible to later students of mental aberration.” His critique of Western media highlights a cultural self-loathing tendency which has persisted and intensified over the intervening decades, through the present:

One role of the democratic media is, of course, to criticize their own governments, draw attention to the faults and failings of their own country. But when this results in a transfer of loyalties to a far worse and thoroughly inimical culture, or at least to a largely uncritical favoring of such a culture, it becomes a morbid affliction — involving, often enough, the uncritical acceptance of that culture’s own standards.

Mindslaughter, Redux

Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich delivered a singularly astute and courageous address this past July 29, 2010. Reactions to that speech across the political spectrum, whether immediate or delayed, illustrate the contemporary equivalent of what Conquest appositely characterized as “mindslaughter” — a brilliantly evocative term for delusive Western apologetics regarding the ideology of Communism, and the tangible horrors its Communist votaries inflicted. What did Newt Gingrich have the temerity to discuss? In defiance of our era’s most rigidly enforced cultural relativist taboo, Mr. Gingrich provided an irrefragably accurate if blunt characterization of the existential threat posed by Islam’s living, self-professed mission: to impose Sharia, its totalitarian religio-political “law,” globally.

With vanishingly rare intellectual honesty and resolve, Gingrich described how normative Sharia — antithetical to bedrock Western legal principles — by “divine,” immutable diktat, rejects freedom of conscience, while sanctioning violent jihadism, absurd, misogynistc “rules of evidence” (four male witnesses for rape), barbarous punishments (stoning for adultery), and polygamy:

Sharia in its natural form has principles and punishments totally abhorrent to the Western world, and the underlying basic belief which is that law comes directly from God and is therefore imposed upon humans and no human can change the law without it being an act of apostasy is a fundamental violation of a tradition in the Western system which goes back to Rome, Athens, and Jerusalem and which has evolved in giving us freedom across the planet on a scale we can hardly imagine and which is now directly threatened by those who would impose it.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Metal Marvel That Has Mended Brains for 50 Years

Lithium—a simple metal and the oldest drug in psychiatry—might protect the brain against mental illness, Alzheimer’s, and other diseases. One problem: There’s no profit in it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101227

Financial Crisis
» Coburn: Control Government Spending or Face ‘Apocalyptic Pain’
» Greece: Government-Church Clash on EU-IMF Memo
» Greece: 2011 Budget, Communists Ready for War
» Italy: Confindustria Paints Bleak Economic Picture
» The Power of Unions: Average Stagehand at Lincoln Center in NYC Makes $290k a Year
» UK: How Labour Left the Taxpayer a £245bn Bill: Debt for New Schools and Hospitals Soars Fivefold
» UK: House Prices to Drop 2pc in 2011 on ‘Weak Demand’, Hometrack Says
» UK: Retailers Fear Unhappy New Year as Boxing Day Sales Disappoint
» Video: How QE2 Works and Why it is Killing the Dollar and Our Future.
» World Markets Fall as Oil Price Hits 26-Month High After Chinese Rate Rise
 
USA
» DEA Transformed Into Global Intelligence Organization
» Exclusive: Allahu Akbar and Ho, Ho, Ho
» George Soros: Economics Needs Fixing
» Guantánamo Not Near to Closure, White House Admits
» How to Make Islam Respectable
» Less Than a Full-Service City
» Man Faces Five Year Prison Sentence for Reading His Unfaithful Wife’s Emails
» Obama Asks us to Believe in Impossible Things
» Obama’s Reversal on ‘Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Stirs Concern Over Legal Claims
» Obama to Give Manhattan Back to Native Americans?
» Showdown With Terror
» The End of Easy Oil
» Uncovering Radical Islam in America
» US to Step Up Security at Hotels and Malls
 
Canada
» Why is the North Magnetic Pole Racing Toward Siberia?
 
Europe and the EU
» Backsliding in Belarus: The EU’s False Impression of Lukashenko
» BMW’s Electric Automobile Revolution
» Britain at Risk of Power Cuts From Aging Networks, Warns Ofgem
» France: National Front’s Marine Le Pen to Prove Formidable Rival to Nicolas Sarkozy
» Germany: Holidays a High Season for Islamist Recruitment
» Germany: Chinese Hackers Target Government Computers
» Italy: Milan Central to Malpensa Airport, Now Possible
» Italy: Refuse: 1500 Tonnes in Naples; Army Swings Into Action
» Italy: Fiat Mirafiori Newco to be Outside Confindustria
» Netherlands: Arrested Somalis ‘Suspected of Links to Al Shabab’, Says Volkskrant
» Netherlands: Labour Calls on Opposition to Unite
» Number of Religious Czechs Falling, Poll Shows
» Outsmarted by Apple: Nokia Looks to Recover the ‘Magic Dust’
» Terror in Rome: Bomb Found at Greek Embassy as Multiple Embassies Have Package Scares
» Top Economists Debate the ‘Clinging to the Euro Will Only Prolong the Agony’
» UK: ‘Cowardly’ Drunken Thugs Beat Up Pensioner, 69, For Wearing RAF Blazer and Poppy
» UK: Christmas Bomb Plot: Nine Remanded in Custody Over Terror Charges
» UK: Christmas Bomb Plot: Nine Men Remanded Over Plan to ‘Blow Up Big Ben and Westminster Abbey’
» UK: David Miliband May be Offered US Ambassador Post
» UK: Police Chief Duped After House He Rented Out Was Turned Into a Cannabis Factory
» Why Deport Immigrants?
» ‘WikiLeaks is Annoying, But Not a Threat’
 
Balkans
» Brussels Denies ‘Credibility Problem’ After Marty Report
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Anti-Arab and -Immigrant March, Press Alarmed
» Flotilla: Israel, Lieberman Harshly Criticised
» London Considering Granting Palestinian Delegates Diplomatic Status
 
Middle East
» A Gloomy Christmas in Iraq. Mgr Sako: “We Will Resist and We Will Remain”
» Ankara Authorities Look to Close Alevi Group for Cemevi Statute
» GCC: Call for Correcting Population Disparity
» High-Ranking Female Religious Official Removed From Office in Turkey
» Islam: A Religion Custom Made for Men
» Look What Obama Expects Israel to Give Up Now
» ‘Other Angels’ Gets Marks for Bravery With Turkish Transgender Film
» The Muslim Brotherhood Down the Salafi Road
» Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan to Hold Joint Military Exercise
» Twin Suicide Blasts Targeting Government Compound in Western Iraq Kill 9 People
» We Cannot Protect Assyrians and Other Minorities: Iraqi Official
 
Russia
» Mikhail Khodorkovsky Found Guilty Again
 
South Asia
» Bombay Stock Exchange Launches Islamic Index
» BSE, TASIS to Launch Shariah-Compliant Index
» Classified Maps Show Security in Afghanistan is Worsening, Despite Obama’s Assurances the War is ‘On Track’
» India: Orissa: Hindu Radicals Threaten a Christmas Pogrom Against Christians
» Indonesia: West Java: Catholics Celebrate Christmas Mass in a Parking Lot
» Malaysian Colleges a Hotbed for Militant Recruiting: Experts
» Need Pushes Pakistani Women Into Jobs and Peril
» Pakistan: Female Suicide Bomber Stops UN Aid to Pakistan Flood Victims
» Pakistan: US Predators Kill 21 ‘Rebels’ In North Waziristan Strike
» Suicide Bomber Kills 3 in South Afghanistan
» U.N. Maps Rate Afghanistan Less Secure
 
Far East
» The Cost of Success: Life in Beijing’s Cellars
 
Australia — Pacific
» Mums Welcome Paid Parental Leave
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» African Elephants Are Two Distinct Species
» Somali Islamist Insurgents Threaten US Attack
» Somali Islamist Insurgents Threaten US Attack
 
Latin America
» The Mexican Drug War: A Nation Descends Into Violence
 
Immigration
» The Profound Problem of Muslim Immigration
 
Culture Wars
» Australia: Church Free to Ban Gay Foster Parents
» New Zealand: All Parents Lie, Declares Starship Nurse
» Obama Returns to End-of-Life Plan That Caused Stir
» Stop Offending Me!
» UK: Bishop of Winchester: Legal System Discriminates Against Christians
» UK: Christians ‘Are Denied Human Rights by Our Courts,’ Claim Bishop and Top Judge
 
General
» Did First Humans Come Out of Middle East and Not Africa? Scientists Forced to Re-Write Evolution of Modern Man
» If Modern Humans Are So Smart, Why Are Our Brains Shrinking?
» Let’s Build Babbage’s Ultimate Mechanical Computer
» Report Documents Move by ‘Radical Philanthropist’ To Control Message
» Researchers Decipher DNA of Mysterious Human Ancestor

Financial Crisis


Coburn: Control Government Spending or Face ‘Apocalyptic Pain’

“Apocalyptic pain” from an out-of-control debt could cause 18 percent unemployment and a massive contraction in the economy that would destroy the middle class, a leading Republican deficit hawk said in an interview that aired Sunday.

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., who recently issued a report on government waste, warned that the U.S. only has about three or four years to get its fiscal house in order or it could find itself facing austerity measures seen in Greece, Ireland, Spain, Portugal and earlier in Japan.

“The history of republics is they average 200 years of life. And they all fail in the history over fiscal matters. They rot from within before they collapse or are attacked,” Coburn told “Fox News Sunday.”

“The problem that faces our country today, the last 30 years we have lived off the future, and the bill is coming due,” he added.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Government-Church Clash on EU-IMF Memo

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, DECEMBER 21 — Greece’s socialist government, led by Giorgios Papandreou, has clashed with the Greek Orthodox Church after strong clerical criticism of “the ruling class”, which is said to have turned Greece into a “country under occupation” by EU-IMF creditors.

The government spokesperson, Giorgios Petalodis, answering the criticism contained in a pastoral message circulated last Sunday in all churches, said that the claims of the Orthodox bishops “have no relationship with reality” and derive from the fact that the clerics “apparently fail to understand the great importance of the efforts made by the government” to bring Greece out of crisis and to modernise the country. He invited the Church to consider “the changes and the needs of new times.

The strong government reaction, observers say, is due to the fact that the Church has chosen a delicate time for Greece to join the chorus of criticism from the entire opposition, both right and left, trade unions and the many sectors of society that oppose the austerity plan. The episode comes amid unending strikes and protests against the government.

Despite the fact that the message from the Holy Synod only partly supports the claims of the political and union opposition to the memorandum of understanding with the EU and IMF, the pastoral message has been criticized by the left and in particular by the Communist Party (KKE). The main opposition force, the centre-right New Democracy (ND) party, has approved “the holy intervention” of the bishops, saying that it evokes the Greek ecclesiastical hierarchy’s more militant past.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: 2011 Budget, Communists Ready for War

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, DECEMBER 23 — The Greek parliament last night approved the 2011 Financial Bill, thanks to the votes of the socialist majority. The new Finance Bill includes new cuts totalling 14.4 billion euros. The communist party (KKE) has ask the labourers for “a real war” to “overthrow the regime” and to set up “a government of the people” to lead the country away from the crisis “while refusing to pay the debt” to EU-IMF.

The parliament approved the new budget with 156 votes of Pasok against 142 votes of the opposition. The budget does not impose more direct cuts to salaries and pension, but new taxes and a decrease in expenditure which could deepen the recession.

A few hours earlier thousands of people demonstrated during a 3-hour general strike and a 24-hour strike of public transport.

“The painful measures are behind us”, said Premier Giorgio Papandreou, who guaranteed that the recovery will start as early as 2012 and that the country will free itself from international supervision by 2013. Papandreou said that he is more determined than ever to continue the rebalancing and bring the deficit down to less than 3% in 2014, and carry out reforms to transform the country.

“We are about to vote the first budget with limited sovereign rights”, said the leader of the centre-right opposition party ND, Antoni Samaras, referring to the loan that was granted under certain conditions by EU and IMF.

Aleka Papariga, leader of the KKE, the party that leads the protests against the austerity measures, said that “the workers should understand the causes of the crisis and prepare for a real war: aware, planned and organised to overthrow the regime”. According to the leader of KKE, the third party which grew in the recent local elections from 7.5% to 10.5%, the only solution for Greece is “to refuse to pay the debt”, something only “a labour-popular government “ can manage.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Confindustria Paints Bleak Economic Picture

‘Comparison with Germany is merciless,’ says report

(ANSA) — Rome, December 16 — A bleak picture of Italy’s economy emerged from a report released Thursday by the research arm of Confindustria, a national organization representing Italian industry, disappointing hopes for signs of economic rebound after the global financial crisis set off the grimmest economic recession seen here in 60 years. “(Italy’s) illness of slow growth has never been cured.

Comparison with Germany is merciless,” stated the report.

Near-stagnant growth estimates for Italy were revised downward, as Confindustria economists cut estimates for gross domestic product from +1.2% to +1% for 2010, and from +1.3% to +1.1% for 2011. Confindustria sees the Italian workforce continuing to shrink next year, though far less dramatically than before, losing -0.4% over the course of 2011. Unemployment is likely to hit 9% in the last trimester of 2011, its studies centre said. Unemployment was 8.6% in November of this year, according to the state statistics agency ISTAT. Confindustria forecasts job creation is not likely to pick up again until 2012.

Unemployment more than doubled from April 2007 to October 2010, reaching 2.167 million people. From the first trimester of 2008 to the third trimester of 2010, the country lost 540,000 jobs, and an additional 480,000 posts were temporarily suspended with state subsidies given to workers. The report also said difficult credit conditions have yet to ease, since loans to families, businesses and regional governments continue to accrue losses, as do residual toxic assets from the economic crisis.

Confindustria criticized Basil 3, the revised international banking accord intended to shore up global finance, for overly restricting growth and providing insufficient measures to guarantee future stability.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Power of Unions: Average Stagehand at Lincoln Center in NYC Makes $290k a Year

Columnist James Ahearn of New Jersey’s Bergen Record has a great column today on, of all things, the stagehands at New York city’s top performing arts venues such as Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall. These are not highly skilled or technical jobs but take a gander at how much they are paid:

At Avery Fisher Hall and Alice Tully Hall in Lincoln Center, the average stagehand salary and benefits package is $290,000 a year.

To repeat, that is the average compensation of all the workers who move musicians’ chairs into place and hang lights, not the pay of the top five.

Across the plaza at the Metropolitan Opera, a spokesman said stagehands rarely broke into the top-five category. But a couple of years ago, one did. The props master, James Blumenfeld, got $334,000 at that time, including some vacation back pay.

Ahern also notes that the top paid stagehand at Carnegie Hall makes $422,599 a year in salary, plus $107,445 in benefits and deferred compensation. So why such exorbitant pay? You probably already guessed that a union is involved:

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: How Labour Left the Taxpayer a £245bn Bill: Debt for New Schools and Hospitals Soars Fivefold

The true cost of Labour’s expensive Private Finance Initiative scheme was laid bare yesterday as the bill taxpayers face soared fivefold.

Official figures show that 544 PFI projects such as new school and hospital buildings have been launched since 1997.

The original capital cost of the projects agreed under the Labour government was £51.5billion.

But repayments for these will have rocketed to an eye-watering total of £245billion by 2047/8, according to the Treasury.

That is the equivalent of £14,800 for each of Britain’s 16.5million working households. PFI schemes allow governments to put off raising upfront money for new buildings.

Instead, a private company is given a lengthy contract to build a school or hospital and then provides related ‘services’ to the public sector.

The Government leases the building for the length of the contract before it reverts to public ownership.

But any small change to the build or service is usually charged at exorbitant rates, allowing the company to make a healthy profit.

The scheme was introduced by the last Conservative government under John Major in the early 1990s. Labour then adopted it with relish when Gordon Brown used it as a convenient way to stay within his strict borrowing rules for most of his time as Chancellor.

Tory MP Jesse Norman has launched a campaign to get a PFI rebate for taxpayers.

He is calling on banks, construction firms and service companies which have benefited from the initiative over the past decade to give back a small portion of their profits.

‘Under Gordon Brown, Labour went on a spending splurge with borrowed money which taxpayers will eventually have to pay back many times over,’ said Mr Norman. ‘As a senior Treasury adviser working for Gordon Brown, Ed Miliband bears responsibility for a borrowing trick that will mean future generations saddled with billions in debt.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: House Prices to Drop 2pc in 2011 on ‘Weak Demand’, Hometrack Says

The average cost of a home in England and Wales dropped by 0.4pc during the month, according to the housing intelligence group. The drop was driven by the ongoing shortage of buyers, with estate agents reporting a further 4.8pc fall in the number of people registering with them in December, the sixth consecutive monthly decline.

Richard Donnell, director of research at Hometrack, said: “The seasonal slowdown which began at the beginning of November continued apace into December.”

Overall, the group said house prices had fallen by 1.6pc during 2010, with property values ending the year at a lower level than they started it in 71pc of England and Wales, although they were higher in 15pc of areas — mainly in London and the South East. Mr Donnell said: “Looking ahead we expect house prices to remain under downward pressure in the first half of 2011 on the back of weak demand although we expect the supply of homes for sale to shrink as vendors withdraw from the market or reduce pricing to a level where property will sell.”

The group expects house prices to fall by 2pc during 2011, due to weak demand and the ongoing problems in the mortgage market. But it added that a fall in the number of homes for sale, along with continued low transaction levels, would act as a support to house prices, and help to limit further falls.

The number of homes being put up for sale dropped for the second month in a row during December, falling by 1.5pc.

The supply of properties on the market has increased by 24pc during 2010, while the number of buyers registered with estate agents has dropped by 7pc during the whole of the year, but dived by 18pc during the past six months.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Retailers Fear Unhappy New Year as Boxing Day Sales Disappoint

The total number of shoppers fell by 22.8pc nationally on the day after Christmas Day, although stores in London attracted 11.4pc more visitors, Synovate said.

Shopper numbers were down by as much as 27pc in southwest England and by 19.9pc in eastern England.

Britain’s retailers are striving to sell as much as possible over the Christmas and New Year holiday period, since many expect sales to decline next year due in part to a rise in Value Added Tax (VAT) which takes effect on Jan. 4.

Nearly two-thirds of retailers expect sales next year to fall compared with 2010, as weak consumer confidence and inflationary pressures come to bear, according to a survey conducted by the British Retail Consortium (BRC).

In a bearish prognosis for the retail sector, just 18pc of businesses expect sales to improve in 2011, compared with 64pc who expect a deterioration.

Shops have already been hit by the appalling December weather, Synovate reporting yesterday that retail forecasts for the month have undersestimated the drop in customer numbers caused by the snow. The research company had previously estimated a 4pc drop in shoppers, but footfall between December 22 and 24 was down 6.1pc compared with last year.

“Retailers expect a difficult December to be followed by a tough 2011,” said Stephen Robertson, director general of the BRC. “They believe the VAT rise will contribute to higher prices and, with fears about government cuts and the wider economy, people will be put off spending.” […]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Video: How QE2 Works and Why it is Killing the Dollar and Our Future.

Midas Resources video “QE2 explained” shows how Qualitative Easing 2 works and why it is killing the dollar and our future. (Midas Resources sells gold, so second part of video is pro-gold; but first part explains QE1, QE2 and inflation nicely.)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



World Markets Fall as Oil Price Hits 26-Month High After Chinese Rate Rise

Soaring oil prices, which hit a 26-month high, also unsettled investors, with losses seen from Shanghai to Wall Street. It came amid mounting fears that China’s unexpected rise in interest rates could derail growth in Asia and damage an upturn for the world’s major exporters.

On Christmas Day, the People’s Bank of China raised its benchmark rate by 25 basis points to 5.81pc, as the country grapples with rampant food inflation and rising wage demands.

However, analysts believe that tightening measures by Beijing may curb growth only slightly. On Boxing Day, analysts at JP Morgan Chase trimmed their 2011 growth forecast for the Asian economic powerhouse to 9pc from 10pc.

China’s Shanghai Composite Index slid 1.9pc on Monday, the most the index has fallen since November.

Growth concerns prompted jitters in all the world’s stock markets, which recently hit two-year highs. The German blue chip Dax index fell 1.3pc, France’s CAC 40 lost 1pc and Spain’s Ibex lost 2pc. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.2pc by lunchtime.

Growth concerns hit German carmakers particularly hard, as China became the world’s largest vehicle market in 2009. Shares in Daimler slumped 4.6pc, with Volkswagen shares plunging 5.7pc. The oil price, which has jumped 27pc since May, weighed heavily on market sentiment. The severe blizzard across the eastern seaboard of the US and continued cold temperatures in Europe are expected to push prices still higher as demand for heating oil grows. Brent crude for February delivery hit $94.52 in morning trading — its highest level since the height of the banking crisis in October 2008 — before profit takers moved in. Although UK markets were closed, Brent crude contracts can still be traded electronically. Oil prices are expected to rise steadily next year, with many analysts forecasting the price could cross the psychologically important $100 a barrel mark.

Analysts from Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and JP Morgan Chase have all said they expect oil to move above $100 in 2011, with some raising the possibility that it could happen earlier in the year than many feared.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


DEA Transformed Into Global Intelligence Organization

WASHINGTON — The Drug Enforcement Administration has been transformed into a global intelligence organization with a reach that extends far beyond narcotics, and an eavesdropping operation so expansive it has to fend off foreign politicians who want to use it against their political enemies, according to secret diplomatic cables.

In far greater detail than previously seen, the cables, from the cache obtained by WikiLeaks and made available to some news organizations, offer glimpses of drug agents balancing diplomacy and law enforcement in places where it can be hard to tell the politicians from the traffickers, and where drug rings are themselves mini-states whose wealth and violence permit them to run roughshod over struggling governments.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Exclusive: Allahu Akbar and Ho, Ho, Ho

In 1997, Mohammed T. Mehdi, head of the Arab-American Committee and the National Council on Islamic Affairs, lobbied to have a crescent and star go up at the World Trade Center during the holiday season. His wish was granted, despite the fact that Mehdi had been an adviser to Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the religious leader behind the original bombing of the World Trade Center.

Long before the Ground Zero Mosque was even a twinkle in the eye of a violent ex-waiter and a slumlord Imam, the World Trade Center allowed Mohammed T. Mehdi to bully it into flying the symbol of Islam.

By 1997, Mohammed T. Mehdi had become an unambiguously ugly public figure. He had been fired by Mayor Dinkins in 1992 for anti-Semitic remarks. The year before he had proclaimed that, “Millions of Arabs believe Saddam stands tall having defied Western colonialism”. In 1995, the US Attorney’s Office in New York had listed Mehdi as one of the unindicted co-conspirators in the trial of Sheik Rahman. Mehdi had already published a book titled “Kennedy and Sirhan: Why?”, which argued that Robert Kennedy’s assassin had been acting in self-defense.

Considering Mehdi’s role in actively working on behalf of the Sheik behind the wave of terrorism that included the original attack on the World Trade Center, if the WTC should have turned down anyone’s request for an Islamic symbol at the site, turning down Mehdi should have been a no brainer. And yet when all was said and done, in the winter of 1997 there was an Islamic star and crescent at the World Trade Center. And another one at the park in front of the White House. No one in the media thought it at all odd, that a man who had a long record of blatantly supporting terrorists should get his way. They thought it was just great.

The previous year had marked the first annual Ramadan dinner, integrating the Islamic celebration into the Clinton Administration’s schedule of events. Bill Clinton who had not come down to the World Trade Center after the bombing, had a different set of priorities. A month after 9/11 however, Bush went Clinton one better, when he became the first US President to host a Ramadan dinner. Many of the Muslim ambassadors at the event were there representing countries which had helped finance Al Queda. Little more than a month after the attacks that killed 3,000 Americans, the President of the United States sat down to break bread with the money men for the killers.

But the Star and Crescent flying at the World Trade Center did not prevent it from being targeted in a second greater attack four years later. Nor did Bush’s Ramadan dinners do anything to diminish Islamic terrorism. On the contrary, every gesture of appeasement only seemed to make it worse. Before the star and crescent flew at the World Trade Center, the site suffered only a few dead. After it, thousands dead. The more Ramadan dinners Bush hosted, the more Americans died. There was of course no direct connection between the two, only an indirect one. Because the Star and Crescent and the Ramadan dinners both signified a deliberate blindness to the threat of Islamic terrorism.

No one who understood what had happened at the World Trade Center in 1993, would have permitted a banner associated with its attackers to be flown there. But while the World Trade Center, administered by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, let Mehdi have his way, Muslims in dark rooms were plotting to fulfill Sheik Rahman’s formula for a war on America and the free world; “Cut the transportation of their countries, tear it apart, destroy their economy, burn their companies, eliminate their interests, sink their ships, shoot down their planes, kill them on the sea, air, or land.”

While the Star and Crescent was blowing in the cold December wind coming off the Hudson River, an even colder wind was blowing out of Hamburg, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia. A year earlier Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had come up with the idea and presented it to Osama bin Laden. A year later the operation began to move forward.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



George Soros: Economics Needs Fixing

You have provided $50 million to set up the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) in New York City. What prompted you to do this?

It was the crash of 2008, which brought home the fact that there is something broken in economic theory. Two ideas — rational expectations theory and the efficient market hypothesis — have a monopoly of thought. Neither prepared us for the crash, yet other ideas don’t have enough support. I talked to friends about how to address this and the idea of an institute emerged. Now it’s running away with itself. I have never been involved in any initiative with this kind of self-generating interest before.

What does the institute aim to achieve?

A radical reorientation of economic theory. Exactly what shape it will take is impossible to predict, but I hope it will recognise the fundamental uncertainties in our economic system. These uncertainties have been ignored for the past 25 years.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Guantánamo Not Near to Closure, White House Admits

“It’s certainly not going to close in the next month,” said Robert Gibbs, the press secretary, referring to the first anniversary of the passed deadline. “I think part of this depends on the Republicans’ willingness to work with the administration on this.” Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill have stymied a crucial part of the closure plan by blocking the transfer of detainees to American soil for long-term detention and possible trial.

Mr Gibbs sought to blame Republicans, telling CNN. “The question is, are we going to continue to have and let al-Qaeda use Guantánamo Bay as a recruiting tool?”

It has been reported that White House lawyers are drafting a new executive order that would allow the indefinite detention of nearly 50 Guantánamo inmates. Those targeted would be prisoners adjudged by a task force to be unlikely to be convicted in a trial but too dangerous to be freed.

Mr Gibbs said: “‘Some would be tried in federal courts, as we’ve seen done in the past. Some would be tried in military commissions, likely spending the rest of their lives in a maximum-security prison that nobody, including terrorists, have ever escaped from.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



How to Make Islam Respectable

Regardless of whether one subscribes to the notion of a clash of civilizations, I think we can all agree that relations between “the Islamic world” and “the West,” however one defines those labels, are, well, strained. President Obama was elected at least partly because, with childhood roots in Muslim Indonesia and an Arabic middle name no one was allowed to mention until after the election, the Left believed him to be the perfect candidate to heal that rift. When he wasn’t healing the racial divide, America’s reputation abroad, and the planet, that is.

So right out of the gate, Obama made his first order of business an appearance on al-Arabiya TV, in which he made seven references to “respecting” the Muslim world, his flashing neon semaphore to them that he was no imperialist exploiter like his predecessor (Daniel Pipes notes here how common a motif the word “respect” was for Obama, ironically so for a man who commands none either at home or abroad). Then it was on to a self-important speech from Cairo, in which Obama flattered the Islamic world so effusively that one wondered if he was angling to ask it to the prom. And of course, who can forget his show of contemptible dhimmitude — I mean deep respect — to the Saudi King?

His efforts haven’t exactly mellowed the clash of civilizations into a Kumbiya campfire circle. And yet Obama was at least theoretically on the right track. Because a recent poll by the new Abu Dhabi Gallup Centre reports that a large majority of Muslims say that the best way for the West to improve relations with them is to “respect Islam.” But the West has made every effort at “Muslim outreach” and bent over backwards to make social and cultural concessions to its Muslim citizens. President Bush himself expressed a distasteful degree of deference toward Islam, and Obama far surpassed even that; so how much more respect will it take to make the Muslim world feel sufficiently respected?

The issue needs to be reframed. Since even our most gushing genuflection seems to have accomplished nothing except to incite further expectations of respect, it’s time for the West to take charge of this dialogue on our terms. We in the West — apart from Obama and his sycophants — are accustomed to the understanding that respect cannot simply be expected, much less demanded; it has to be earned. So now the question becomes, what must that majority of Muslims who want respect for their religion do to earn it? How can they make their religion, well, more respectable?

What follows are ten suggestions (some of which mirror Robert Spencer’s five ways to end Islamophobia) for those Muslims cited in the Gallup poll to take to heart — those who, like Rodney Dangerfield, lament that they can’t get no respect.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Less Than a Full-Service City

Plan for Detroit Would Pull Resources—and Population—From Blighted Districts

DETROIT—More than 20% of Detroit’s 139 square miles could go without key municipal services under a new plan being developed for the city, with as few as seven neighborhoods seen as meriting the city’s full resources.

Those details, outlined by Detroit planning officials this week, offer the clearest picture yet of how Mayor Dave Bing intends to execute what has become his signature program: reconfiguring Detroit to reflect its declining population and fiscal health. Yet the blueprint still leaves large legal and financial questions unresolved.

Listen: Matthew Dolan reports on what the mayor’s plan would mean for the city. Until now, the mayor and his staff have spoken mostly in generalities about the problem, stressing the need for community input and pledging to a skeptical public that no resident would be forced to move.

But the approach discussed by city officials could have that effect. Mr. Bing’s staff wants to concentrate Detroit’s remaining population—expected to be less than 900,000 after this year’s Census count—and limited local, state and federal dollars in the most viable swaths of the city, while other sectors could go without such services as garbage pickup, police patrols, road repair and street lights.

Karla Henderson, a city planning official leading the mayor’s campaign, said in an interview Thursday that her staff had deemed just seven to nine sections of Detroit worthy of receiving the city’s full resources. She declined to identify the areas, but said the final plan could include a greater number.

Ms. Henderson said her team amassed hundreds of data—on household income, population density, employment, existing city services, philanthropic investments and housing stock —in its effort to identify the neighborhoods with the brightest outlook—those that could be stabilized with additional city, state and federal resources.

“What we have found is that even some of our stronger neighborhoods are at a tipping point with vacancy,” Ms. Henderson said. “Vacancy adds to blight and blight is a disease that takes over the whole neighborhood. So the sooner we can get those homes occupied, the better for the city.”…

           — Hat tip: Takuan Seiyo [Return to headlines]



Man Faces Five Year Prison Sentence for Reading His Unfaithful Wife’s Emails

A husband who suspected his wife was having an affair faces up to five years in jail after reading her emails without her permission.

Leon Walker has been charged under tough anti-hacking laws aimed at preventing identity theft in the US.

The 33 year old had suspected his wife Clara was having an affair with her former husband.

He is alleged to have used his computer skills to gain access to her Gmail email account on the shared home computer.

Walker discovered a series of emails which confirmed his suspicions that Clara was being unfaithful to him.

[…]

Legal experts say this will be the first time anti-hacking laws have been used in a domestic case.

‘It’s going to be interesting because there are no clear legal answers here,’ said Frederick Lane, a nationally recognized expert who has published five books on electronic privacy.

The fact that the two still were living together, and that Leon Walker had routine access to the computer, may help him, Lane said.

‘I would guess there is enough of a grey area to suggest that she could not have an absolute expectation of privacy,’ he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Asks us to Believe in Impossible Things

To believe in Obama’s America, it’s good to be a queen. You must be prepared to believe impossible things.

You must believe that Obama’s indefinite detention of terrorists at Gitmo is different than Bush’s indefinite detention of terrorists at Gitmo. After all, Obama promised to close Gitmo as a necessary action to restore America’s reputation in the world. His intention to close Gitmo is what’s important, certainly more important than the reality of leaving it open “indefinitely.”

You must contrast Obama’s indefinite detention of terrorists at Gitmo while heroically working to close Gitmo to Maricopa County (Arizona) Sheriff Joe Arpaio with his desert tent city of county inmates in pink underwear singing Christmas carols. Obama, the indefinite detainer, has sued Sheriff Joe for violating the human rights of county inmates because Sheriff Joe has no intention of closing his tent city. Understand?

You must believe that Obama is committed to border security even though he sued Arizona when that state wanted to actually enforce the federal laws on immigration.

You must believe that openly homosexual U.S. soldiers will win the war with radical Islam when Islamic Shariah law punishes open homosexuality with death.

You must believe that “tolerance” demands your approval of a triumphal mosque at Ground Zero, but respect for “diversity” requires you to understand why Muslims were so offended by a Christian church near Baghdad they killed 68 parishioners attending mass. Those Christians (who were in Iraq before there was an “Islam”) sure can be provocative.

You must believe that you are safer on an airplane flight from radical Muslim terrorists if the TSA can take your nude X-ray picture and/or grope your genitalia.

You must believe that FCC restrictions on the Internet will enhance free speech. And you must believe that these FCC restrictions, adopted by the FCC without any lawful authority from Congress, are lawful because the FCC intends to protect you from evil corporations, and its intention is pure. The FCC is acting in the public interest and need no authority from Congress to do so.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Reversal on ‘Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Stirs Concern Over Legal Claims

President Obama’s decision last week to reverse U.S. policy and back a U.N. declaration on the rights of “indigenous peoples” has touched off a debate on whether the move could boost American Indian legal claims over the ills they suffered dating back to the colonial period.

The president announced his decision at the White House Tribal Nations Conference last week, making the United States the last nation to endorse the statement — the Bush administration had opposed it since it was adopted in 2007. American Indian advocacy groups cheered the move, finalized after a months-long administration review.

But John Bolton, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said the “abstract” document — which in several sections discusses the “right to redress” — will probably be used to fuel new legal claims. And he predicted the issue would complicate those cases more than it would help either side actually resolve them.

“It’s a kind of feel-good document that has so many unclear phrases in it that nobody’s really sure what it means when you agree to it,” Bolton told FoxNews.com. “It’s wrong and potentially dangerous to sign onto a document that you don’t fully understand the implications of.”

[…]

Carl Horowitz, a project manager with the National Legal and Policy Center who follows discrimination cases against the federal government, used the r-word — reparations — to describe those implications.

“It reflects a global egalitarianism,” he said. “It’s a shakedown.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama to Give Manhattan Back to Native Americans?

President believes nation can spare some sovereignty

President Obama is voicing support for a U.N. resolution that could accomplish something as radical as relinquishing some U.S. sovereignty and opening a path for the return of ancient tribal lands to American Indians, including even parts of Manhattan.

The issue is causing alarm among legal experts.

In recent remarks at the White House during a “tribal nations conference,” Obama endorsed the “United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People,” which includes a sweeping declaration that “indigenous peoples have a right to lands and resources they traditionally occupied or otherwise used” but that later were acquired by occupying forces.

“U.N. resolutions like this claiming amorphous rights can be a stalking horse for future attempts to have international courts enforce broad interpretations of those rights at the expense of American sovereignty,” Theodore Frank, a fellow with the Center for Legal Policy at the Manhattan Institute, a leading public policy think tank in New York City, told WND.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Showdown With Terror

Last year, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab attempted to kill passengers by the plane-full above Detroit on Christmas Day through an underwear bomb. Three days before Christmas in 2001, Richard Reid hatched a similar plot in the skies with explosives in his shoes. Both failed. Both demonstrated that at the very time of the year that Americans take off Muslim terrorists work overtime. The suspected 2010 plot to poison salad bars and buffets suggests that terrorists didn’t plan on taking a holiday this holiday.

This is the world in which we live. It’s also the context of Jamie Glazov’s new collection of interviews, Showdown with Terror: Our Struggle against Tyranny and Terror. For more than a decade, Glazov has been talking to leading thinkers and allowing mere mortals to eavesdrop on the conversation at Frontpagemag.com. William F. Buckley, Richard Pipes, Victor Davis Hanson, and Christopher Hitchens are among the thirty discussants featured in Showdown with Terror.

Glazov is the son of Soviet dissidents, so freedom is neither taken for granted nor seen as an abstraction. The interviews he conducts invariably gravitate toward that subject. For the Moscow-born historian, the Cold War is a natural reference point for discussions about the War on Terror. The freedom/tyranny dichotomy that described the combatants of the Cold War is applied to the opposing camps of the War on Terror. So, too, is the notion of useful idiots.

“There is no unifying agenda or theme that solidifies the current leftist movement,” David Horowitz tells Glazov. “What actually unifies them is their hatred for the United States as it exists in the present.” So why are we repeating history? “The hard Left sees history as infinitely malleable and remakes it to conform to whatever are its current concerns,” Cold War historian John Earl Hayes explains. “It can never learn from history because the past it ardently believes in is always one that ratifies its worldview.”

Alas, the Right-Left labels that foreshadowed one’s outlook on the Cold War do not remain terribly constructive for the War on Terror. The 9/12 Right, amply represented within the pages of Showdown with Terror, takes a muscular tack advancing human rights around the globe. Ascendant after 9/11, descendant in the wake of Iraq, the view peaked around the time of George W. Bush’s heady Second Inaugural. But in post-Tea Party America, where what matters is deficits and a return to the founding vision, the idea of using American foreign policy as a tool to spread human rights seems a throwback to a Bush presidency that many conservatives would like a do-over for.

The important foreign policy questions, then, won’t be settled through a Left-Right argument, but through an internecine debate on the Right. Consider the differences in the perspectives of Glazov’s interviewees.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The End of Easy Oil

Canada’s tar sands will soon be our top source of imported oil. But will that energy be worth the costs?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Uncovering Radical Islam in America

New York Rep. Peter King is under attack for his plan to hold hearings on the Muslim community’s lack of cooperation with the government to stop the rising threat of homegrown radicalization when he becomes chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. King’s investigation, though, is imperative, as even top Obama administration officials are warning of the frightening increase in acts of homegrown terrorism. King is being described as the real extremist for his past vocal support of the Irish Republican Army and is being accused of having an anti-Muslim bias. The legal director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee says King has “bigoted intentions” and the community affairs director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ New York chapter says he “has dedicated years of his career peddling extremist rhetoric and baseless claims concerning the Muslim community and its leadership.”

The true “baseless claims” are the ones made against King. He was an advocate of U.S. military intervention in the former Yugoslavia on the side of Muslims, has taken Pakistan’s side over India’s in their fight over Kashmir, and had a long relationship with the Muslim community of Long Island. His record contradicts the accusation that he has an anti-Muslim agenda. His warnings are based in fact and they are echoed by top Obama administration officials.

“You didn’t worry about this [homegrown terrorism] even two years ago— about individuals, about Americans, to the extent that we now do,” Attorney General Eric Holder recently said. He added that over the past two years, 125 people in the U.S. have been indicted on terrorism-related charges, 50 of which are American citizens. On September 22, Michael Leiter, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, said the same thing. He said that terrorist plots against the U.S. “have surpassed the number and pace of attacks during any year since 9/11.” These facts underscore the need for a congressional investigation into how to adapt to this changing environment.

King is being criticized for saying in 2004 that “80-85 percent of the mosques in this country are controlled by Islamic fundamentalists,” even though he emphasized that this does not mean that everyone attending these mosques were extremists. The Council on American-Islamic Relations condemned him and the statement is being used as evidence of King’s anti-Muslim bias, but that figure originally came from a Sufi Muslim leader named Sheikh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani, the chairman of the Islamic Supreme Council of America. Kabbani’s estimate has since been corroborated by an undercover investigation of 100 mosques and Islamic schools in the country that found that about 75 percent promote an anti-Western form of Islam.

The congressman’s criticism of the Muslim community for not pulling its weight in the War on Terror is what really outraged his critics. However, his stance comes from interacting with Muslims in Long Island that he had a long relationship with. After 9/11, he was shocked at how many of them dismissed evidence that Al-Qaeda carried out the attacks, instead attributing it to a government conspiracy involving Zionists.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



US to Step Up Security at Hotels and Malls

The United States is stepping up security at “soft targets” like hotels and shopping malls, as well as trains and ports, as it counters the evolving Al-Qaeda threat, a top official said Sunday.

A year after a foiled plot to bomb a US-bound passenger plane, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told CNN’s “State of the Union” program that other places and modes of transportation must now be scrutinized.

“We look at so-called soft targets — the hotels, shopping malls, for example — all of which we have reached out to in the past year and have done a fair amount of training for their own employees,” Napolitano said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Why is the North Magnetic Pole Racing Toward Siberia?

The north magnetic pole (NMP), also known as the dip pole, is the point on Earth where the planet’s magnetic field points straight down into the ground. Scottish explorer James Clark Ross first located the NMP in 1831 on the Boothia Peninsula in what is now northern Canada, and with the planting of a flag claimed it for Great Britain. But the NMP drifts from year to year as geophysical processes within Earth change. For more than 150 years after Ross’s measurement its movement was gradual, generally less than 15 kilometers per year. But then, in the 1990s, it picked up speed in a big way, bolting north—northwest into the Arctic Ocean at more than 55 kilometers per year. If it keeps going it could pass the geographic north pole in a decade or so and carry on toward Siberia. But why?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Backsliding in Belarus: The EU’s False Impression of Lukashenko

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko left little doubt about who was in control of his country following last week’s elections. The European Union had hoped for more democracy. But it would appear that many in Belarus are happy with the status quo.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was one of the first to congratulate “the great European leader” Alexander Lukashenko on his re-election, calling the Belarusian leader’s country a “bastion of dignity and prosperity in the middle of a Europe agitated by the insatiable greed of transnational capital.”

In his congratulatory cable, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad referred to “yet another golden chapter of the brilliant history of the great people of Belarus.”

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev also offered his congratulations, though with a touch of a guilty conscience. The election in Minsk, he said, was an “internal affair,” characterizing Belarus as one of the countries that is “closest to Russia, regardless of its political leadership.”

The “golden chapter” Iranian President Ahmadinejad mentioned was a reference to the election in Belarus, in which, according to the official count, 7.8 million people voted for their next president on the Sunday before last. But the chapter was not golden; it was bloody.

It had hardly been announced that autocratic leader Lukashenko would remain in power (it was his fourth election victory in a row, and this time his official tally was 79.7% of the votes), when more than 10,000 citizens took to the streets in the capital Minsk. An attempt to storm the government headquarters building failed. The secret police, which appeared to have been well prepared, clubbed down the demonstrators, arrested several hundred and carried off seven of the opposition presidential candidates.

Weekend Raids

The old and new president said that “bandits” had triggered mass unrest, and that he would not allow a revolution to take place in his country. In expedited proceedings, he had about 600 regime critics sentenced to prison terms. His justice ministry threatened to ban all parties, movements and trade unions whose members had taken part in the protest — as if many such organizations still existed. Over the weekend, police raided the homes and offices of several opposition activists.

It was an ugly reversion to former times, and it triggered a public relations crisis for Western Europe. Two days after the election, the 27 member states of the European Union noted that they had had a “bad feeling” about the images coming from Minsk. In January, the EU will decide whether to reinstate earlier sanctions against the regime in Minsk.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



BMW’s Electric Automobile Revolution

BMW is hoping to revolutionize the electric car industry. Whereas most manufacturers rely on traditional — and heavy— steel car bodies, the German company hopes that carbon fiber components could lead electric cars into the future.

Cars may have conquered the world, but they didn’t do it overnight. Decades after its invention in 1886, the passenger car was still too expensive and too impractical to be anything more than a rare sight on the streets. Gas stations didn’t even exist in those days.

The spread of electric cars in the 21st century seems to be proceeding at a similar slow pace. The first models from major manufacturers are now hitting the market, but as a form of transportation, these vehicles face much the same acceptance problem as Gottlieb Daimler’s horseless carriage did. These cars have a high price tag but offer low performance.

Mitsubishi has released its first electric car series under the rather uninspiring model designation i-MiEV. It’s a simply furnished compact car with an oval body and lithium-ion batteries under the floor panel. With one charge of the battery, the vehicle can travel 100 kilometers (62 miles) in summer or 60 kilometers (37 miles) in winter. It costs €34,390 ($45,240).

Nissan’s electric car, the Leaf — set to hit the German market next year — faces the same cost-benefit plight. Even so, European automobile journalists saw fit to name the Leaf their “Car of the Year.”

It doesn’t take extensive market research to see that something doesn’t add up here. What customer is willing to pay the price of a luxury sedan for a spartan vehicle whose operating radius barely extends beyond the range of commuter trains?

Too Weak and Too Heavy

All car manufacturers face the same problem — even the most modern rechargeable batteries are too expensive, too weak and too heavy to power conventional cars, which are already excessively heavy even without the batteries.

“Integrating electric power into existing vehicle concepts is the wrong way, a dead end,” declares Rainer Kurek, head of the Munich-based MVI Group, which develops car bodies and other components for the automotive industry. In his recently published book, Kurek urges vehicle manufacturers to take a completely new approach. “The current hype surrounding electric vehicles,” the engineer writes, “is obscuring the fact that today’s auto bodies have become far too heavy over the course of the last decades.”

A first-series Volkswagen Golf from 1974 weighs 750 kilograms (1,653 pounds). A Golf from today’s production series weighs around half a ton more. It’s also an entire vehicle class larger than its predecessor, contains a standard eight airbags and can drive into a wall at 64 kilometers per hour (40 miles per hour) without its occupants being seriously injured. Such an accident in the original Golf would have meant certain death.

Technological progress has long meant an inevitable increase in weight. The aluminum auto bodies used in Audi’s luxury cars, for example, just barely manage to make up for the weight added by the all-wheel drive system that the brand has made its trademark. Hardly a technical revolution.

Now, though, BMW is attempting to break the cycle. Three years from now, the Munich-based company plans to offer an electric vehicle of a completely different construction type. The project, known as Megacity Vehicle (MCV), won’t contain steel or aluminum bodywork. Instead, it will have a light alloy frame in the car floor and a body made of carbon fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP)…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Britain at Risk of Power Cuts From Aging Networks, Warns Ofgem

In a letter to all operators, including Scottish Power, Scottish & Southern, Warren Buffett’s CE Electric and E.ON, the energy regulator has threatened to fine operators if they don’t improve their services. In a worrying sign for investors, it threatened to impose “penalties to have a proportionate impact on shareholder returns”. The letter principally warns network companies that they must be quicker about reporting any breaches of their engineering obligations while they work to keep the network in a good state.

“We want to raise our concern that the approach being adopted by some distribution network operators to assess their compliance may be exposing customers to unacceptable levels of risk regarding security of supply,” wrote Rachel Fletcher, Ofgem’s distribution partner. The letter highlighted one incident in which a company took years to report a problem with its network to Ofgem.

“It is not acceptable to expose customers to significant levels of risk for a prolonged period of time and without having a plan agreed with Ofgem in place to rectify the matter,” she said. Britain’s electricity network industry is in a state of flux since some large utility companies have been looking to offload the heavily regulated assets.

EDF sold its electricity network to Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing for an unexpectedly high £6bn earlier this year. Meanwhile, E.ON has put its network up for sale, as it tries to raise cash to fund a large capital spending programme in the UK and rest of Europe.

Britain’s utility companies are under unprecedented pressure to replace their ageing networks at the same time as making sure they are upgraded to meet the needs of technologically advanced “smart” grids. Ofgem believes £32bn will need to be spent on upgrading the network into low-carbon grids and replacing old pipes and wires over the next 10 years.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



France: National Front’s Marine Le Pen to Prove Formidable Rival to Nicolas Sarkozy

The 42-year-old is seen as a potentially dangerous threat to President Nicolas Sarkozy if chosen to succeed Jean-Marie Le Pen in a mid-January party congress almost 40 years after he founded the party. In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, Miss Le Pen, said: “The progressive Islamisation of our country and the increase in political-religious demands are calling into question the survival of our civilisation.”

“We are fighting against Islamism, not Islam”, she said. “Islamism is the will to impose Shariah for all as civil, political and religious law. We Western societies are fighting against Islamism all around the world. We have sent our kids to Afghanistan to be killed to fight against Islamism, and we don’t have the right in France through words and political action to fight it? That seems totally absurd to me,” she said.

Miss Le Pen said examples of creeping Islamisation included pork being taken off the menu in certain French schools, the fact that 22 Quick fast food restaurants were offering exclusively Halal burgers. She also claimed that Muslim communities were receiving hidden French government funds to build “increasingly ostentatious mosque-cathedrals” or ones funded by Saudi Arabia.

“In reality, it’s asking French people to increasingly submit themselves to the Muslim religion. That goes totally against the secular principles of the French republic,” she claimed, adding that the issue would be a “key theme” of the 2012 presidential elections. Miss Le Pen, a twice-divorced mother of three, sparked outrage among the French political mainstream early in December by likening Muslims praying in the streets to the Nazi occupation of France, minus the “tanks and soldiers”.

Her outburst received high French backing. According to an Ifop poll, some 54 per cent of sympathisers of Mr Sarkozy’s conservative UMP party backed Miss Le Pen’s controversial comparison, while it received the support of 39 per cent of all French.

In line with other Right-wing populist parties from the Netherlands to Italy, her words have clearly struck a chord beyond the FN’s traditional electorate, with analysts predicting she could woo chunks of France’s lower-middle classes hard-hit by the economic crisis. Dominique Reynié, a political analyst, said: “The French no longer only see the FN as an extreme-Right party but as a populist and popular party transcending the Right and Left.”

An Ipsos poll has just given her a 27 per cent approval rating. One poll suggests that up to 17 per cent of the French intend to vote for her should she run for president in 2012 — a good nine points more than her father was polling two years before he took 17 per cent of the vote in the 2002 presidential election and shocked France by reaching the second round run-off.

As a result, she claims, Mr Sarkozy is scared stiff she will knock him out of the first round in 2012 and then woo enough of his electorate to beat a Left-wing candidate.

Jean-François Copé, head of the UMP party, said: “It’s undisputable: the FN has been rising regularly in recent months. We are in danger from an electoral point of view.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Germany: Holidays a High Season for Islamist Recruitment

Suspected Islamic extremists are reportedly being closely monitored during the holidays, which German intelligence authorities consider to be a high season for Islamist recruitment.

The period between Christmas and New Year is often used by Islamists to attract new followers who fill their time during breaks from work or school by attending sermons and lectures, daily Süddeutsche Zeitung reported on Monday.

During the holidays, Islamists hold seminars and other events to “indoctrinate particularly young people with Salafist preachers,” an intelligence source from the North Rhine-Westphalia Office for the Protection of the Constitution told the paper.

“That is not a new development,” the source said.

Such seminars were particularly troubling “because they have the space and time to offer group education and exert extremist influence through often charismatic lecturers.”

Of particular concern are preachers from the Salafi community which supports a fundamentalist stream of Islam that aims to create a society modelled on the purported original community of the Prophet Mohammed.

The star of this scene is a former boxer called Pierre Vogel — also known as Abu Hamza — who pushes a strict interpretation of Islam but publicly condemns violence and terrorism.

A group connected to him, called “Invitation to Paradise” was raided by the police the week before last. On orders from Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière, officers searched the group’s headquarters and also the homes of leading members for material that could provide a basis on which to ban the organisation.

Vogel, a regular preacher at the Al-Nur mosque in the Berlin district of Neukölln, has cancelled several recent events.

In the town of Elsdorf west of Cologne in North Rhine-Westphalia, a three-day “Islam education meeting” was held between Friday and Sunday. Authorities kept a close eye on it because the teachers at the seminars are considered radical preachers by intelligence agencies that monitor extremism.

The meeting included such preachers Hassan Dabbagh from Leizig and Mohamed Benhsaid from Bonn, both of whom authorities consider radical.

Two of the preachers recently faced a complaint — ultimately unsuccessful — by Munich prosecutors that their sermons had criminal associations.

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



Germany: Chinese Hackers Target Government Computers

The number of cyber-attacks on German government computers has risen dramatically in 2010 and authorities suspect Chinese government hackers are behind the assault, the media reported Monday.

From January to September this year, about 1,600 such attacks against government computers were counted, the WAZ group of newspapers reported. That was nearly double the 900 counted in the first nine months of 2009.

Furthermore, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), which has responsibility for domestic intelligence, believes there has been an increase in unreported cases.

The cyber-spies are trying to access political, military and economic data. State employees in China are behind a large share of the attacks, a spokeswoman for the BfV told WAZ.

The Chinese hackers send emails with attachments that, when opened, install a “spyware” program on the German computer and establish a connection with China so that data can be transferred.

The latest BfV report on cyber-attacks acknowledges that the hackers are getting the upper hand.

“The advantages on the Chinese side seem to predominate,” it said.

The attacks are causing such concern that the Interior Ministry is now planning counter-measures.

“We urgently need a national cyber-defence centre that monitors and aims to safeguard the security and the integrity of the internet — under control of the federal Interior Ministry,” Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière told news magazine Der Spiegel recently.

De Maizière plans to put forward a detailed plan this year for such a cyber-defence centre. The government fears that hackers in future may try not only to access information but also to attack important systems such as the electricity grid or power stations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Milan Central to Malpensa Airport, Now Possible

The first Malpensa Express left from Milan’s Central Station this morning. Fifty-one runs a day, on top of the 79 to and from Milan’s Cadorna Station.

The first “Malpensa Express” left today, Sunday 12 December, at 5.25 a.m. from Central Station: 51 runs a day will be added to the 79 to and from Milan’s Cadorna Station. Of the runs to and from Cadorna, 54 go directly to Malpensa, with a journey time of 29 minutes. The new Trenitalia-LeNORD service now has 130 connections a day, between Milan and Malpensa Airport, from dawn to after midnight.

The connection has been made possible thanks to the opening of the track that joins Central Station to Bovisa Station, last July, and there are two types of service: there is a train from Central Station, every hour during the rush hour, at 25 minutes past the hour, stopping at Garibaldi, Bovisa, Saronno, Busto Arsizio FN; outside rush hour, the train also stops at Rescaldina, Castellanza and Ferno-Lonate. During rush hour, there is also a fast service, which only stops at Porta Garibaldi and Bovisa, with 5 runs leaving from Milan Central, and 6 from Malpensa Airport.

The Milan Cadorna service has been rescheduled, with 54 non-stop runs outside rush hour (run time, 29 minutes), and 25 runs with stops at Saronno and Busto Arsizio FN, during rush hour (run time, 36 minutes).

For the next six months, the ticket from Milan Central will be sold a promotional price of €7. The timetable can be consulted at www.malpensaexpress.it and www.trenitalialenord.it.

“We’re increasing the connections to Malpensa without taking any resources away from the regional train service, because the Malpensa Express is a market service, that doesn’t get state subsidies,” said Giuseppe Biesuz, the managing director of Trenitalia-LeNORD. Biesuz then pointed out that “since it was established in August 2009, Trenitalia-LeNORD has introduced 373 new runs for commuters in Lombardy and has reduced delays by millions of hours, thanks to the essential contribution by the Region of Lombardy.”

Two of the six new Coradia trains for the airport service (shown here on the right, in a photo by Simone Carcano) are also starting work today. The remaining four trains will start work by next January.

The new trains were ordered in May 2009 by FERROVIENORD (a company that is part of the FNM Group) from Alstom, which won the public tender called in August 2007. The cost of supplying the six trains is €35 million, which is funded by the Region of Lombardy, and is part of an agreement that includes an option to increase the order up to 35 trains. The funding is part of the approximately €900 million that the Region of Lombardy has allocated, since 2001, for renewing the regional rolling stock.

The new train, which consists of five articulated carriages, is 82.2m long and 2.95m wide, and has a total of 230 seats. It has been designed in accordance with modern comfort, safety and accessibility standards, and can reach a maximum speed of 160 kph.

The entrances to the carriages are close to the ground, so, it is easy for passengers to get on, and the retractable footplates, installed on every door, give easy access also to passengers with reduced mobility. Each vehicle contains a luggage area. There are many services on board: a video surveillance system, information screens, sound system, writing in Braille, 220V sockets for mobile phones and laptops.

Three of Alstom factories in Italy are involved in making the trains. The Savigliano factory (near Cuneo) is responsible for project development, for part of the vehicle production and the type testing; the Sesto San Giovanni factory (near Milan) is responsible for the design and production of the traction systems and auxiliary converters; the Bologna factory is responsible for the on-board signalling system.

Here is the new timetable of the Malpensa Express.

14/12/2010

Translated by Valeria Garavaglia (Reviewed by Prof. Rolf Cook)info@ssml.va.it

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



Italy: Refuse: 1500 Tonnes in Naples; Army Swings Into Action

(AGI) Naples — The amount of waste being consigned to the Naples bins is slightly up, to 1500 tonnes, as binmen take 2 days off. The Army has swung into action for a second time, and have collected roughly 50 tonnes since dawn in the area between Via Don Bosco and Viale Umberto Maddalena, close to Capodichino Airport.

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



Italy: Fiat Mirafiori Newco to be Outside Confindustria

CEO Marchionne says separate contract needed for Turin plant

(ANSA) — New York, December 10 — A new company that Fiat and Chrysler intend to create in order to produce new models at Fiat’s main plant in Turin, Mirafiori, will not be part of Confindustria and thus will not have to abide by existing national contracts struck by the industrial employers association with unions, Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said here on Friday.

It is not clear, however, whether this would entail Fiat leaving Confindustria entirely, to then perhaps rejoin at a later date.

The decision to keep the newco outside Confindustria was later confirmed by the association’s chairman, Emma Marcegaglia, who said the new joint venture would be “born outside Confindustria”.

She added that once a new contract was hammered out with unions that met with Fiat’s needs, the newco could then join Confindustria.

Fiat last week broke off negotiations with unions on the future of Mirafiori in response to their apparent refusal to agree to a new, ad hoc contract for the plant which was not tied to the national autoworkers’ contract.

The Italian automaker has said it is ready to invest one billion euros in Mirafiori, where it wants to produce larger cars and SUVs for both the Jeep marque and Alfa Romeo using a new, common platform. The investment is part of Fiat’s proposed 20-billion-euro plan for Italy that hinges on unions agreeing to individual factory accords.

The automaker maintains that separate contracts are needed to meet the individual conditions necessary to boost productivity at each of its plants.

Fiat has made it clear that without these accords with unions it would invest outside Italy, a move which observers say would distance Fiat from its native base.

The first new factory contract was recently struck for Fiat’s Pomigliano d’Arco plant near Naples, where it plans to move production of its popular and best-selling Panda subcompact city car.

This contract broke a common front among unions with all agreeing except one, the left-wing FIOM which is affiliated with the CGIL, Italy’s biggest union.

FIOM has also been the most resistant to an ad hoc contract for Mirafiori.

On the possibility of Fiat leaving Confindustria, one of FIOM leaders said “there is no such thing as temporarily abandoning contracted relations. You’re either in a system our you’re out”.

In regard to the unions at Mirafiori, Marchionne said “the investment is ready but we cannot wait forever. I need these cars, they have to be on the market in 2012. The countdown has begun”.

Without an accord for Mirafiori, he explained, “there will be no investment. There are many other factories and Fiat is a big group with 240,000 employees, less than a third of whom are in Italy”. Marchionne added that it would be a “very, great shame” if no accord could be worked out for Mirafiori.

Fiat last year acquired management control of bankrupt Chrysler by offering its small-car and green technology in exchange for an initial 20% stake.

Fiat’s alliance with Chrysler has allowed it to return to the American market after 26 years, with its popular 500 city car hitting showrooms next month.

This was the first benchmark which will enable Fiat to begin increasing its stake in the US automaker to 35%.

Other benchmarks include producing Chrysler vehicles, like Jeep, outside North America.

Fiat can boost its stake to over 50% when it meets other benchmarks, including repaying federal bailout loans.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Arrested Somalis ‘Suspected of Links to Al Shabab’, Says Volkskrant

The 12 Somali men arrested on Friday in connection with planning a terrorist attack on an unknown Dutch target are suspected of having connections to Islamic terror group Al Shabab, the Volkskrant reports on Monday.

The paper bases its claims on sources in the Somali community in the Netherlands, Mogadishu and Kenya.

The paper says one of the 12 men is related to a commander in Al Shabab known as Mohamed Garmashqo and that this is the same nickname as the owner of the phone shop arrested on Friday.

Not radical

However, friends of the man, Mohamed Abdullahi R say there is no question that he is involved in terrorism. He is Muslim, but not radical, they told the paper.

Five of the 12 were released on Sunday and are no longer considered suspects.

The lawyer of two of them has called for an investigation into the way the AIVD does its work.

‘One can only assume the AIVD has made a mistake if you release suspects so quickly,’ Michael Ruperti is quoted as saying by the AD.

Damages

Ruperti’s clients also plan to claim damages for their arrest. The two were picked up, handcuffed and blindfolded and not told they were wanted on terrorism charges until Saturday, Ruperti said.

A judge will decide on Monday if the seven other suspects should remain in custody.

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



Netherlands: Labour Calls on Opposition to Unite

Labour leader Job Cohen has called on all progressive parties and organisations to attend a protest event against Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s centre-right government. The event, to be held in Amsterdam’s Brakke Grond cultural centre on 16 January, aims to present “a different view”.

Mr Cohen wants all opposition parties to form a united front against the cabinet, which comprises the pro-business liberal VVD and Christian Democrat CDA party and is backed in parliament by Geert Wilders’ anti-Islamic Freedom Party (PVV). “This is not how we do things in the Netherlands. Things can be done differently”, Mr Cohen told the newspaper de Volkskrant.

Three opposition parties Green Left, the D66 democrats and Socialist Party, have agreed to take part in the meeting. The Christian Union has declined the invitation to attend the event as it is to be held on a Sunday. A number of other organisations will attend, including the FNV and CNV trade union federations, religious organisation IKV and charity Cordaid

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Number of Religious Czechs Falling, Poll Shows

Prague, Dec 22 (CTK) — One-third of Czechs believe in God and adhere to some church, which is 7 percent fewer than 15 years ago, according to a poll conducted by the polling agency STEM and released to CTK yesterday.

Practicing church-goers account for roughly one-tenth of the total population.

However, at Christmas even atheists go to churches.

The residents of Moravia are more religious than Czechs and more often observe Christmas customs, the poll found.

The agency has been asking Czechs about their faith for 15 years.

In the latest poll, 12 percent said they certainly believe in God and 20 percent they rather do. On the other hand, 36 percent said they did not believe in God and 32 percent rather did not.

The Catholic Church is claimed by 31 percent of Czechs and Czechoslovak Hussite Church and Czechoslovak Evangelical Church by around 2 percent each.

One half of those polled said they were “without any denomination” and 14 percent said they were not sure.

The rest is in various other Christian and different churches.

About one-fifth of Czechs go to masses at least once a year and 7 percent at least once a month.

Two-thirds of Czechs said a visit to church was among their Christmas customs. Compared with the situation at the close of the previous millennium, this was 5 percent fewer.

There were significant differences between Bohemian and Moravian regions. In the latter, there are more church-goers, the poll found.

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



Outsmarted by Apple: Nokia Looks to Recover the ‘Magic Dust’

For years, Nokia effortlessly dominated the cell phone market. But then Apple and Google muscled in on its turf and changed the game forever. The Finnish company is pinning its hopes on a new operating system, but it might be too little, too late.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Terror in Rome: Bomb Found at Greek Embassy as Multiple Embassies Have Package Scares

A package bomb has been found at the Greek Embassy in Rome, three days after mail bombs exploded at two other embassies injuring two people.

Greek Foreign Ministry spokesman Gregoris Delavekouras said from Athens that no one was harmed in the latest incident, in part because heightened security measures had already been put in place.

‘The embassy was evacuated and the staff assembled some distance away from the building, so that everyone could be accounted for,’ he told media.

‘There were already heightened security measures at the Greek and other embassies, so the procedure that had to be followed was clear. The matter is now in the hands of the Italian police.’

Mail bombs exploded Friday at the Chilean and Swiss embassies, injuring two people who opened them. An anarchist group with reported ties to Greek anarchists claimed responsibility.

Police, carabinieri and firefighters massed around the building Monday while the Greek Embassy staff lingered outside. The street, in the residential Parioli neighborhood, remained open to traffic.

Reports of suspicious packages at the embassies of Venezuela, Monaco and Denmark were false alarms, police and news reports said. There have been several other reports of suspicious packages in recent days that turned out to be false alarms.

Police told all embassies in the capital to be on alert after the package bombs on Friday; Monday was the first day of business after the Christmas holiday.

Sweden’s Foreign Ministry said no packages have so far been found at that country’s embassy in Rome, but that it was closed Monday ‘for security measures.’

An Italian group calling itself the Informal Anarchist Federation claimed responsibility for Friday’s blasts.

News reports said that a claim found at one of the embassies cited the name of Lambros Fountas, a Greek anarchist who was killed in a shootout with police in March.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni has said that investigators believe the anarchists who were responsible might have ties to Greek anarchists responsible for last month’s letter bombings at Athens embassies.

On Nov. 2, suspected Greek anarchists sent 14 mail bombs to foreign embassies in Athens, as well as to Berlusconi, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Two of the devices exploded, causing no injuries.

A group called Conspiracy Nuclei of Fire claimed responsibility for the Greek blasts. It called on militants in Greece and other countries to step up their action, and Greek police noted Thursday that in the past, acts of ‘solidarity’ have been carried out between Greek and Italian militant groups.

Though the bombings were similar, Greek police have pointed out that the attacks there seemed not intended to cause injury — and none was caused.

In contrast, the Italian attacks seemed intent on at least seriously wounding whoever opened the envelopes, since at least one of the devices contained an iron bolt that shot into the chest a Chilean employee.

That man also risked losing the sight in his eye; both he and the Swiss victim had serious injuries to their hands and arms, hospital officials said.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Top Economists Debate the ‘Clinging to the Euro Will Only Prolong the Agony’

Leading German economists Peter Bofinger and Stefan Homburg are split over the euro’s chances of survival. In a discussion moderated by SPIEGEL, they talked about the wisdom of introducing a euro bond and what would happen if Germany left the common currency.

SPIEGEL: Mr. Bofinger, Mr. Homburg, can the euro be saved?

Stefan Homburg: In 1995, the great thinker and European policy expert Ralf Dahrendorf predicted that the euro would divide rather than unite the continent. At the moment, we are experiencing the beginning of this process. Political tensions are growing in Europe, and the Germans are being viewed as taskmasters. For these reasons, it would be better to bring down the curtain on the euro and return to the deutsche mark.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Cowardly’ Drunken Thugs Beat Up Pensioner, 69, For Wearing RAF Blazer and Poppy

A former serviceman was left bloodied and bruised when two drunken thugs beat him up for wearing an RAF blazer and poppy.

Anthony O’Brien, 69, was attacked by the thugs, aged between 17 and 20, after meeting friends to plan the funeral of a former colleague.

Mr O’Brien said today that as they attacked him they shouted: ‘Blow up all soldiers. F****** shoot all you b*******s — death to all soldiers.’

The pair — described as being of Asian or mixed race — then headbutted and punched him to the floor leaving him in a daze.

[…]

Mr O’Brien staggered back to his home nearby in Fallowfield, Manchester, but has been left wheelchair-bound after being treated for his injuries.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Christmas Bomb Plot: Nine Remanded in Custody Over Terror Charges

Gurukanth Desai, 28, Omar Sharif Latif, 26, and Abdul Malik Miah, 24, from Cardiff, and Mohammed Moksudur Rahman Chowdhury, 20, and Shah Mohammed Lutfar Rahman, 28, from London, appeared at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court.

Chief magistrate Howard Riddle remanded them to appear at the Old Bailey on January 14.

The four men from Stoke-on-Trent were later also remanded in custody to appear at the Old Bailey on January 14.

They were Nazam Hussain, 25, Usman Khan, 19, Mohibur Rahman, 26, and Abul Bosher Mohammed Shahjahan, 26.

The suspects were held a week ago during a series of dawn raids by counter-terrorism officers.

In all 12 men were held during the raids by unarmed police on December 20 in London, Cardiff, Stoke-on-Trent and Birmingham. Two men from Cardiff and one from London were released without charge. The remaining nine suspects were charged last night with conspiring to cause an explosion or explosions in the UK “of a nature likely to endanger life or cause serious injury to property” between October 1 and November 20 this year.

They are also accused of engaging in conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism between October 1 and December 20, including by downloading and researching materials and methods; carrying out reconnaissance and agreeing potential targets, and igniting and testing incendiary material.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Christmas Bomb Plot: Nine Men Remanded Over Plan to ‘Blow Up Big Ben and Westminster Abbey’

They are alleged to have carried out reconnaissance missions before deciding on their possible targets.

Police were said to have found a list of six sites, including the full postal address of the Stock Exchange, Boris Johnson’s London mayoral office and the US embassy.

Defendants were seen studying the tower of Big Ben, before inspecting Westminster Abbey, the London Eye and the Church of Scientology. Al-Qaeda inspired books and leaflets, including instructions on making a pipe bomb, were also uncovered during the counter-terrorism operation. Details of the alleged plot were outlined at City of Westminster magistrates’ court.

The defendants, aged 19 to 28, were charged on Sunday with conspiracy to cause an explosion and conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism, having been arrested during early-morning raids in Cardiff, London and Stoke-on-Trent on Dec 20.

Piers Arnold, prosecuting, said the list of landmarks was found during police searches. “A handwritten note was found next to a computer with six contact details handwritten. They included the name, full address and post codes,” he said.

Among the details were the addresses of the Dean of St Paul’s Chapter House and of two rabbis at separate synagogues. A reconnaissance trip is alleged to have been made from Trafalgar Square, down Whitehall to Westminster Bridge where Big Ben was studied intently.

A mobile phone had appeared to be raised and pointed towards the clock tower, the court heard.

Westminster Abbey, the Palace of Westminster and the London Eye were also closely examined before the Church of Scientology near Blackfriars was allegedly observed intently for some minutes. The journey ended with a meal in a McDonald’s fast food restaurant, the court heard.

Police searches are said to have uncovered two issues of the al Qaeda extremist magazine Inspire, which is published in English in Yemen and is aimed at a Western audience. An article in issue one was entitled “How to make a pipe bomb in the kitchen of your mom”, while issue two included “What to expect in jihad” and “Tips for our brothers in the US”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: David Miliband May be Offered US Ambassador Post

Downing Street is considering offering David Miliband the post of British ambassador in Washington, the Guardian has learned.

The former foreign secretary, still recovering from being beaten to the Labour leadership by his brother Ed, has the skills, contacts and abilities to make a success of the post, it is believed.

His name has also been mentioned by shadow cabinet members in connection with the post, which has been occupied by Sir Nigel Sheinwald since October 2007. Sheinwald, a lifetime diplomat, is due to retire shortly.

It has been pointed out inside the cabinet that Miliband has forged strong personal relations with the US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, and would be a voice trusted by the Obama administration.

If he was offered, and accepted, the post it would mean the end of his political career at Westminster, and require a byelection in his South Shields constituency.

The precedent of Peter Jay is seen as relevant to Miliband’s appointment. Jay, a broadcaster and economist, was made ambassador to the United States between 1977 and 1979 by the then foreign secretary, David Owen, a move that caused controversy among diplomats angry that a plumb posting had been taken away from the professional diplomatic service.

Former cabinet colleagues who have spoken to David Miliband have found him wary of the idea, partly because he is not clear it is a job with real power, rather than a message carrier from the British government to the US.

Some senior coalition members would like to see him taken out of Westminster, so removing what they still regard as the most dangerous political threat to the coalition inside the Labour Party.

But those in the cabinet advocating Miliband insist they are not pressing his case out of some artful desire to remove him from British politics, but due to his talent and diplomatic experience.

His views on the need to find a political solution in Afghanistan and green politics chime with the coalition government’s, and would be used to try to change thinking in Washington. He has had disagreements with the coalition over the economy and Europe, including with the foreign secretary, William Hague, but cabinet members do not regard this as a problem in relation to the Washington job.

[…]

[DF — David Miliband who was recently paid £25,000 for one speech he gave in the United Arab Emirates. As well as five star luxury accommodation on a five day trip there.]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Chief Duped After House He Rented Out Was Turned Into a Cannabis Factory

One of the country’s most senior policemen has been left red-faced after a house he owns was turned into a cannabis factory.

Rod Jarman, Deputy Assistant Commissioner at Scotland Yard, rented out the four-bed home through an online letting agent to a British man with a Chinese or Vietnamese name.

He had no idea that the £400,000 property had been turned into a drugs emporium, growing thousands of super-strong ‘skunk’ plants under his nose.

Worried neighbours contacted Mr Jarman earlier this months to say they had heard strange noise coming from inside the house.

He decided to visit the property in Abridge, Essex, and found it filled with plants and equipment for growing the class B drug.

There was also a machete lying on the floor and the rear had been smashed — signs that the house had been burgled by rivals.

The gang had run up a £20,000 electricity bill using powerful lighting to grow the cannabis and caused an estimated £48,000 of damage.

A spokesman for Essex Police said: ‘We called to a report of a break-in to a property on London Road, Abridge on December 13.

‘There have been no arrests and inquiries continue.’

The man who rented the property is understood to have provided proof of identity and bank details to the letting agent.

Mr Jarman said: ‘Despite 31 years’ experience of policing I didn’t see it coming.

‘It is an absolutely awful thing for people to find their home has been destroyed for somebody else’s illegal gain.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Why Deport Immigrants?

Joseph Chamie & Barry Mirkin

The world as we know it emerged out of the ceaseless wandering of humans on the planet and, more recently, with migrations of millions across national borders. That trend of globalisation could be reversed as growing numbers of political parties and movements around the world call for sterner restrictions on immigration and immediate removal of those unlawfully residing within their countries.

This could be more than an empty threat as such parties gain in established democracies. Examples abound: the Dutch Freedom Party, the German National Democratic Party, the British National Party, the French National Front, the Italian Northern League, the Irish National Party, the Israeli Yisrael Beitenu, the Indian Shiv Sena, the Sweden Democrats Party, the Danish Peopleâ€(tm)s Party, the Spanish Peopleâ€(tm)s Party, the Norwegian Progress Party, the Austrian Freedom Party, the Flemish Interest Party, the True Finns Party, the Swiss Peopleâ€(tm)s Party, the Australian First Party and the American Tea Party.

Resistance to immigration, running against the modern tide of globalisation, is an early and major plank for many of these political parties. Particularly visible and forceful, often striking a sensitive nerve among much of the public, is their fierce opposition to illegal immigration. For example, a year after voting to ban minarets, Swiss voters in November approved the referendum backed by the right-wing Swiss Peopleâ€(tm)s Party for automatic deportation of foreign-born nationals convicted 
of crimes.

Calls for increased deportation of unauthorised migrants are reinforced by the global economic recession, severity of governmental austerity measures and high levels of unemployment. Recent electoral gains by nativist parties at the ballot box have intensified pressure on leaders of every political stripe to respond to the presence of illegal migrants. Exacerbating the situation are continuing high numbers of people attempting to immigrate illegally. For example, every month an estimated 10,000 men and women, most from North Africa and South Asia, cross the Greek-Turkish border illegally.

Fueling calls for increased deportations are frustrations and disappointments with multiculturalism and assimilation, contributing to anti-immigrant sentiments. Various national leaders and party officials — most recently in Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland — have expressed serious doubts about the success of immigrant integration, especially among those who differ religiously and ethnically from their host communities. Remarks by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, for example, were unequivocal with regard to immigration, stating that attempts to build a multicultural society, living side by side and enjoying one another, have utterly failed. Some go further, such as the leader of the Sweden Democrats, claiming that the population growth of the Muslim immigrants was the greatest foreign threat to his country since World War II.

And no doubt, the heightened security concerns as a result of past terrorist tragedies and uncovered threats produce additional pressures to deport illegal migrants, particularly those with suspect leanings. Although many of those involved in terrorist acts were in the country legally, this distinction has not diminished public demands for increased deportations. Removal of unauthorised migrants is often a politically sensitive matter for governments, especially in the international context. Consequently, some countries, in particular those that do not always observe due legal process and internationally recognised protocols on migrant rights, avoid providing timely, accurate information on migrants deported or expelled. For instance, United Nations officials estimate that last year Angola expelled 160,000 Congolese, while the Democratic Republic of Congo expelled 51,000 Angolans. Malaysia in 2005 ordered the mass expulsion of more than 400,000 illegal migrant workers mainly from neighbouring Indonesia.

Other countries regularly publish annual figures and other data on those deported. While no doubt incomplete, this information provides an up-to-date sketch of the nature of migrant deportations. The country deporting the largest number of unauthorised migrants is the United States. This should not be unexpected, however, given that the US has the largest number of migrants — 43 million, as well as the largest number of unauthorised migrants — approximately 10.8 million. The number of persons removed from the US in 2009 was 393,289, a record high and nearly an eightfold increase over the level just 15 years earlier. About a third of recent US removals were convicted criminals, most involved in illegal drugs, traffic offenses and immigration violations. This proportion has declined considerably since the early 1990s when about 70 per cent of the removals were convicted criminals.

Other top deporting nations include: South Africa (165,270), Greece (68,191), the United Kingdom (64,750) and Libya (53,842). Even in countries where mass regularisation programmes have been implemented in the recent past, such as in Greece, Italy and Spain, tens of thousands of illegal migrants continue to be deported every year. Attempts to discuss international migration in international forums, such as the United Nations, have not advanced much. Calls for shared responsibility fall on deaf ears. With economic recovery reported to be underway, demands from various business sectors for more migrant workers — both skilled and unskilled — will intensify, as it has in past recoveries. As a result, countries will face the difficult task of balancing the need for economic growth and additional migrant workers with the political and social consequences of increased immigration. Failure to properly balance these powerful, but opposing forces will in all likelihood lead to heightened social tensions, rising political extremism and increased governmental paralysis, especially for democratic societies.

Illegal entry is a major means through which low-skilled foreign workers join the labour force in many industrialised countries. In the United States, for example, these workers account for 5 percent of the labour force, but are more vital to those sectors that rely on low-skilled labour intensively, including farming, construction, landscaping, low-end manufacturing, the hospitality industry, building maintenance and family care-giving. The US Secretary of Agriculture recently warned that the nation has three options concerning immigration and food prices: pay substantially higher prices if more unauthorised workers are removed from the United States; import substantially more food from other countries, raising food-safety concerns; or pass comprehensive immigration reform that addresses labour shortages in the agriculture industry.

Of course, governments may choose to ignore or downplay the presence of large numbers of migrants residing unlawfully within their borders. Or, they may decide — as has often been the case — to postpone confronting this contentious issue in hopes the political climate will improve. However, as has been observed in country after country, citizens increasingly reject governmentâ€(tm)s ostrich-like behaviour and promised-filled postponements as viable options and demand concrete action. Consequently, the calls for increased and immediate deportation of unauthorised migrants continue to mount.

Joseph Chamie is research director at the 
Center for Migration Studies, and Barry 
Mirkin is an independent consultant

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



‘WikiLeaks is Annoying, But Not a Threat’

Spiegel Interview With German Interior Minister

By Holger Stark and Marcel Rosenbach

In a SPIEGEL interview, German Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière talks about the failed terrorist attack in Stockholm, his opinion of WikiLeaks and governments’ responsibility for protecting the Internet.

SPIEGEL: Does the recent suicide attack in Stockholm mean that the wave of terror that you feared has now arrived in Europe?

Thomas de Maizière: No. This has little to do with the warnings of attacks that we have been receiving for months. But it is unfortunately true that wide-scale public debates always lead to copycats who are not closely linked to global terrorist networks. This might have been the case here.

SPIEGEL: You’re saying that the vociferous public debate in Germany about terror and the palpable level of tension that followed your Nov. 17 warning about a possible attack in Germany were a mistake?

De Maizière: By no means, but the possible negative consequences are the reason why, for nearly a year, I carefully considered the issue of whether and when I should issue a public warning. Terrorism is also a form of psychology. In retrospect, for instance, we know that the threat in the run-up to the German 2009 parliamentary elections was just a psychological ploy. Also the fact that al-Qaida claimed responsibility for the parcel bombs mailed from the Arabian Peninsula six weeks ago, and the way they claimed responsibility, was primarily intended to have a psychological effect: Look here, with a few thousand dollars, we can attack international freight traffic. We shouldn’t support these psychological tactics with a public debate.

SPIEGEL: But that’s exactly what you did when you went before the cameras in November and warned of an attack.

De Maizière: Our assessment of the situation was different then. What’s more, it would be wrong if people got the impression that absolutely nothing is going on. The comments made by the minister responsible (for this issue) have to navigate between these two extremes, without knowing exactly what reaction will be prompted by one or the other.

SPIEGEL: If you issue an alert, the terrorists have achieved their objective of disrupting society. If you don’t issue warnings, it’s easier for the terrorists to carry out their plans. Does al-Qaida have the German interior minister at its mercy?…

Translated from the German by Paul Cohen

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

Balkans


Brussels Denies ‘Credibility Problem’ After Marty Report

The European Commission has “no credibility problem” on human trafficking after a Council of Europe report accused EU institutions of silently tolerating Kosovo abuses, home affairs chief Cecilia Malmstrom has said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Anti-Arab and -Immigrant March, Press Alarmed

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, DECEMBER 21 — The Israeli press is alarmed at the repeated marches organised by far-right activists against the Arab minority and immigrants from Africa.

Yesterday in the town of Bat Yam, south of Tel Aviv, hundreds of people took part in a protest against the presence in the town of Arab inhabitants from nearby Jaffa. “Arabs are taking possession of Bat Yam. taking our women and corrupting them. We must defend Bat Yam as a Jewish town” were the words on a leaflet handed out by far-right activists.

Another protest is due to take place today in the working-class Hatikva area of Tel Aviv, in protest against African immigrants who have set up there recently. “Foreigners out” is one of the slogans being used by organisers.

These episodes are being stimgatised by commentators, who say that incitement to violence could be translated into action. Two days ago in Ashdod (South of Tel Aviv), a group of unidentified people tried to set fire to a flat inhabited by five Sudanese immigrants. In Hatikva on the same day, youths punched and kicks three young black girls in the street.

An organisation supporting immigrants says that “violence is already spreading” although attacks are not always reported to the police.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Flotilla: Israel, Lieberman Harshly Criticised

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 27 — A wave of criticism by members of the government and opposition has descended upon Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who made harsh remarks yesterday against the Turkish government for its “false” accusations on Israel and its call for an apology and compensation for the murder of nine Turkish citizens when the Israeli Navy boarded the ship Mavi Marmara, which was bringing pro-Palestinian activists to Gaza. Last night, Israeli Premier Benyamin Netanyahu quickly disassociated himself from Lieberman’s comments, stating that “they reflect his personal opinion” and that the position of the government is solely expressed by the prime minister.

Today, Defence Minister and Labour Party leader Ehud Barak urged against “increasing tensions” with Turkey. Deputy Defence Minister Matan Vilnai said that “as usual, the statements by the foreign minister are unfortunate, superfluous and out of place”. Another minister of the Labour Party, Binyamin Ben Eliezer, said that Lieberman can no longer represent Israel and urged the premier to reprimand him. Within the premier’s Likud Party, several ministers, albeit anonymously, called Lieberman’s statements “crude and vulgar” in form and substance, while opposition (Kadima, centre) rep Ronni Bar-On said that they “painfully demonstrate his independence from the premier”.

This morning, the foreign minister responded to the attacks by confirming the stance taken in an interview on public radio and pointing out that he was speaking as a party leader (Israel Beitenu), which obtained 400,000 votes in the last election, making them the third political force in Knesset.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



London Considering Granting Palestinian Delegates Diplomatic Status

This could lead to a full-fledged recognition of Palestinian statehood as done already by Brazil, Argentina, Ecuador and Bolivia. The Foreign Office has already confirmed that it is considering upgrading the status of the Palestinian delegation, something that is worrying the Israeli government.

Jerusalem (AsiaNews/Agencies) — The UK government is considering upgrading the status of the Palestinian delegation to that of diplomatic mission, Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported today. In Israel, officials fear this might lead to the unilateral declaration of Palestinian statehood.

If carried out, the step would follow that of various South American nations who have already granted recognition to an independent Palestinian state. The Palestinian delegation would thus enjoy a status similar to that of an independent state, which will turn Palestinian delegates into diplomats.

So far, only Brazil, Argentina, Ecuador and Bolivia have recognised a Palestinian state. France, Spain and Portugal have already recognised the Palestinian delegation as a diplomatic mission

The Israeli government is very concerned about the possible move because the current UK government is considered pro-Israel. Its action would profoundly change the European context.

The British Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) confirmed that it was looking into the possibility of upgrading the Palestinian delegation’s status. A FCO spokesperson said the matter was indeed being examined thoroughly.

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

Middle East


A Gloomy Christmas in Iraq. Mgr Sako: “We Will Resist and We Will Remain”

Many liturgical functions called off, no Christmas decorations, and no celebrations after dark. The Iraqi prime minister calls attacks on Christians “a crime against national unity”. An appeal for peace and solidarity among ethnic groups and religions, and a message of hope from the archbishop of Kirkuk.

Kirkuk (AsiaNews / Agencies) — A Christmas of fear and sadness for Iraqi Christians, in memory of the martyrs killed Oct. 31 in the Syrian Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Salvation in Baghdad. Many masses were called off across the country, and security measures heightened. But in the midst of this also the determination expressed in a message also sent to AsiaNews by Archbishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk. According to Middle East Concern, the celebrations were cancelled as a result of threats posted on Web sites of Islamic groups. “The decision was taken after the threats were repeated on Tuesday, December 22. The churches in Baghdad, Mosul and Kirkuk have decided not to put up Christmas decorations and called off ceremonies after dark”.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has called on Christians not to leave Iraq. “Attempts to keep Christians away from their homeland and their land, which clung to them through the centuries, is a great crime against national unity,” al-Maliki said in a statement marking the Christmas holiday. But many churches in Mosul did not hold celebrations while in Basra the roads leading to churches were cordoned off with barbed wire, and the buildings were surrounded by security forces.

In this gloomy picture, the archbishop of Kirkuk, wants to talk about hope. “As long as we get back to each other: Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen, Muslims and Christians, we resist and we stay, because Iraq without us loses its beautiful multi-identity. We remain because are committed to love and to return to each other. This is the road to resurrection, life and renewal”.

Archbishop Sako recalled Oct. 31: “ We live in Iraq today, a painful experience, culminating in the massacre of Our Lady of Deliverance, which have shocked Christians and Muslims together, but we are determined to withstand the ordeal. We will not give in to temptation and frustration because life is a gift from God and it is greater than the hands of evil can destroy it”.

“If we go back to the essence of religion and to our common human roots, inevitably we will meet tour national fraternity in equality, justice, solidarity. Then risk will vanish and life will reflect abundantly This is good news of Christmas, the birth of Jesus Christ with his message of hope: Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace. “

The Archbishop of Kirkuk concluded his message with an appeal for peace: “Peace is the base of all goods: we ask it in prayer and implement it with mutual love and solidarity. Then the miracle happens and we will have peace on earth for human beings and the glory of God in the highest. We both believe that God is the Lord of the impossible”.

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



Ankara Authorities Look to Close Alevi Group for Cemevi Statute

Ankara provincial authorities have moved to close down a local Alevi association because it aims to build a cemevi “as a house of worship,” daily Radikal reported Friday.

“This action shows that the [government’s] Alevi opening is not sincere,” said Ali Yildirim, a lawyer and one of the founders of the Çankaya Cemevi Building Association.

“Our Sunni citizens can found associations to built mosques. Alevis should be able to build cemevis as well,” said Hikmet Sami Türk, a former Turkish justice minister who noted that mosque-building associations are some of the most frequently established entities in the country. Building cemevis is also not against the law, he added.

Alevis are widely perceived by many as a liberal form of Islam.

When Alevis in Ankara formed the association in 2004, one of their primary aims was “to build cemevis, which are the belief and worship centers for Alevi believers,” according to the group’s charter. The association also aims to construct cemevis in Alevi-populated areas that are part of lands Ankara municipality has allocated for places or worship as part of a citywide reconstruction plan.

As per legal requirements, the association submitted an application to the Interior Ministry for recognition in 2004, but the ministry expressed its concern about the “place of worship” phrase contained within the group’s statutes. Ministerial authorities asked for clarification on the issue from the Religious Affairs Directorate, to which the latter said cemevis could not be considered places of worship.

As a result, the ministry demanded the association remove the phrase from its statutes, suggesting the group replace it with “building a cemevi for cultural purposes.” The association, however, refused the recommendation.

“There is no breach of law here,” said Ankara University Law School member Hasan Ayranci upon reading the association’s statutes.

Ankara’s Governor’s Office warned the association to again change the code in June, but the group responded saying the statute was not open to discussion.

As such, the Chief Prosecutor’s Office opened a case against the association late last month.

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



GCC: Call for Correcting Population Disparity

Nationals of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) countries may lose their identity in an ocean of expatriates, if urgent legal measures are not taken to correct the population imbalance, chief of Dubai Police Lt Col Dahi Khalafan Tamim has said.

He made this observation while participating in the “Lakom al-Qarar” (The decision is yours), a televised discussion programme in Arabic on topics of current interest, broadcast on Qatar TV a few days ago.

A report in the local daily Arrayah quoted him describing the situation as serious.

He called upon the GCC governments to evolve a strategy to increase their indigenous population. “More attention should be paid to the marriage funds to enable young men to meet the dowry and other expenses required for marriage. Incentives by way of additional financial allowances should be offered to citizens with large families.”

Currently the expatriate workforce in the GCC region hails from around 200 countries most of which are in the Asian continent.

“The Gulf national is targeted by international human rights bodies for all the problems related to the sponsorship and employment of expatriate workforce,” he said, adding that in addition to paying large sums of money for recruiting workforce from abroad the Gulf national has to bear all the blame for a variety of problems.

Drawing a difference between the Arab and non-Arab workforce he said that “an Arab national is like the son of the soil. “It is easy to interact and have a better rapport with him as against the non-Arab national. But the gulf nationals should restrain themselves from being over-dependent on expatriates because that leads to a myriad of problems.”

“Terrorism in Saudi Arabia is mainly due to the impact of foreign elements. Recruitment of workforce from abroad should be on a balanced basis so as to not to allow any one particular nationality becoming numerically strong than the rest,” the Dubai Police

chief said.

The deputy chairman of the Standing Committee on Population, Dr Hasan al-Muhannadi, who also participated in the discussion drew attention to the negative impact of Asian housemaids in the upbringing of the children in gulf households.

           — Hat tip: AJ [Return to headlines]



High-Ranking Female Religious Official Removed From Office in Turkey

The entire staff of the Religious Affairs Foundation’s Women’s Activities Center has decided to collectively resign from their posts following the removal from office of the center’s head, Ayse Sucu, daily Milliyet reported Sunday.

Sucu, who is known for her liberal views about religion and women and for wearing a loose style of headscarf, reportedly told her close friends that she was surprised and hurt by the foundation’s decision to let her go.

Foundation head Necati Akçesme said in a statement that the change was the result of “new excitement and new understanding” in the foundation. The Religious Affairs Directorate is undergoing personnel changes under new head Mehmet Görmez, who has recently identified three new deputies and appointed four general managers.

In his written press statement, Akçesme did not mention Sucu by name, but identifying her by her post, said her personal life and thoughts did not play a role in the decision. Sucu had previously said wearing a headscarf is not a religious obligation for Muslim women.

Sucu collected her belongings from her office Saturday after receiving the official statement about her removal from office. “I was always focused on my work. I achieved a lot of firsts. There has been great success here,” she reportedly told her friends, according to Milliyet. “I am really hurt by this act while there are a great number of women [paying attention to our work]. I did not deserve this.”

Monday press meeting

Vildan Karabulut, the deputy head of the center, said the staff has no quarrel with any person or institution. “This is a change in posts and it is pretty normal,” she said. “But Mrs. Ayse should have been installed in the place she deserved.” Karabulut confirmed that the center’s staff had decided to collectively resign. “With our head removed from office, the acting board no longer has the power to act. They brought us to that position,” she said. “We are going to hold a press meeting Monday.”

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



Islam: A Religion Custom Made for Men

Muslims, by belief and practice, are the most blatant violators of human rights. We hardly need to detail here Muslims’ systemic cruel treatment of the unbelievers, women of all persuasions, and any and all minorities across the board. To Muslims, human rights have a different meaning, and its protective provisions are reserved strictly for Muslims—primarily for Muslim men. Just a couple of examples should suffice for now.

Oppression of women, for one, is so systemic in Islam that to this day women are, at best, second-class citizens under Islamic law. Saudi Arabia, the custodian of Islamdom, denies women the right to drive, vote or hold elective offices—the most basic rights of citizens in democratic societies. Arabs and Muslims are masters of double-acts. They do all things in private, yet the public display of morality, decorum, and even piety is something you wear as you would your Keffiyeh even under the sizzling sun.

In model Islamic states such as Saudi Arabia and Iran, for instance, women do not dare complain about their Allah-decreed chattel status. If they protest in the least, they are beaten by their husbands. And if they dare to demonstrate in public for equal family rights with men, they get severe beatings by the police and are hauled to jails for additional indignities and violence.

One may wonder then why is it that millions of Muslim women meekly submit to their subservient rank and thank Allah for it. These women are virtually imprinted by their parents and the clergy from birth to adopt the gender inequality as well as the entire pathological Islamic ethos.

Islam can be a “forgiving” religion, specifically for the male. If you neglect to say your prayers or you simply don’t want to, you can hire someone, preferably an imam or a mullah, to pray on your behalf. Going to the Hajj is too onerous and takes you away from the pleasures and comforts of your life? You can deputize someone else to go in your stead. You have a few drinks of the forbidden brew and it is time to say your prayer? Simply rinse your mouth and go ahead with praying. But, always remember the will of Allah and serve him. Do your duties to vanquish the unbelievers, promote the rule of the Sharia, and make the earth Allah’s.

In Islamic societies, freedom of expression, worship, and assembly are taken away. Women are indeed treated as chattel. Young girls are subjected to barbaric genital mutilation to make them sex slaves and birth channels without the ability to enjoy intercourse. Minors are executed, adulterers are stoned to death, thieves have their limbs amputated, and much much more. Isn’t that everyone’s idea of paradise?

Women, by the very nature of their second-class status expressly stipulated in the Quran, are occasionally allowed a token high position in government, while non-Muslim minority citizens are virtually barred from securing any positions at all.

“Men have authority over women because Allah has made the one superior to the others and because they spend their wealth to maintain them. Good women are obedient. They guard their unseen parts because Allah has guarded them. As for those from whom you fear disobedience, admonish them and send them to beds apart and beat them. Then if they obey you take no further action against them. Allah is high, supreme.” Quran 4.34

This misogynist religion of Allah is custom-made for the savage male. A faithful follower of Allah is allowed to have as many as four permanent wives-and replace any of them at any time he wants-as well as an unlimited number of one night or one-hour-stands that he can afford to rent. But, woe unto a woman if she even has a single love affair with another man. Nothing less than death by stoning is her just punishment.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Look What Obama Expects Israel to Give Up Now

Negotiators push surrender of territory twice used to invade Jewish state

TEL AVIV — The Obama administration is pressing Israel to enter into negotiations with Syria aimed at compelling an Israeli retreat from the strategic Golan Heights, WND has learned.

Syria is in a military alliance with Iran. The country twice used the Golan, which looks down on Israeli population centers, to mount grounds invasions into the Jewish state.

Informed Middle East security officials tell WND that Dennis Ross, an envoy for the White House in the Middle East, visited both Israel and Syria last week to discuss specifics of a deal in which Syria would eventually take most of the Golan.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘Other Angels’ Gets Marks for Bravery With Turkish Transgender Film

Director, writer, producer Emre Yalgin’s debut feature, ‘Teslimiyet’ (Other Angels), is a brave attempt to shed light on the lives of the transgender community in Istanbul — since such women are usually subjected to one-dimensional stereotypes. While the transgender characters and actors impress, the film fails when the straight characters walk in.

The movie follows the lives of four transgender women living together in the underbelly of Istanbul. They are all sex workers, as is the case unfortunately for most transgender women in Turkey.

Followers of Turkish movie blogs and movie pages on Facebook might have noticed last week that there was a lot of chatter urging people to go see the feature “Teslimiyet” (Other Angels). Although you could read about its groundbreaking subject matter, and why we had a social duty to watch it in theaters, we had yet to see a film review among the dozens of blog entries.

“Other Angels” is the first feature movie to take a candid look at the lives of the transgender community in Istanbul since 1993’s “Dönersen Islik Çal” (Whistle If You Come Back). The heavy virtual traffic was thanks to those sensitive about the tragic lives of transgender people in Turkey. Here was a chance to make transgender people more visible, a chance to watch them as multidimensional characters as opposed to the simplified and unfair stereotypes they were accustomed to being depicted with.

The movie follows the lives of four transgender women living together in the underbelly of Istanbul. They are all sex workers, as is the case unfortunately for most transgender women in Turkey. Save for the novice Sanem (Didem Soylu), the other three are street-smart, true warriors in a world where they are constantly on the lookout.

As we go deeper into their daily routines, consisting of a spliff now and again, watching mindless TV, and the endless beauty routines, we see that the hierarchy among the women is not much different than a typical nuclear family. The two older women Hayat (Seyhan Arman) and Mavi (Buse Kiliçkaya) play the parents, the other two referring to them as Mom. This makes Aygül (Ayta Sözeri) the older and Sanem the younger child, a role that requires her to learn the tricks of their profession and some tips on surviving. Taking the role of the children, the two younger women take the occasional tongue-lashing from the other two.

We are simultaneously introduced to a young man, Gökhan (Kanbolat Görkem Arslan), a heartbroken straight guy who has just moved into the neighborhood. Immersed in sorrow over his recent break-up, Gökhan first doesn’t really notice the vulgar comments made by the women living next door. Soon, he notices one of them, the beautiful Sanem.

Good intentions, mediocre execution

Being the only one among four women who still continues to hold on to her hopes of finding her knight in shining armor, Sanem develops a crush over this unsuspecting young man in the neighborhood. When the women’s lives turn into nightmare with the police, bad-news customers and bad-news boyfriends, Sanem finds refugee in a life headed for doom with Gökhan. The two get close and ultimately find that they have to face their prejudices and preconceptions of one another.

Director, writer and producer Emre Yalgin’s debut feature is one of the bravest Turkish movies to come to screen recently. Delving straight into the private lives of the transgender community and hoping to be more accurate than sensationalist is not the easiest thing. What’s more, Yalgin puts real-life transgender actors into his movie. That alone deserves applause.

That said, the movie manages to disappoint with its plot holes, poorly drawn characters, bad dialogue and not doing justice to its delicate subject matter. The first half of the movie, dominated by scenes with the women, surpass expectations with the natural flow of the relationships and with dialogue that mostly impresses with its shock value.

Things start to go really bad when Sanem and Gökhan get close, and more straight characters find their way into the story. The bigoted reactions to Gökhan’s relationship with a transgender woman by his ex-girlfriend and his best friend are very predictable.

The biggest shortcoming of the movie comes in the form of the relationship between Sanem and Gökhan, where they are at a loss for words in most of the scenes. And when they talk, it just becomes embarrassing. More screen time for the transgender characters, totally immersed in their characters, would have made “Other Angels” a memorable film. Sadly, we are reminded that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

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



The Muslim Brotherhood Down the Salafi Road

A new study charts how the Muslim Brotherhood largely pushed itself to the fringes of society, writes Galal Nassar from Alexandria

A recent study of the Muslim Brotherhood suggests that the group is increasingly leaning towards more puritan interpretations of Islam. The author of this study, Hossam Tammam, argues that Wahhabism (the 19th century Islamic movement still popular in Saudi Arabia) and Qotbism (the militant ideas of mid-20th century Egyptian scholar Sayed Qotb) are now dominant in both the Muslim Brotherhood’s thinking and organisational structure. His study, “The Brotherhood Embraces Salafism: The Erosion of the Brotherhood Thesis and the Ascendance of Salafism within the Muslim Brotherhood,” appears in the first edition of Marased (Watchtowers), a periodical published by the Future Studies Unit of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina.

The Brotherhood, Tammam says, has undergone the biggest organisational shift since the 1950s and 1960s, especially after the victory of conservatives in internal elections the group held in late 2009 and early 2010. With the conservatives in full control of the Brotherhood, the group’s ideology is also undergoing a profound change.

The Muslim Brotherhood has been drifting towards Wahhabism since the early 1950s, when the Salafi trend rose in reaction to the repression of the Nasserist campaign. One reason for this was that many Brotherhood members fled Egypt to Saudi Arabia, the historic hub of Wahhabi Salafism. The trend was to continue during the 1970s, when the growth in the Saudi economy led to the rise of religious conservatism around the region.

It’s not that the Brotherhood was against Salafism to start with. Hassan El-Banna, who founded the Muslim Brotherhood in the 1920s, described the group as “a Salafi appeal, a Sunni method, a Sufi experience, a political organisation, a sports gathering, a scientific and cultural association, and economic enterprise, and a social idea.”

The above definition makes it clear that the Brotherhood thought highly of Salafism. And yet, its original understanding of Salafism doesn’t tally with today’s definition of the term. The Brotherhood, let’s not forget, was an inclusive group, one that sought to unite rather than to divide, inspire rather than dictate. Significantly enough, the group in its early days also advocated Sufism as part of its theoretical and educational practice.

Tammam argues that the Brotherhood was inspired initially by the reformist ideas of Salafism as espoused by Sheikh Rashid Reda. This brand of Salafism was inclusive and flexible in its approach to religious rituals and textual interpretations.

Also, in its early days, the Brotherhood was pan-Arab in its orientation, which meant that it was particularly respectful of non-Muslims, as they were an integral part of the country and the region. El-Banna was particularly clear on this point.

The traumas of the Nasserist era, Tammam contends, contributed to the rise of Salafism. The first wave of Salafism occurred when the Brotherhood fled Egypt in 1954, following the first clash with the regime. Saudi Arabia offered them safe haven, and often enough passports.

The second wave of Salafism occurred in the 1970s. As Brotherhood members became acclimatised to Saudi traditions, their brand of Islam became more puritan than was the case back in Egypt. And their ranks were soon to swell. For when Anwar El-Sadat released thousands of Brotherhood members from prison, many left for Saudi Arabia, where it was easy for them to find jobs and feel accepted.

The rise of oil wealth, as it attracted a lot of workers from Egypt, reinforced this trend. The open-door policies of Sadat, with its stress on financial success, encouraged Egyptians to seek employment in Gulf countries, where religious conservatism was the norm.

Egypt had its own Salafis for decades before that. The Ansar Al-Sunna (supporters of the prophet’s traditions) group espoused a brand of thinking that closely resembled that of the Wahhabis. Hamed El-Fiqi, the group’s founder, was the first to import Wahhabi thinking to Egypt. Eventually, Ansar Al-Sunna preachers became quite popular at university campuses. And the Salafi library of Mohebeddin Al-Khatib in Cairo offered ready material for many college students of this generation, who often reprinted the books and sold them at nominal prices.

Having suffered at the hands of the Nasserist regime, the Brotherhood needed new blood, and began to court college students, especially the followers of various Islamist groups. The newcomers to the group brought their Salafi doctrines. So by the late 1970s, the Brotherhood’s thinking became more puritan than any time before.

In the post-Camp David Egypt of the 1980s, a fair amount of crossbreeding took place between the Brotherhood and the Salafi movement. Mostly, the Brotherhood brought organisational structure to Salafism, whereas the Salafis infused the Brotherhood with their newfound puritanism.

Consequently, two sub-currents in Salafism surfaced. One is a Qotbi current espousing the Jihad strain of Salafism seen in the Palestinian Muslim Brotherhood led by Abdallah Azzam. The other is the Sahawi (revivalist) current seen in the Syrian Brotherhood led by Mohamed Sorour Zein Al-Abidin. The latter, in particular, maintained the Brotherhood tradition of involvement in public work while borrowing liberally from the Salafi thinking of the Wahhabis.

The rise of the Gamaa Islamiya and the Jihad also had their impact on the Brotherhood, reinforcing a militancy that was mostly short-lived and tentative.

Tammam believes that the changes in the religious and political scene in Egypt in the 1990s left a lasting mark on the Muslim Brotherhood. The group was particularly weakened by a government clampdown on Brotherhood- led labour and trade unions and the confiscation of Brotherhood-run companies. Meanwhile, the Egyptian religious scene was becoming more tolerant of Salafism. As the mainstream largely embraced stricter forms of religiosity, the Brotherhood had to keep up.

Salafi preachers became all the rage, and Brotherhood- affiliated preachers benefited from the Salafi-friendly media and the attendant boom in Islamist websites and television programmes. Some became talk show hosts, whereas others appeared regularly on cultural and religious programmes. As a result, the Brotherhood drew closer to Salafism.

A Salafi component began to assert itself within the Brotherhood. This wasn’t a development with which all Brotherhood members agreed, and some of them felt alienated as a result. This created some tensions within the Muslim Brotherhood, with the Qotbis demanding a stricter interpretation of the letter of Islam. As Brotherhood organisers tried to maintain unity within the group’s ranks, the gap between the conservatives and the reformers continued to grow.

In the Brotherhood’s internal elections of 2008, reformists within the group expressed the concern that their organisation was being “hijacked” by the Qotbi current. Their evidence was not hard to see: the supreme guide and two of his three lieutenants are ultra-conservatives.

The Brotherhood, the author argues, is becoming too conservative to be inclusive. The resurging Salafism, with its obsession with outward piety, is generally unappreciative of the arts and literature. According to Tammam, the Brotherhood has changed from a group that “wished to reclaim Islamic identity from the Wafd Party in the 1930s and 1940s to the concept of hakimia [theocracy] in the face of state and society in the 1970s, to a defender of public morality in the 1990s, to a proponent of exclusive orthodoxy today.”

The Salafis may not be dismissive of political participation, but they miss its point. As a result, Tammam says, they “will throw confusion into political doctrine… and hinder the progress of the Brotherhood in the coming years.” Interestingly, Tammam doesn’t blame the rising Salafism on the Wahhabis. He says the trend is a natural outcome of the course Egyptian society has been taking for years. The Egyptian brand of Salafism maintains certain traces of the pluralism, openness, and social vitality that are still alive in Egypt, despite setbacks.

Tammam expects the Muslim Brotherhood to lose much of its flexibility due to its new orientation. In particular, it will be unable to maintain diversity in its ranks for long. As the Qotbi and Salafi doctrines prevail, the Brotherhood may have to spend much of its energy on cultural indoctrination. To put it briefly, the Brotherhood is drifting farther from its original goal. The organisation that once had an ecumenical appeal is now hindered by its own ideology.

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



Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan to Hold Joint Military Exercise

Turkey will hold a joint military exercise with Afghanistan and Pakistan in March 2011, the leaders of the three countries reportedly decided during a trilateral summit held Friday in Istanbul.

Turkish diplomatic sources speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation confirmed the plans Friday to the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

“Development [of our countries] is a strategic tool to maintain peace, stability and serenity,” Turkish President Abdullah Gül said Friday in his opening speech at the summit, which followed a meeting of Central Asian countries belonging to the Economic Cooperation Organization.

Security and development were the main issues discussed at the trilateral summit. In his speech, Gül said the three countries had to provide a positive environment for private investment and strengthen cooperation in the fields of air transportation, commerce and energy.

In addition to the training exercise, the heads of state also decided to establish infrastructure for audiovisual conferences as well as a natural disaster emergency operation center. Four main decisions were made regarding security issues including joint military drills, the fight against terrorism, a joint program on police cooperation and one on the fight against drug trafficking.

An “ideas platform” will also be launched in order to increase communication and cooperation among researchers, academics and media outlets in the three countries. The leaders also agreed to launch a cultural exhibition that will highlight the heritage of the three countries and strengthen cultural ties.

“Friendship among the people of our countries has deep historical roots,” Gül said in his speech, adding that relations between the three countries have progressed and gained momentum since the first trilateral summit, held in Ankara in 2007.

The fifth trilateral summit took place directly after the 11th ECO Summit. Previous summits have focused on a variety of topics, including dialogue and mutual security, economic cooperation, security and education.

Iran nuke talks

A diplomatic solution to Iran’s controversial nuclear program is Turkey’s most sincere offer, Gül told his Iranian counterpart, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a meeting Thursday evening, diplomatic sources told a group of journalists Friday. Gül said Turkey was making its efforts due to the responsibility it feels as Iran’s neighbor and that Turkey was ready to contribute in any way to secure positive results in the Istanbul nuclear talks to be held in January between Iran and world leaders in the P5+1, the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany.

Ahmadinejad said he was glad relations between the two countries were improving day by day and that Turkey was developing at a very fast pace. Cooperation between Turkey and Iran is constructive both regionally and globally, the Iranian leader said, according to diplomatic sources.

Turkish President Gül also met Friday with his Kyrgyz counterpart, Roza Otunbayeva, and suggested she invite Turkish firms to invest in her country, which is rich in natural resources and mines. Turkish companies are disciplined and will attract other investors to Kyrgyzstan by setting a good example, Gül told Otunbayeva, according to diplomatic sources. He also said justice and the rule of law would bring Kyrgyzstan much more welfare than oil and natural gas.

Afghanistan has meanwhile asked for Turkey’s technical assistance in increasing project-development capacity; the Afghan president told Gül that his country has decided to become a partner of the ECO Commerce and Development Bank. Azerbaijan also said it had decided to become a partner of the bank, while Kazakhstan said it would do so in the near future.

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



Twin Suicide Blasts Targeting Government Compound in Western Iraq Kill 9 People

Two suicide bombers blew themselves up on Monday, killing nine people at the government compound in the provincial capital of Ramadi, local officials in the Iraqi province of Anbar said. Insurgents frequently go after government targets in an effort to destabilize the U.S.-backed Iraqi authorities, as American troops prepare to leave by the end of next year.

The first blast occurred when a suicide bomber drove a minibus packed with explosives into the entrance of the main government compound of the city, official spokesman Mohammed Fathi said. As people gathered to observe the destruction, another suicide attacker detonated his explosive vest in their midst, said police and hospital officials.

The officials said in addition to the nine dead, another 43 people were injured by the blasts. Consecutive blasts meant to catch bystanders and rescue personnel have become a hallmark of al-Qaida’s tactics in Iraq in the past few years. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the double attack.

Ramadi is the seat of the Anbar provincial government and used to be a stronghold of al-Qaida. Recently, local militias have managed to bring a measure of calm to the city and province.

The complex, which houses various government agencies, including the governor’s offices, has been bombed twice this year.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



We Cannot Protect Assyrians and Other Minorities: Iraqi Official

In a secret meeting in Stockholm by an Iraqi delegation with members of the Swedish government, the Iraqi delegation called on Sweden to stop deporting to Iraq refugees whose applications were rejected for asylum. “We cannot receive Iraqi refugees deported forcibly from Sweden because we cannot protect them and their lives will be at risk if they are returned to Iraq,” said an Iraqi diplomat.

The Iraqi delegation, which included representatives from a number of ministries, said in their meeting with Swedish officials the Iraqi government is giving priority to stopping emigration and working to increase security, but it needs more time to build its security forces. The Iraqi delegation asked Swedish officials to stop the forcible deportation of Iraqis for this interim period.

The Swedish authorities are very quiet about the Iraqi delegation’s mission in Sweden. Quoting from an email by a Swedish official, Hökan Gestrin, the visit of the Iraqis to the Migration Board was not unusual. He writes that the Migration Board is often visited by delegations from other countries in order to get answers concerning legislative laws. But Gestrin refuses to answer questions about the meeting, what the Iraqi delegation discussed in the meeting are according to him issues regulated by foreign affairs privacy.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) strongly criticized Sweden last week for forcibly deporting people to Iraq. On December 15, in the same week when the meeting between the Iraqi delegation and the Swedish government took place, twenty Iraqis were forcibly deported to Iraq on a chartered Swedish aircraft; five of them were Christian Assyrians. This act was widely criticized by many organizations, who have pointed to the extremely volatile security situation in Iraq.

On the same date a hearing was held in the Swedish Parliament under the title “Iraq outside the scope of the perspective of asylum.” The questions raised during the hearing were focused on the seriousness of the situation in Iraq and its danger to minority groups in Iraq, and how the Swedish Migration Board and other immigrations services assesses Iraqi refugees issues and their need for protection, as well as how the Swedish Board deals with the information given in the country.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Russia


Mikhail Khodorkovsky Found Guilty Again

Judge Victor Danilkin said the former chief executive of the oil company and his business partner Platon Lebedev had been found guilty of using trading schemes to embezzle $25 billion in oil revenues from the now defunct Yukos and had laundered the stolen money. “The court has found that Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev committed embezzlement and abuse of their official positions,” Mr Danilkin told a courtroom packed with journalists and the defendants’ relatives.

Mr Khodorkovsky and Mr Lebedev appeared unmoved by the verdict. Mr Lebedev was seen reading a book and exchanging notes with his defence team, while Mr Khodorkovsky was seen communicating with his mother. Outside the courtroom protesters chanted “free Khodorkovsky” and police made several arrests.

Reading the full verdict and sentencing is expected to take several days. The conviction carries a minimum sentence of one year, but could keep Mr Khodorkovsky behind bars until 2017.

Mr Khodorkovsky, once Russia’s richest man, is reaching the end of an eight year sentence for tax evasion from a 2005 trial that was widely seen as punishment for defying then-president Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin. After the first trial Yukos was broken up and its assets snapped up at knock-down prices by state-owned oil companies.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Bombay Stock Exchange Launches Islamic Index

The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) in the Indian city of Mumbai has launched a new index which consists of companies that meet the Islamic legal code.

The Tasis Shariah 50 was formed using guidelines from an Indian Shariah advisory board.

Studies have found that most Muslims in India are excluded from the country’s formal financial sector.

That is because Islamic law does not allow investment in companies that sell goods like alcohol, tobacco or weapons.

Neither does it allow investment in companies that derive significant profit from interest.

The index is intended to be the basis for other Shariah-compliant financial products.

‘Come and invest’

BSE Managing Director and Chief Executive Madhu Kannan said that the new index would attract Islamic and other “socially responsible” investors both in India and overseas.

“This index will create increased awareness of financial investments among the masses and help enhance financial inclusion,” he said in a statement.

Companies included in the index have been screened by Tasis, which is based in Mumbai and whose board members include Islamic scholars and legal experts.

“Before anyone can attract investors, we need to put in place institutional infrastructure, and having an index to track Shariah-compliant stock is important,” MH Khatkhatay, senior adviser to Tasis, told the Reuters news agency.

“If you have an ETF (exchange traded fund), for example, you need an index, or if overseas investors want to invest in Shariah index in India, this is an invitation for people to come and invest.”

Tasis said the index would “unlock the potential for Sharia investments in India”.

“The BSE has the largest number of listed Sharia-compliant stocks in the world,” said Shariq Nisar, director of research and operations at Tasis.

“All Muslim countries of the Middle East and Pakistan put together do not have as many listed Sharia-complaint stocks as are available on the BSE.”

Stocks will be reviewed every month to ensure they continue to meet the criteria — any which do not will be removed, officials say.

           — Hat tip: DW [Return to headlines]



BSE, TASIS to Launch Shariah-Compliant Index

(RTTNews) — Bombay Stock Exchange Ltd. or BSE and Taqwaa Advisory and Shariah Investment Solutions or TASIS will launch the BSE TASIS SHARIAH 50 Index on Monday, December 27, 2010.

The Index will be the first Shariah Index created in India utilizing the strict guidelines and local expertise of a domestic, India-based Shariah advisory board. The BSE TASIS Shariah 50 index consists of the 50 largest and most liquid Shariah compliant stocks within the BSE 500.

TASIS employs a strict, proprietary screening process utilizing their knowledge of and local access to listed Indian companies to ensure that all stocks included within the BSE TASIS Shariah 50 are strictly compliant with Islamic Shariah law. TASIS has adopted financial screening norms that are more conservative than its peers, making the product ideal for Islamic investors seeking investments that adhere to the strict, conservative Shariah compliance norms.

The BSE TASIS Shariah 50 employs index constituent weight capping. Index constituent weights are capped at 8% at re-balancing, in an effort to increase the diversification within the index and ensure greater compliance with international regulatory and statutory investment guidelines.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Classified Maps Show Security in Afghanistan is Worsening, Despite Obama’s Assurances the War is ‘On Track’

Secret United Nations maps reveal security is deteriorating in parts of Afghanistan despite White House assurances its war strategy is working.

The maps reveal fighting had worsened in 16 districts in the north and east of the country by October, compared with March.

The regions, which were once considered secure, have since been upgraded to ‘high risk’ status.

The districts concerned are in the provinces of Badghis, Sari Pul, Balkh, Parwan, Baghlan, Samangan, Faryab, Laghman and Takhar.

The documents, which were published by the Wall Street Journal, also show that the south, which is regarded as the fiercest battleground between the Taliban and U.S. troops, remains unchanged at ‘very high’ risk status.

The map regions are graded by very high, high, medium and low risk categories.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



India: Orissa: Hindu Radicals Threaten a Christmas Pogrom Against Christians

The Kui Samaj, a fundamentalist movement, has convoked a rally on Dec. 25 to “honor the memory” of one of its members who was injured while destroying a church and later died in unclear circumstances. Christians in India urge the authorities to intervene to prevent an announced massacre, similar to that of 2007.

New Delhi (AsiaNews) — A radical Hindu movement, the Kui Samaj, says it will hold a rally in Kandahamal district on Christmas Day, an area that has been the scene of tragic anti-Christian violence in Orissa. The Global Council of Indian Christians reports that the announcement has caused panic among Christians in the region. “We’re scared. Please do something”, implored Kartika Nayak, a Christian youth from the village of Barkham, who witnessed the anti-Christian violence of Christmas 2007. Nayak was among those accused of killing Khageswar Mallick, a tribal Hindu, on Christmas Day of that year. Kartika Nayak said that Mallick was injured while trying to destroy a church. Hindu radicals then took him away to get it treated. Mallick died in mysterious circumstances, and since then the Hindus have been trying to blame Christians for his death.

On 19 December, Lambodar Kanhar, leader of Kandhamal Kui Samaj, informed reporters that his group would hold the rallies to honor Mallick. Local Christians say Hindu radicals have held closed meetings and distributed leaflets asking people to observe the “memorial day.” Bipra Charan Nayak — no relation- convener of Kandhamal Survivors Association, recalled that Kanhar had called for a general strike on 2007 Christmas in the district. “It resulted in violence that killed three Christians and torched 750 houses and 115 churches, convents and dispensaries,” he said. Bipra said Christians fear the cycle of violence would recur in this Christmas season if the administration failed to act.

Umesh Nayak, a local Christian leader — no relation to the two mentioned above -, who was part of the district collector’s peace meetings, says government assurances do not assuage Christians’ fear. He recalled that Kandhamal experienced seven-week anti-Christian violence starting August 2008 despite promises of safety from the federal minister, who visited them in relief camps in that January. Itikera Sunamajhi, a tribal leader, said they do not want December 2007 repeated. “Definitely, there is a fear among the Christians. We have told the collector about it and the administration has assured us that it would take necessary measures”.

The problem has the support of the President that the Council of Christians, Sajan George, who has written to Prime Minister of Orissa. “Panic is spreading among Christians in Kandhamal after KSSS announced plans to hold rallies on Christmas day. The rally announced is a stalk reminder of brutality and deceit being carried out in Barakama on the Christmas day of 2007.Now, the radicals want to observe Christmas day as his ‘memorial’ and thousands of leaflets are send out to whip up passion ..Christians fear the cycle of violence would recur in this Christmas season if the administration failed to act with determination to curb the sinister move”. Sajan George recalls that in 2007 the anti-Christian violence in Kandhamal district had no precedent in Indian history. A total of 730 houses were destroyed, along with 115 churches. The nine dead were Christians, many women raped and more than 40 businesses and shops damaged. And the letter closes with a plea: “Mr. Minister, we ask you to restore confidence in this tiny Christian minority.”

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



Indonesia: West Java: Catholics Celebrate Christmas Mass in a Parking Lot

An order by Bogor Regency prohibits members of the Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church from engaging in any public activity, ostensibly because they lack a proper place of worship. Muslim extremist groups increasingly threaten Indonesia’s Christians.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Hundreds of members of Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church in Parung (West Java) celebrated Mass under the sun and in a tent set up in the parking lot of the Marsudirini Elementary School. Bogor Regency chief’s prohibition of Christmas celebration was thus not repealed despite repeated attempts by Tulang Kuning Church leaders to negotiate with local authorities.

The latter justified their decision citing the lack of a permit to build a church. Without it, the local parish is not allowed to perform any public functions even on its own land.

According to Indonesia’s constitution however, no one has the right to prohibit any religious community from practicing its faith and celebrating its rites and services. Yet with the rising influence of Islamic radicals, the constitution has been repeatedly violated as local authorities kowtow to Muslim extremists and show greater hostilities towards Christians.

The Parish of Saint John the Baptist has at least 3,000 members. In April of this year, dozens of Muslim extremists threatened those from the community in Tulang Kuning, preventing them from celebrating Easter Mass.

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



Malaysian Colleges a Hotbed for Militant Recruiting: Experts

Malaysia’s universities have become prime recruiting grounds for Islamic militants looking for youngsters to draw into terrorist networks, security experts warn.

Unlike neighbouring Indonesia and Thailand, the moderate Muslim-majority nation has remained largely free of terror attacks but there are fears that lax admission policies have created a haven for jihadists. A string of arrests and detentions this year have highlighted the growing presence of radicals using Malaysia as a base to sign up supporters and plan attacks.

“The terror threat to Malaysia is very real in terms of terrorists who come in as students,” Zamihan Mat Zin, deputy head of the Malaysian Islamic Training Centre, told AFP.

“They are under the radar so they can recruit and create terrorists in our midst,” said Zamihan, who is among a group of Muslim scholars engaged by the government to rehabilitate terror suspects in custody. In June, authorities deported 45-year-old Al-Qaeda-linked Syrian scholar Aiman Al Dakak along with eight other foreigners from Syria, Yemen, Nigeria and Jordan, most of them students.

Al Dakak gave lectures to Malaysian and foreign students at his Kuala Lumpur home, allegedly indoctrinating them with jihadist ideology and urging them to carry out bombings on places of worship in the multi-ethnic nation.

The following month, engineer Mohamad Fadzullah was detained under internal security laws for trying to recruit students at Malaysia’s national university and technical institutes for the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) extremist group.

Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said after the deportations that the phenomenon was an “unhealthy trend which can affect national security”.

He said foreign militants were using Malaysia as a base to carry out financial transactions, share information and sign up new followers. “Despite the arrests, we believe there are still many who are here now and this process is continuing,” said Zamihan, who was given permission to interview the nine deported terror suspects. “Some of these Al-Qaeda operatives who are caught overseas but not prosecuted because of a lack of evidence or a good lawyer, they are able to escape so they then come to Malaysia to study to do a Masters or PhD, but at the same time they are busy recruiting undergraduates.” “Once they have their recruits, whether local or foreigners studying here, they plan regional attacks. Many of them have confessed this,” he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Need Pushes Pakistani Women Into Jobs and Peril

Dinner at Rabia Sultana’s house is now served over a cold silence. Her family has not spoken to her since May, when Ms. Sultana, 21, swapped her home life for a cashier’s job at McDonald’s. Her conservative brother berated Ms. Sultana for damaging the family’s honor by taking a job in which she interacts with men — and especially one that requires her to shed her burqa in favor of a short-sleeved McDonald’s uniform.

Then he confiscated her uniform, slapped her across the face and threatened to break her legs if he saw her outside the home.

Her family may be outraged, but they are also in need. Ms. Sultana donates her $100 monthly salary to supplement the household budget for expenses that the men in her family can no longer pay for, including school fees for her younger sisters.

Ms. Sultana is part of a small but growing generation of lower-class young women here who are entering service-sector jobs to support their families, and by extension, pitting their religious and cultural traditions against economic desperation.

The women are pressed into the work force not by nascent feminism but by inflation, which has spiked to 12.7 percent from 1.4 percent in the past seven years. As a result, one salary — the man’s salary — can no longer feed a family.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Female Suicide Bomber Stops UN Aid to Pakistan Flood Victims

The distribution centers give food to 41 thousand people. The suicide attack killed 46 and wounded nearly 100. The condemnation of Ban Ki-moon. This is the first Attack by a woman suicide bomber, believed to be between 18-22 years.

Islamabad (AsiaNews / Agencies) — The offices of the World Food Programme (WFP), which gave food to 41 thousand people affected by flooding, will be closed for a week because of the attack that killed 46 people waiting rations on Christmas Day. There are 96 wounded. The terrorist action took place in Khar, Bajaur tribal region in the north-west of the country on the border with Afghanistan.

Mustaqeem Khan, a government representative in the region, confirmed that on the morning of December 25 at 8.30 am, a woman wrapped in a burqa blew herself up after trying to mingle with the crowd that was waiting in line outside the WFP food office. From the remains of the woman, the police concluded that she was between 18 and 22 years. According to Pakistani media this is the first action performed by a woman suicide bomber.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, has condemned the “horrible terrorist act which targeted innocent people.” Even Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned the attack and vowed that the fight against militants will continue until their complete elimination. “

Last year, the Pakistani army launched an offensive against the Taliban in the border area with Afghanistan. The radical Islamists have responded with a series of guerrilla attacks against the army and minorities, even as the country tries to cope with the crisis which followed massive flooding that left 17 million people homeless and without food.

The Taliban in Pakistan, claiming the attack, said they have ordered it because the locals — the Salarzai tribes — support the military.

U.S. president Barack Obama has condemned the killing. “Killing innocent civilians outside a WFP distribution point — he said — is an affront to the Pakistani people and all humanity.”

The distribution of aid will resume within a week, after checking and improved security in the distribution.

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



Pakistan: US Predators Kill 21 ‘Rebels’ In North Waziristan Strike

The US launched an airstrike today in Pakistan’s Taliban-controlled tribal agency of North Waziristan. The strike is the first in 10 days, and the first in the Mir Ali area in a month. Unmanned Predators or the more heavily armed and deadly Reapers fired two missiles at a compound and four more missiles at two vehicles in the town of Mir Ali, Geo News and Al Jazeera reported. One of the vehicles is said to have been laden with explosives and ammunition, “magnifying the blasts from the missile attacks.”

Twenty-one “rebels” were killed, according to Pakistani intelligence officials, but no senior al Qaeda or Taliban fighters have been reported killed in the strike. Pakistani officials often refer to al Qaeda or allied Central Asian terrorists as rebels.

The Mir Ali area is in the sphere of influence of Abu Kasha al Iraqi, an al Qaeda leader who serves as a key link to the Taliban and supports al Qaeda’s external operations network. Mir Ali is a known hub for al Qaeda’s military and external operations councils. In addition to al Qaeda, Taliban leader Hafiz Gul Bahadar and the Haqqani Network also operate in the Mir Ali area.

In 2010, the US has been pounding targets in the Datta Khel, Miramshah, and Mir Ali areas of North Waziristan in an effort to kill members involved in the European plot. Al Qaeda and allied terror groups such as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, the Islamic Jihad Group, the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Party, Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, and a number of Pakistani and Central and South Asian terror groups host or share camps in the region.

Since Sept. 8, a total of 16 Germans and two Britons have been reported killed in Predator strikes in the Mir Ali area. The Europeans were members of the Islamic Jihad Group, an al Qaeda affiliate based in the Mir Ali area. The IJU members are believed to be involved in a recently discovered al Qaeda plot that targeted several major European cities and was modeled after the terror assault on the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008.

Despite the known presence of al Qaeda and other foreign groups in North Waziristan, and requests by the US that action be taken against these groups, the Pakistani military has indicated that it has no plans to take on Bahadar or the Haqqani Network. Bahadar and the Haqqanis are considered “good Taliban” by the Pakistani military establishment as they do not carry out attacks inside Pakistan.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Suicide Bomber Kills 3 in South Afghanistan

A suicide car bombing in the southern Taliban stronghold of Kandahar killed three people and wounded 26 others, mostly police, officials said Monday, in an attack spotlighting instability in Afghanistan as the NATO-led fight against insurgents there approaches the start of its 10th year.

The bomber struck in the crowded center of the city, near a police compound and a branch of Kabul Bank, and witnesses described a chaotic scene after the dust and smoke cleared.

“I was sitting near the gate when this explosion occurred. We fell to the ground and we couldn’t see anything for five minutes” due to the dust and smoke caused by the blast, said Noor Mohammad, a policeman who was guarding the bank, adding that police and security guards from nearby buildings and compounds took the casualties to a hospital. An Associated Press reporter at the scene saw pieces of the suicide bomber’s car scattered around the street. Three police vehicles, at least two civilian cars and two shops in the area were also destroyed by the blast.

In a statement, President Hamid Karzi condemned the midday attack. The government and witnesses said it killed three people. The bombing highlighted the precarious nature of security gains in Afghanistan, and the challenges the country faces in trying to quell an insurgency that has found a measure of safety in Afghanistan’s rugged terrain and porous borders.

Karzai spokesman Waheed Omar, hours after the blast, stressed that Pakistan should not provide safe havens for insurgents and pressed the need for better security cooperation between the neighboring nations. Pakistan is host to the Taliban-linked Haqqani network, a militant movement based in its North Waziristan region that carries out operations in Afghanistan. Pakistan’s government is believed to give the group some freedom as a way of securing Islamist support against archrival India.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



U.N. Maps Rate Afghanistan Less Secure

Internal United Nations maps show a marked deterioration of the security situation in Afghanistan during this year’s fighting season, countering the Obama administration’s optimistic assessments of military progress since the surge of additional American forces began a year ago.

The Wall Street Journal was able to view two confidential “residual risk accessibility” maps, one compiled by the U.N. at the annual fighting season’s start in March 2010 and another at its tail end in October. The maps, used by U.N. personnel to gauge the dangers of travel and running programs, divide the country’s districts into four categories: very high risk, high risk, medium risk and low risk.

In the October map, just as in March’s, virtually all of southern Afghanistan-the focus of the coalition’s military offensives-remained painted the red of “very high risk,” with no noted security improvements. At the same time, the green belt of “low risk” districts in northern, central and western Afghanistan shriveled considerably.

The U.N.’s October map upgraded to “high risk” 16 previously more secure districts in Badghis, Sar-e-Pul, Balkh, Parwan, Baghlan, Samangan, Faryab, Laghman and Takhar provinces; only two previously “high risk” districts, one in Kunduz and one in Herat province, received a safer rating.

A Pentagon report mandated by Congress drew similar conclusions when it was released last month. It said attacks were up 70% since 2009 and threefold since 2007. As a result of the continued violence, the Taliban still threaten the Afghan government, according to the report. The White House’s National Security Council declined to comment.

The director of communications for the U.N. in Afghanistan, Kieran Dwyer, said he couldn’t comment on classified maps. But, he said, “in the course of 2010, the security situation in many parts of the country has become unstable where it previously had not been so. There is violence happening in more parts of the country, and this is making the delivery of humanitarian services more difficult for the U.N. and other organizations. But we are continuing to deliver.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Far East


The Cost of Success: Life in Beijing’s Cellars

As speculators and increasing demand drive up Beijing’s real estate prices, those who cannot afford the rent are going underground — literally. Hundreds of cellars and air-raid shelters are being rented out as living spaces in the Chinese capital.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Mums Welcome Paid Parental Leave

WHEN Cathy Mollica had her first child three years ago there was no paid parental leave at her IT job and she says she felt disempowered because she had to ask her husband for money.

“I was entitled to not a single day’s paid leave,” said 32-year-old Ms Mollica.

She said her relationship with her husband changed during the 14 months she took off work to rear her daughter Charlotte because she had to go to him when she needed money.

“I had been an independent woman contributing to the running of the household and all of a sudden I was at home and my relationship with my husband changed because I found myself asking him for money,” she said.

“I felt disempowered and he was horrified I felt like that.”

Ms Mollica is due to give birth to her second child in June and this time round she won’t have to go begging to her husband because she will be a benefactor of the federal government’s Paid Parental Scheme which begins on January 1.

Families Minister Jenny Macklin launched the scheme at the Melbourne Museum today and said that for many people this will be the first time that they will have access to paid parental leave.

She said for women who give birth between now and Saturday, the Baby Bonus and other family payments will be available to them and other families who are not eligible for paid parental leave.

Under the scheme, the government will provide 18 weeks’ leave pay at the National Minimum Wage, currently $570, for applicants who have worked at least 330 hours, or just over one day a week, in 10 of the 13 months before the expected date of birth.

Ms Macklin said the scheme will cost around $260 million a year.

The government will make the payment directly to parents until July 2011 when business will be required to take over the responsibility.

She said the government will monitor employers to make sure they don’t substitute the government scheme for their own in-house paid maternity leave scheme.

“What we are seeing is employers saying they are going to keep their paid parental leave and allow their employees to take this scheme on top,” Ms Macklin told reporters.

“Woolworths, Aldi, Coles, Holden, Rio Tinto, some of the banks, have already come out and made it clear that that’s what they’re going to do.

“They know that paid parental leave is good for their employees and good to be able to keep their employees who they have spent money and time training.”

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


African Elephants Are Two Distinct Species

Scientists have long debated whether African elephants belong to the same or different species. They look very different, with the savanna elephant weighing around 7 tonnes — roughly double the weight of the forest elephant. But studies had suggested they were the same species — DNA in mitochondria (the cell’s energy factories) from African elephants found evidence of interbreeding between forest and savanna elephants around 500,000 years ago.

Now a group of scientists have taken a deeper look at the African elephants’ genetic ancestry. The researchers sequenced the nuclear genomes of both types of African elephant, as well as that of the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus). They also extracted and sequenced DNA from the extinct woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) and mastodon (Mammut americanum) — ancient elephant ancestors. By comparing all these genomes, the team found that the forest and savanna elephants diverged into separate species between 2.6 and 5.6 million years ago.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Somali Islamist Insurgents Threaten US Attack

MOGADISHU, Somalia — A leader of Somalia’s Islamist insurgency threatened to attack America during a speech broadcast Monday.

“We tell the American President Barack Obama to embrace Islam before we come to his country,” said Fuad Mohamed “Shongole” Qalaf.

Al-Shabab has not yet launched an attack outside Africa but Western intelligence has long been worried because the group targeted young Somali-Americans for recruitment. About 20 have traveled to Somalia for training and at least three were used as suicide bombers inside Somalia. Al-Shabab holds most of southern and central Somalia and has the support of hundreds of foreign fighters, mostly radicalized East Africans.

It seeks to overthrow the weak U.N.-backed government, which is protected by 8,000 Ugandan and Burundian African Union peacekeepers.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Somali Islamist Insurgents Threaten US Attack

A leader of Somalia’s Islamist insurgency threatened to attack America during a speech broadcast Monday.

“We tell the American President Barack Obama to embrace Islam before we come to his country,” said Fuad Mohamed “Shongole” Qalaf.

Al-Shabab has not yet launched an attack outside Africa but Western intelligence has long been worried because the group targeted young Somali-Americans for recruitment. About 20 have traveled to Somalia for training and at least three were used as suicide bombers inside Somalia.

Al-Shabab holds most of southern and central Somalia and has the support of hundreds of foreign fighters, mostly radicalized East Africans. It seeks to overthrow the weak U.N.-backed government, which is protected by 8,000 Ugandan and Burundian African Union peacekeepers.

The al-Shabab militia launched coordinated suicide attacks in Uganda in July that killed 76 people. It has also announced its allegiance to al-Qaida and is believed to be harboring a mastermind of the twin 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people.

The radio message was recorded in the town of Afgoye, near the Somali capital, during a meeting of Shongole and Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, formerly the leader of insurgent group Hizbul Islam. The two insurgent groups had clashed several times previously but announced a merger last week. Aweys said his group will fight under al-Shabab’s command.

“We have united for the sake of our ideology and we are going to redouble our efforts to remove the government and the African Union from the country,” said Aweys on Monday.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Latin America


The Mexican Drug War: A Nation Descends Into Violence

The Mexican government has been using the army to fight the nation’s drug cartels for about four years. It isn’t working. Some critics say the army is part of the problem, even if the occasional mission removes a kingpin. But President Felipe Calderón has no one else to trust.

Ivana García didn’t flee when two headless bodies were found in front of the city hall, nor did she leave when a body without arms or legs was hanging above a downtown square.

But when fighting erupted on the street in front of her house, when mercenaries working for the drug cartels began firing their Kalashnikovs from armored vehicles, and when house-to-house skirmishes went on for hours, as if Ciudad Mier were a town in Afghanistan, not bordering the United States, she had no choice but to flee. In fact, almost the entire population, about 6,000 people, left Ciudad Mier. When they realized there was no one to protect them — no government, no army — they packed their belongings and left their homes.

Ciudad Mier used to be an inconspicuous Mexican municipality on the Rio Grande River, consisting of a colonial center and a few rectangular blocks of houses. Now it is known throughout the country as a ghost town — one of those symbolic places that exist all over Mexico. Each of these towns can tell the story of a nation descending into violence.

Horrific, but Commonplace

One of them is Ciudad Juárez, where more than 3,000 murders were committed this year alone, making it the most violent city in the world. Criminals battle each other in broad daylight in the resort town of Acapulco. In the village of Praxedis, a 20-year-old woman became police chief because no one else dared to accept the job. On a ranch in northern Mexico, a 77-year-old man shot and killed four of the gunmen who had been sent to kill him, only to be murdered by the rest. He was celebrated as a hero.

Horrific news reports have become commonplace in Mexico. Some 29,000 people have died in drug wars within the past four years, and this year the number of killings doubled to about 12,000. An astonishing 98 percent of the crimes committed in Mexico remain unpunished.

It has been four years since President Felipe Calderón came to office promising to defeat the cartels, multibillion-dollar organizations that supply the United States, the world’s largest drug market, with cocaine, crystal meth, heroin and marijuana.

Calderón mobilized 45,000 soldiers and federal police officers for his campaign. There was no one else he could trust, including local police forces and governors. The army is his only reliable tool.

There have certainly been many spectacular arrests. Famous drug kingpins were arrested or killed, including the leader of the “La Familia” cartel, who died earlier this month. But have these successes weakened the drug cartels? There are few indications that this is the case.

At first, many citizens saw the violent excesses as the beginning of a necessary evil. Recent opinion polls, however, show that a majority now opposes the government’s strategy. The newspapers are filled with reports of kidnappings, blackmail and beheadings. There are blogs that specialize in publishing photos of severed limbs taken with mobile phones.

It is easy to picture the savagery with which this war is being waged. But it is more difficult to understand why the violence doesn’t stop, what its causes are and what can be done about it.

Could the legalization of drugs be the answer, as some experts suggest? Or maybe more border controls? Would a new national police force and a reform of the government solve the problem? Or is it best to simply leave the cartels alone, which for years was the government’s policy?

These are the questions that Mexico is asking itself in 2010, the 200th anniversary of the beginning of its war of independence. The filmmaker Luis Estrada has given his native country a bitter film for its anniversary: “El Infierno” (Hell). It is the portrait of a world consisting of nothing but narcos, whores and corruption.

“We have a national problem, and it’s called impunity,” says Estrada, a soft-spoken man with glasses and a gray beard. “People who break the law aren’t punished. That’s why many believe that honesty doesn’t pay. We Mexicans are in hell, that’s for sure. I just don’t know which pit of hell it is at the moment.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


The Profound Problem of Muslim Immigration

As the West has accepted extensive immigration from Islamic countries, unexpected social and political problems have followed. While rising crime rates, rampant unemployment and a heavy load on our much-appreciated welfare systems are severe problems in itself, a distinct and dramatically more significant problem is the subtle subversion of our free and democratic societies, also known as “Stealth Jihad”.

The retired Islamic scholar Sam Solomon, in this compact book “Al-Hijra, The Islamic Doctrine of Immigration”, connects the dots and explains why seemingly unrelated incidents are in fact rooted in Islamic tradition and are steps on the path to create a fully Islamized society.

To demonstrate how this functions, Sam Solomon dives into his exhaustive knowledge of Islamic history and law. As Islamic scholars everywhere, he derives his conclusions from Islamic scripture, the life of Muhammad in particular, and shows how historically immigration has slowly but steadily lead to formerly Jewish or Christian societies submitting to Islam. The primary example in the book is Muhammads takeover of Yathrib, today known as Medina, and how the concepts and strategies developed for the conquest of a relatively insignificant Arab city are being duplicated by Islamic leaders worldwide, with the same goal: Expanding Islamic conquest ever further.

The depth of knowledge and connections described in Al-Hijra constitute both a strength and a weakness. Most important is the strength: Sam Solomon uses his Islamic scholarship to reveal the justifications and machinations being applied to undermine and attack the very notion of a secular society. This is important information that everyone involved in these matters deserve to have.

The weakness is that the book frequently becomes hard to follow. Understanding Islamic terms like Darura (necessity), Takweem (empowerment), I’dad (readying) etcetera are important in order to counter the undercurrent of Islamization, yet the denseness of the presentation makes the lines of thought hard to follow for the unprepared. One does well in having some knowledge of Islamic thought before reading Al-Hijra.

That said, this book is indispensable for a very simple reason: It presents information otherwise not available to the uninitiated Westerner, and mercilessly reveals the twisted logic of Islamist activists, their justifications, methods and ultimate goal: A fully Shariah-compliant society. By pointing out the scriptural justifications and inner logic of seemingly benign and unrelated Muslim demands, it provides an invaluable tool for identifying and countering the stealth jihad destabilizing our societies. Dismantling this threat peacefully requires knowledge as provided by Sam Solomon.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Australia: Church Free to Ban Gay Foster Parents

CHURCH groups are free to discriminate against homosexuals after a landmark judgment in which a tribunal ruled religious charities are allowed to ban gay foster parents.

The ruling, made in the NSW Administrative Decisions Tribunal, has been hailed by the Catholic Church but has outraged civil libertarians, who are demanding religions no longer be exempt from anti-discrimination laws if they receive public money, reported The Daily Telegraph.

The Council of Civil Liberties suggested more children might end up in orphanages because church-based service providers could now knock back couples who did not conform to their beliefs.

Even the tribunal itself, whose judgment came down in favour of the ban, said it was effectively bound to reach the decision because of the very broad exemptions in the Anti-Discrimination Act relating to religious groups.

And, it went as far as suggesting that Parliament may wish to revise those laws.

The decision marks the end of a seven-year legal battle for a gay couple who attempted to become foster carers through Wesley Mission Australia but were knocked back because their lifestyle was not in keeping with the beliefs and values of Wesleyanism, a Methodist order of the Uniting Church.

The ADT initially awarded the couple $10,000 and ordered the charity to change its practices so it did not discriminate but an appeals panel set aside that decision and ordered the tribunal to reconsider the matter.

The tribunal then said it had little choice but to find that the discrimination was “in conformity” with the church’s doctrine because the test in the law “is singularly undemanding”.

Council of Civil Liberties president Cameron Murphy said churches who received taxpayers money to provide services for the state -as was increasingly the case -should no longer be exempt from discrimination laws.

“It’s outrageous,” he said. “If a non-religious organisation tried to do this they would be in breach of the law.

“If they want to run a foster care agency they ought to be looking after the best interests of the child, not trying to push their religion on the community.

Cardinal George Pell welcomed the decision and said churches must be able to choose who they wanted to use in the provision of services.

Greens MLC Cate Faehrmann said it was high time groups were no longer able to discriminate for religious reasons.

A spokesman for Opposition Leader Barry O’Farrell said if the matter came before Parliament the Liberal Party would allow a conscience vote.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



New Zealand: All Parents Lie, Declares Starship Nurse

A senior nurse at Starship hospital’s child protection unit told a conference of medical professionals that “all parents are liars until proved otherwise”, doctors who attended say.

The revelation comes after a Sunday Star-Times investigation into practices at the unit, Te Puaruruhau, revealed concern it is being run like a police station, with staff treating parents as guilty until proven innocent over unexplained injuries.

Families have complained that the unit’s doctors rushed to judgements, refused to budge from their initial assessments, and failed to apologise when injuries were shown to be accidental.

[…]

But a comment at the start of the speech raised eyebrows.

“She just blankly said the most important thing she’d learnt working in the unit was that all parents are liars until proved otherwise,” a GP who attended the session said.

He asked not be named because he did not want to “buy into a fight with Starship” and child abuse was not his area of expertise.

“It’s etched in my memory. It gave me a bit of a cold chill.

“How can you communicate, connect or go forward with families if you’re starting from that point?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Returns to End-of-Life Plan That Caused Stir

By R. Pear

When a proposal to encourage end-of-life planning touched off a political storm over “death panels,” Democrats dropped it from legislation to overhaul the health care system. But the Obama administration will achieve the same goal by regulation, starting Jan. 1.

Under the new policy, outlined in a Medicare regulation, the government will pay doctors who advise patients on options for end-of-life care, which may include advance directives to forgo aggressive life-sustaining treatment.

Congressional supporters of the new policy, though pleased, have kept quiet. They fear provoking another furor like the one in 2009…

[…]

[Return to headlines]



Stop Offending Me!

I can’t believe it! I’d just mailed a check to the Red Cross when I discovered they’d caved to “offended” Muslims. I’ll certainly think twice before I write another such check.

Admittedly, the capitulation is by the British Red Cross not the American Red Cross, but I’ve decided that I’m not going to be a patsy anymore when there are such blatant examples of catering to our veiled and robed friends in the name of ecumenism.

The British Red Cross decided to remove Christmas decorations from all 430 of their fundraising shops on the outside chance Muslims, atheists and others might be offended by a public display recognizing the Christian Christmas holiday.

Really? They did it to protect the sensitivities of those possibly “offended” people? Or did they do it because they feared violent repercussions if they didn’t cave to those sensitivities?

Or are they just so cowed by political correctness that they’ve lost their minds?

Am I the only one to find it strange that Muslims, who are subject to the tough rules of Islam as well as the very strong punishments for believers who break those rules, suddenly develop very thin skins and delicate sensitivities when exposed to visible signs of other religions in the public square?

Oh please.

Some members of this group find it serves their offended selves to riot, destroy, maim and kill in retaliation for perceived offenses against Muhammad — remember the Danish cartoon riots — but when Jews, and particularly Christians, want their religious holidays to be visible in the public square, they’re shut down in no uncertain terms when Muslims and others object.

Last week, the European Commission was blasted for EU diaries, which they printed and sent to British schools as student gifts. The annual calendars had dates and anniversaries noted on the appropriate days for Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Jewish and Chinese festivities and they also highlighted EU anniversaries.

But gee, they eliminated all Christian festivals — there was no mention of Christianity at all.

Roman Catholic groups and Christian Democrat parliamentary members are furious and complained.

The commission response shows how weak-spined they are.

According to the Telegraph, a spokesman said it was a “blunder” which would be corrected in the interests of political correctness by eliminating all references any religion in future editions.

“We’re sorry about it, and we’ll correct that in the next edition. Religious holidays may not be mentioned at all, to avoid any controversy.”

Hmmm — they’re more concerned about political correctness than about fairness, equality and logic. Or is it they’re more than ready to deal with unhappy Christians than they are with angry Muslims?

Did I mention the diaries were supposed to be Christmas gifts for the schoolchildren?

What hypocrisy.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Bishop of Winchester: Legal System Discriminates Against Christians

The Bishop of Winchester, the Rt Rev Michael Scott-Joynt, warned that the death of “religious literacy” among those who made and administered the law had created an imbalance in the way in which those with faith were treated compared to sexual minorities.

Highlighting the case Gary McFarlane, a relationship counsellor who was sacked by Relate for refusing to give sex therapy to a homosexual couple, he said that the judiciary now went out of its way to protect the rights of minorities.

At the same time, for the first time in British history politicians and judges were largely ignorant of religion and so failed to appreciate the importance Christians placed on abiding by the scriptures rather than the politically correct values of the secular state. The Bishop’s concerns were underlined by Lord Woolf, a former Lord Chief Justice, who agreed that in some legal cases the balance had gone “too far” in tipping away from Christians.

His words echo recent warnings from other church leaders about what they perceive as attacks on Christianity.

The critique of the Human Rights Act is likely to fuel the criticism of David Cameron for failing to abide by a pre-election pledge he made to replace the controversial European rules with a home-grown Bill of Rights.

Other recent high profile legal cases involving Christians include bed and breakfast owners sued for turning away two homosexuals who wished to share a bedroom, and adoption agencies forced by the Government to close their doors after they refused to place children with same sex couples Bishop Scott-Joynt told the BBC’s World This Weekend: “The problem is that there is a really quite widespread perception among Christians that there is growing up something of an imbalance in the legal position with regard to the freedom of Christians and people of other faiths to pursue the calling of their faith in public life, in public service. “Probably for the first time in our history there is a widespread lack of religious literacy among those who one way and another hold power and influence, whether it’s Parliament or the media or even, dare I say it, in the judiciary.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Christians ‘Are Denied Human Rights by Our Courts,’ Claim Bishop and Top Judge

An Anglican bishop and Britain’s former top judge yesterday launched an impassioned defence of the rights of Christians in an increasingly secular society.

The Bishop of Winchester, the Rt Rev Michael Scott-Joynt, said judges wrongly discriminate against people of faith because they are ignorant of religious beliefs.

He said failure to support the beliefs of Christians and other religious people could drive them from their jobs and blamed the Human Rights Act for allowing them to be victimised.

The bishop was backed by ex-Lord Chief Justice Lord Woolf, who said the courts had gone ‘too far’ in restricting the rights of Christians in the workplace. He said it was ‘about time the tide turned’.

The two were speaking at the end of a year in which Christian relationship counsellor Gary McFarlane lost his appeal against dismissal after he refused to give sex therapy to a homosexual couple, and nurse Shirley Chaplin lost a discrimination case after she was moved to a back office job because she wore a crucifix.

During the General Election campaign, David Cameron promised to abolish the Human Rights Act and replace it with a British Bill of Rights, which would spell out rights and responsibilities based on British traditions.

But that promise has been watered down by the Coalition agreement, which promises only to set up a commission to ‘investigate the creation of a British Bill of Rights that incorporates and builds on all our obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights’.

Yesterday the bishop said he ‘generally welcomed’ the Human Rights Act but said it was being used without reference to religious sensibilities.

He said: ‘There is growing up something of an imbalance in the legal position with regard to the freedom of Christians and people of other faiths to pursue the calling of their faith in public life, in public service. One major context is obviously the Human Rights Act.’

He condemned the treatment of Mr McFarlane, who was sacked by Relate after refusing to give sex therapy to a gay couple because it contradicted his religious beliefs.

The bishop said: ‘We have had a statement from a senior judge this year that matters of Christian belief were only matters of opinion and the law couldn’t possibly take countenance of them in coming to decisions about the rights and wrongs of particular behaviour in the workplace.’

He argued it was not an option for Christians to keep their faith private. ‘Anybody who is part of the religious community believes that you don’t just hold views, you live them. Manifesting your faith is part of having it and not part of some optional bolt-on.’

He said in the McFarlane case, ‘judgment seemed to be following contemporary society, which seems to think that secularist views are statements of the obvious and religious views are notions in the mind. That is the culture in which we are living. The judges ought to be religiously literate.’ He also accused Parliament of having behaved ‘quite tyrannically’ over the treatment of Catholic adoption societies, which were told they would have to accept gay and non Christian staff.

Lord Woolf said the bishop’s complaints did have ‘a grounding in the facts’ and added: ‘I think it’s a very good thing that you voice those concerns because the tide goes in and the tide goes out in these areas and sometimes it’s about time the tide turned a bit and started to go back. We may have gone too far.

‘The law must be above any sectional interest even if it is an interest of a faith but at the same time it must be aware of the proper concerns of that faith.

‘The law should be developed in ways that, wherever practicable, it allows that faith to be preserved and protected.’

¦ Pope Benedict yesterday condemned Christmas attacks on Christians. He told pilgrims and tourists in St Peter’s Square that he was saddened by the ‘absurd violence’.

Explosions on Christmas Eve in Nigeria killed at least 32 people and left 74 critically injured. Clashes were still continuing between armed Christian and Muslim groups yesterday. On Christmas Day, six were injured by a bomb in a Roman Catholic Church in the Philippines.

Pope Benedict said: ‘I want to express my heartfelt sorrow for the victims of these absurd acts of violence and once more repeat an appeal to abandon the path of hate and seek instead peaceful solutions to conflicts.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

General


Did First Humans Come Out of Middle East and Not Africa? Scientists Forced to Re-Write Evolution of Modern Man

Scientists could be forced to re-write the history of the evolution of modern man after the discovery of 400,000-year-old human remains.

Until now, researchers believed that homo sapiens, the direct descendants of modern man, evolved in Africa about 200,000 years ago and gradually migrated north, through the Middle East, to Europe and Asia.

Recently, discoveries of early human remains in China and Spain have cast doubt on the ‘Out of Africa’ theory, but no-one was certain.

The new discovery of pre-historic human remains by Israeli university explorers in a cave near Ben-Gurion airport could force scientists to re-think earlier theories.

Archeologists from Tel Aviv University say eight human-like teeth found in the Qesem cave near Rosh Ha’Ayin — 10 miles from Israel’s international airport — are 400,000 years old, from the Middle Pleistocene Age, making them the earliest remains of homo sapiens yet discovered anywhere in the world.

The size and shape of the teeth are very similar to those of modern man. Until now, the earliest examples found were in Africa, dating back only 200,000 years.

Other scientists have argued that human beings originated in Africa before moving to other regions 150,000 to 200,000 years ago.

Homo sapiens discovered in Middle Awash, Ethiopia, from 160,000 years ago were believed to be the oldest ‘modern’ human beings.

Other remains previously found in Israeli caves are thought to have been more recent and 80,000 to 100,000 years old.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



If Modern Humans Are So Smart, Why Are Our Brains Shrinking?

Over the past 20,000 years, the average volume of the human male brain has decreased from 1,500 cubic centimeters to 1,350 cc, losing a chunk the size of a tennis ball. The female brain has shrunk by about the same proportion. “I’d call that major downsizing in an evolutionary eyeblink,” he says. “This happened in China, Europe, Africa—everywhere we look.” If our brain keeps dwindling at that rate over the next 20,000 years, it will start to approach the size of that found in Homo erectus, a relative that lived half a million years ago and had a brain volume of only 1,100 cc. Possibly owing to said shrinkage, it takes me a while to catch on. “Are you saying we’re getting dumber?” I ask.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Let’s Build Babbage’s Ultimate Mechanical Computer

The 19th-century Analytical Engine computer, complete with CPU and a memory, remained unbuilt — time to put that right, says John Graham-Cumming.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Report Documents Move by ‘Radical Philanthropist’ To Control Message

For someone who once described himself as “some kind of god” and said that makes him feel comfortable, the scrutiny of a new report that looks into his increasing influence over the messengers in today’s world probably won’t have a personal impact.

But whether it affects him or not, octogenarian billionaire George Soros’ funding of a media “monitor” that routinely attacks traditional and conservative media is becoming a focal point.

“Like the protagonist in the classic Orson Welles movie ‘Citizen Kane,’ Soros can never have enough power. But unlike Charles Foster Kane, the haughty, imperious fictional media mogul, Soros views himself as much more than a mere leader,” the report says.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Researchers Decipher DNA of Mysterious Human Ancestor

The human family just got a new relative. Genetic researchers in Leipzig have deciphered the DNA of a hominid species that coexisted with Homo sapiens and Neanderthals around 40,000 years ago. A tiny piece of bone was enough for them to sequence the genome.

The miniscule amount of powder could have sat on a knife point, and yet, according to Johannes Krause, it contains something sensational. The Leipzig-based genetic researcher extracted the fine powder from a minute piece of fossilized bone — and discovered a whole chapter of mankind’s history inside it.

Krause and his colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in the eastern German city of Leipzig were able to sequence almost the complete genome of a hitherto unknown type of hominid from molecules that they extracted from bone meal. In addition to the DNA sequence of modern Homo sapiens and Neanderthals, they also unlocked a genome from a third type of hominid, according to a paper published Thursday in the journal Nature. The researchers have dubbed the new hominids “Denisovans,” after the Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains of Siberia where the bone was found.

Krause announced to the world’s media earlier this year that he had discovered the remains of a new type of human. The only surviving fossil was a tiny piece of finger bone from a girl who had died around 50,000 years ago that had been found in the Denisova Cave.

The Leipzig scientists — who focus on the era when modern humans shared the Earth with their Neanderthal cousins — had registered their interest in the find immediately. But when Krause drilled into the tiny finger bone for the first time in his clean-room laboratory in Leipzig, he had no inkling of the sensational discovery that awaited him.

At first it seemed to be a routine examination. Krause only wanted to ascertain whether this little bone came from a modern human or a Neanderthal. However, the DNA sequence he found did not match anything he had ever seen before. Krause had stumbled upon a completely new being, a third type of human, who had competed with modern humans and Neanderthals for dominance in Eurasia.

Complete Genetic Code Deciphered

Since the discovery was announced in March, the researchers have been focused on the task of decoding the entire 3 billion DNA building blocks in the complete genetic makeup of the newcomer from the Altai Mountains. It is only now becoming clear what kind of “wonder bone,” as Klause puts it, that they are working on.

Seventy per cent of the DNA code snippets that they found in the bone powder came from the Denisova girl. Never before had scientists found such a high level of purity in Stone Age DNA. Normally with such ancient discoveries, 99 per cent of all DNA consist of contaminants of a bacterial origin. Thanks to the unparalleled purity of the sample, a tiny amount of bone dust was enough for the scientists to assemble an almost-complete DNA sequence of the prehistoric girl. This now enables them to draw remarkable conclusions about the fate of the mysterious Denisovans.

Some 300,000 years ago, they split off from the branch which eventually developed into the Neanderthals. Whereas the Neanderthals spread westwards into ice-age Europe, the Denisovans moved east.

So far, the discovery in Siberia is the only example of this new type of hominid. But researchers believe that the Denisova may have hunted across large swaths of Asia. It is an assumption borne out of the perhaps most stunning part of their analysis.

Few Traces of Intermingling

The scientists posed the question as to how different types of hominids might have interacted with each other. Did they hunt each other? Did they avoid each other? Might they have stolen each other’s women? To find the answers to these questions, the Max Planck scientists compared DNA from the Denisova cave with that of modern man. They found no traces of Denisova characteristics in people from Africa, Europe or China. Indeed, clear indications of intermingling were only found among the inhabitants of Papua New Guinea.

The two types of hominids, researchers believe, must have encountered each other somewhere in Southeast Asia. They hypothesize that different Denisova tribes had settled there long before modern man made his way to East Asia some 30,000 years ago. The two groups must have interbred, perhaps not as a matter of course, but periodically. Later, the modern humans and their genetic dowry moved further south, whence today’s Melanesians developed.

The Leipzig researchers now want to search Russian and Chinese collections for more fossils that could belong to the Denisova. The hope is to understand what they may have looked like. While the DNA provides hints on several characteristics of the Denisova, appearance is not one of them.

Massive Molar

But the researchers did present an additional find. In the same Siberian cave, a molar was found. The tooth’s owner, according to DNA analysis, was closely related to the Denisova girl.

This molar is distinctly different to those of all other known types of humans. Its massive size alone leads the scientists to suppose that it once belonged to a man. “Theoretically, it could also have come from a woman” said Svante Pääbo, the head of the Leipzig-based team of genetic researchers. “But in that case I would prefer not to meet the corresponding male.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101226

Financial Crisis
» Lehman ‘Prophet’ Fears Second Crisis if US Interest Rates Are Kept Low
» Portugal: Beijing Will Help Us With Bond Purchase
» The UK Inflation Genie is Out of the Bottle
 
USA
» Growing Market Opportunity is U.S. Muslims
» US Home-Grown Terrorists ‘A Global Threat’, Warns Congresswoman
 
Europe and the EU
» Berlusconi: The Majority No Longer Identifies With Fini
» Coldest December in Sweden in 110 Years
» German Aid Worker Killed in Afghanistan
» Italy: Weather Woes: Ice and Snow in the North, Rain in the South
» Netherlands: Police Arrest 12 Somalis on Terrorism Charges, Target Unknown
» Pope Condemns Christmas Day Violence
» Sweden: Gothenburg: Coptic Church Closed Down Due to Internet Threats
» UK: Boxing Day Violence: Armed Police Called After Shooting and Stabbing at One of Europe’s Busiest Shopping Centres
» UK: English Defence League Claim 78 Got Whiplash in Crash… But Only 25 Were on Coach
» UK: New 5p and 10p Coins Delayed Over Parking Chaos Threat
» Unwanted Attention: German Far Right Praises New Swiss Law
 
North Africa
» Eight US Tourists Killed in Egyptian Bus Crash
» Tunisia: 18,000 Women at the Head of Enterprises
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Abbas Vows: No Room for Israelis in Palestinian State
» Christmas: Mixed Feelings in Bethlehem
» Christmas in Gaza is a Celebration Tempered by Fear
» Israel Won’t Attend Racism Conference Fete
» Militants Killed as Violence Surges on Gaza Border
» ‘Musical’ Christmas Greetings From Peres on YouTube
» New Rules in Force for Consumer Protection
» Raed Salah in Rahat: Israeli Land Belongs to Muslims
 
Middle East
» Afghanistan’s Karzai Welcomes Taliban Setting Up Office in Turkey
» Al-Qaida Threat on Iraq Christians Linked to Egypt
» Jordan: Christmas for Iraqi Christians Tainted by Attacks
» Somalis Protest Discrimination by Landlords in Turkey
» Turkey Ties Frayed, Israel Turns to the Balkans
» Turkey ‘Wants to Repair Ties With Israel’
 
Russia
» Anti-Racism Rally Draws 2,500 in Moscow
» Russian Islamic Leaders Against the Kremlin
 
South Asia
» ‘German Mother Theresa’ Saves Lives in Pakistan
» Muslim Radicals Colonising the Country, Indonesian Bishops Say
» Pakistan’s Rape Victim Who Dared to Fight Back
» Pakistan Suicide Bomber Was Woman Covered in Burqa
» Pricey Onions Threaten India’s Growth and Government
 
Far East
» Hu Jintao to Washington January 19, To Save China and U.S. From Disaster
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Islamic Clerics Reject South Sudan Referendum, Demand Islamic Laws
» Somali Islamists Beg Al Qaeda Help
 
Latin America
» Bolivia’s Recognition of Palestine as an Independent State Sets Off Alarm Bells in Israel
 
Culture Wars
» UK: Multi-Faith Chaplains to Make House of Commons More Inclusive
» UK: St George’s Flag Protest Lands in Court

Financial Crisis


Lehman ‘Prophet’ Fears Second Crisis if US Interest Rates Are Kept Low

“The crisis that required zero interest rates has passed,” said Mr Einhorn, who co-founded and runs Greenlight Capital, a $6.5bn (£4.2bn) fund. By not raising rates “it increases the chance that governments will over-borrow and fall into a debt trap”.

The criticism of the Federal Reserve comes as it embarks on another $600bn (£380bn) of quantitative easing — or printing money — in an effort to fire up a stronger recovery next year. Interest rates around the western world, including in Britain, have sat at or below 1pc since the near collapse of the financial system in 2008 triggered a global recession.

“If interest rates ever do go up again, you have another crisis,” Mr Einhorn told The Sunday Telegraph.

Those in favour of very low interest rates point to the support it has given the real estate market in the US and that, as in the UK, it should encourage politicians to begin to tackle the $1.3 trillion budget deficit without fear of damaging the economy. Greenlight, which Mr Einhorn founded in 1996 with about $1m, including an investment from his parents, has its single largest position in gold — an asset that many investors have historically turned to during periods of economic uncertainty.

The gold price, which is closing in on a tenth straight year of gains, reached a record $1,432.50 an ounce earlier this month. Mr Einhorn admits that he is having to pay far more attention to the broader economic picture when making decisions about which companies to invest in than he has ever done. He declined to say what he thought of either the UK or eurozone economies at the moment. The 42 year-old, already well known within the hedge fund industry, shot to wider prominence in 2008 after using a lecture in May of that year to voice criticisms of how Lehman was valuing its assets. The lecture had echoes of one he gave six years earlier on Allied Capital, a lender which he accused of using misleading accounting practices. That lecture sparked an almost decade-long battle with Allied, which is recorded in Mr Einhorn’s 2008 book Fooling Some of The People All of The Time. The financial crisis, he says, has done little to ensure that the regulators are any better at detecting either fraudulent or financially weak companies.

Both lectures drew stinging criticism from some investors and parts of the media, who accused the fund manager of stirring up concerns because it had short positions in both companies that would see Greenlight benefit if their share prices dropped.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Portugal: Beijing Will Help Us With Bond Purchase

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 14 — China will “financially” help Portugal. So said the Portuguese Ambassador in Beijing following meetings that the Portuguese Finance Minister, Fernando Teixeira dos Santos, has had with the Chinese leaders during his visit to the country, according to what has been reported by the Bloomberg agency. Dos Santos has gone to China to try to persuade Beijing to buy Portuguese debt. The financial aid will be supplied “now and also in the future in view of the measures that Lisbon has approved for the restructuring of its economy,” reads a communiqué from the Portuguese Embassy. “We have made a great step forward in strengthening our relations at all levels: trade, investment and the financial sector,” Dos Santos told Portuguese agency Lusa. “China is supporting Portugal and will continue to do so,” he concluded, without specifying the amount of stocks that Beijing has already bought or will buy. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The UK Inflation Genie is Out of the Bottle

I’m a natural optimist and don’t wish to upset anyone’s Boxing Day celebrations. Any commentator worth their salt, though, at times like this, should ignore such sensitivities. It would be wrong — reckless, in fact, given the slew of recent bad data — to fail to point to the worrying mix of economic issues the UK now faces. During 2011, the British economy will suffer from rising inflation and sluggish (in some quarters, possibly negative) growth. This grim combination will be set against a budgetary situation that can only be described as ghastly.

George Osborne was recently in New York, soaking up plaudits for boldly leading Britain into fiscal austerity at a time when, apparently in contrast, America’s feckless political elite has allowed the national debt to balloon. The problem is that UK austerity, so far at least, is a myth.

November’s national accounts, released last week, were shocking. Government spending last month was sharply up on the same month in 2009 — yes, up! British state borrowing is still escalating, with the national debt rising very quickly.

Anyone who takes an intelligent interest in current affairs could be forgiven for inferring from the political rhetoric that the UK’s fiscal squeeze is not only well under way but that the worst is actually behind us. If this was indeed your impression, you may want to pour yourself a large Yuletide sherry and possibly take refuge in another bowl of trifle. For the grim reality, as the latest figures show, is that Britain’s fiscal squeeze hasn’t even begun.

I’d hoped to end what has been a nerve-jangling year for the UK economy on an upbeat note. A couple of weeks ago, though, new figures showed that CPI inflation was 3.3pc higher in November than the same month the year before. Inflation has now been above the Bank of England’s 2pc target for 40 of the past 49 months.

Some of us have been warning this would happen. Since late 2008, this column has asserted that the UK faces inflationary dangers and that talk of British “deflation” was deeply disingenuous, an intellectual conceit to justify massive virtual “money printing” and the extension of endless soft credits to banks that should, in fact, be allowed to fail. Such a position has been seen as heresy — not least because “quantitative easing” has friends in high places. QE, for now, has helped politically connected bankers to dodge the implications of their own hubris and incompetence. It has allowed successive British governments to stick their fingers in their ears and avoid tackling root-and-branch banking reform.

To argue that QE is dangerous and that, as a corollary, the UK faces high inflation has been to be treated by the UK’s policy-making elite as some kind of economic Herod. I might as well have been suggesting we slay the first born. In recent weeks, though, the mood has changed. Reality has thankfully broken through.

“Top economists” are now finally allowing themselves to state what is both historically and technically obvious, that money-printing is counter-productive. The same professional “trend-spotters” are now also concluding that high UK inflation isn’t a “blip” or a “one-off”. What took them so long?

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


Growing Market Opportunity is U.S. Muslims

#In the ballroom of an upscale hotel a short train ride from New York, advertisers, food industry executives and market researchers mingled — the men in dark suits, the women in headscarves and Western dress. Chocolates made according to Islamic dietary laws were placed at each table.

The setting was the American Muslim Consumer Conference, which aimed to promote Muslims as a new market segment for U.S. companies. While corporations have long catered to Muslim communities in Europe, businesses have only tentatively started to follow suit in the U.S. — and they are doing so at a time of intensified anti-Muslim feeling that companies worry could hurt them, too. American Muslims seeking more acknowledgment in the marketplace argue that businesses have more to gain than lose by reaching out to the community. “We are not saying, ‘Support us,’“ said Masood, a graduate of the University of Illinois, Chicago, and management consultant. “But we want them to understand what our values are.”

There are signs the industry is stirring: Faisal Masood, a Wall Street executive who organized the gathering, had attracted only 200 or so attendees when he started the event last year. This year, he had to close registration at 400 to keep from going over capacity. The worldwide market for Islamically permitted goods, called halal, has grown to more than half a billion dollars annually. Ritually slaughtered meat is a mainstay, but the halal industry is much broader, including foods and seasoning that omit alcohol, pork products and other forbidden ingredients, along with cosmetics, finance and clothing. Corporations have been courting immigrant Muslim communities in Europe for several years. Nestle, for example, has about 20 factories in Europe with halal-certified production lines and advertises to Western Muslims through its marketing campaign called “Taste of Home.” Nestle plans to increase its ethnic and halal offerings in Europe in coming years. In the United States, iconic American companies such as McDonald’s (which already has a popular halal menu overseas) and Wal-Mart have entered the halal arena. In August, the natural grocery giant Whole Foods began selling its first nationally distributed halal food product — frozen Indian entrees called Saffron Road. Along with new customers, however, the companies draw critics and can become targets in the ideological battle over Islam and terrorism. Abdalhamid Evans, project director with the World Halal Forum Europe, which works with the global halal industry, said a recent backlash has prompted some mainstream businesses in Europe to keep a lower profile about their halal products or scale back their offerings. In the U.K., after Kentucky Fried Chicken rolled out halal menu options in several dozen stores, the restaurant chain pulled the items in a few locations in the face of protests. Critics dubbed the menu “terror chicken.”

Last September, the Daily Mail of London reported that many British supermarkets, fast-food chains, hospitals, schools, pubs and sporting arenas such as Wembley Stadium, were serving some halal meat and poultry without notifying the public. A large share of meat sold in Britain comes from New Zealand, where the slaughterhouses have expanded halal production as they try to boost their already robust exports to Islamic countries.

In the uproar that followed, Barnabas Aid, a group that fights Christian persecution worldwide, started a petition in Britain against what it called the “imposition” of halal. It “may be interpreted as an act of Islamic supremacy,” the group said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



US Home-Grown Terrorists ‘A Global Threat’, Warns Congresswoman

America’s home-grown terrorists are now a ‘global threat’ and the US should look to Europe to learn how to deal with the problem, a prominent US congresswoman has warned Barack Obama.

Mr Shahzad, who described himself as a ‘Muslim solider’, warned ‘brace yourselves because the war with the Muslims has just begun’ Photo: AFP

Duncan Gardham, Security Correspondent 2:42PM GMT 26 Dec 2010

In a letter to the president, Sue Myrick, a member of the House of Representatives select committee on intelligence, says that America is for the first time exporting Islamist terrorism.

She accuses the US of complacency in dealing with the issue and says the country in “far behind” Europe in having measures in place to deal with the growing problem of the radicalisation of young men and their willingness to carry out terror attacks.

Her letter marks a departure from a long-held view in the US that Britain is the biggest threat to the US as a result of its position as a staging point for extremists from Pakistan, the Middle East and East Africa.

In her letter, Mrs Myrick writes: “For many years we lulled ourselves with the idea that radicalisation was not happening inside the United Sates.

“We believed American Muslims were immune to radicalisation because, unlike the European counterparts, they are socially and economically well-integrated into society.

“There had been warnings that these assumptions were false but we paid them no mind.” She goes on: “Today there is no doubt that radicalisation is taking place inside America. The strikingly accelerated rate of American Muslims arrested for involvement in terrorist activities since May 2009 makes this fact self-evident. What has been missed is that our home-grown terrorists are now becoming a global threat.”

Among a number of cases cited by Mrs Myrick, a Republican, is that of David Coleman Headley, a US citizen who conducted the reconnaissance for the Mumbai attacks and also visited Britain.

She also writes about Samir Khan, a leading propagandist with al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsular who produces an English language online magazine called Inspire, and came from the congresswoman’s hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina.

Some of those arrested over the last year, including Faizal Shazad, the Times Square bomber, “embodied the American dream, at least socio-economically,” she adds.

She said that the interpretation that social grievances are at the heart of domestic terrorism is wrong and adds: “The truth is that if grievances were the sole cause of terrorism, we would see daily acts by Americans who have lost their jobs and homes in this economic downturn.” The congresswoman said that America knows little about the ideology that drives terrorism and adds: “We are far behind our allies in Europe who have been studying extremist ideology for some time now.

“If we are truly to stem the tide of home-grown terrorism, we must follow the act of some European countries, we must move beyond addressing bombs and bullets to winning hearts and minds.” Mrs Myrick, a Republican, called on the US president to convene a bipartisan meeting on counter-radicalisation at the White House for congressional leaders to discuss the issues.

The Daily Telegraph understands that senior US officials have been briefed on Britain’s anti-radicalisation project called Prevent, which is currently being restructured by the Coalition Government.

Her call coincides with that of congressman Peter King, the incoming Republican head of the house committee on homeland security who said last weekend that he would hold hearings radicalisation, alleging that law-enforcement officials around the country had told him they received little co-operation from Muslims.

Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens, an expert in extremism at King’s College, London, said: “A number of recent cases, particularly over the last year, suggest that home-grown Islamist extremism is a growing problem in the United States.

“Many of the patterns we have become used to seeing in Europe over the last decade are now emerging over there and it is important that the current US administration acts decisively before it is too late.”

           — Hat tip: El Inglés [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Berlusconi: The Majority No Longer Identifies With Fini

(AGI) Rome — “The majority that elected him no longer identifies with Fini”. The statement was made by Silvio Berlusconi during his guest-appearance in ‘Mattino Cinque’, reiterating the fact that a reconciliation with the 3rd-highest office of the State is not possible. & 13; “There are players in the Government and in the PDL who are turning ino the ruling class, including some that might be perfectly suitable to shoulder the responsibility of Government in the near future” he said and then went on to say, “we should hope that this actually comes about because governing the Country requires great sacrifice and imposes an almost impossible lifestyle”.

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



Coldest December in Sweden in 110 Years

The last few days of the year look to be very cold throughout Sweden, according to a forecast by the Swedish meteorological agency SMHI.

This means that several parts of Sweden, including the southern region Götaland and eastern Svealand, will have experienced the coldest December in at least 110 years.

Considering the freezing Christmas month, SMHI write on their website that it “maybe isn’t that strange that we’ve had a bit of traffic problems”, referring to the past few days of chaos on Swedish roads and rails, caused by heavy snowfall and bitter cold.

Tuesday and Wednesday will be cold throughout the country, but during the last two days of the year milder air will begin coming in.

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



German Aid Worker Killed in Afghanistan

A German development worker was killed by insurgents in northern Afghanistan on Friday night. Development Minister Dirk Niebel described the killing as a “cowardly attack,” while Chancellor Angela Merkel has expressed her shock.

Merkel said on Saturday she “condemned the attack in the strongest terms,” and sent condolences to the bereaved family of the man.

The aid worker, an adviser for German development bank KfW, was fatally injured when the vehicle he was travelling in was shot at.

Four people were in the vehicle, a Development Ministry statement said. An Afghan travelling with him was also injured.

The injured KfW adviser was taken to a German army base for treatment, but died of his wounds soon after.

The worker was reportedly helping with a project to build a road between the towns of Kholm and Kunduz in northern Afghanistan.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack on Saturday, with a spokesman saying they had killed a German citizen.

Niebel expressed sympathy for the man’s family, saying, “This cowardly attack, which is directed against the interests of the local community, shows once again the dangers of civilian reconstruction in Afghanistan.”

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



Italy: Weather Woes: Ice and Snow in the North, Rain in the South

(AGI) Rome — The storm alert in the Center-North has been lifted after the rain gradually shifted to the regions of the South. The forecast in this area is of stormy weather while temperatures drop considerably thoughout the whole peninsula.

The Civil Protection service warns of stormy weather in all of Northern Europe associated with a cold air front which is pushing snowfall towards Italy’s Northern aned Adriatic regions, even on the plains, and strong gushes of wind up to gale strength in the North-East.

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



Netherlands: Police Arrest 12 Somalis on Terrorism Charges, Target Unknown

The 12 Somali men arrested in Rotterdam on Friday night were planning to launch a terrorist attack in the Netherlands ‘in the short term’, the public prosecution department said on Saturday.

However, public prosecution department spokesman Wim de Bruin told the NRC the justice ministry currently has ‘no information at all’ about the potential target.

The 12 were arrested by police in a phone shop and four homes in Rotterdam and two motel rooms in Brabant. No weapons or explosives were found during the raids.

The men are aged between 19 and 48. Six are Rotterdam residents, five have ‘no fixed address’ and one comes from Denmark, the public prosecution department said in a statement.

Elite squad

The arrests were made by the police and army’s elite anti-terror unit DSI following a tip-off from the AIVD.

The NRC states the authorities appear to have taken the threat ‘very seriously’ and that the counter-terrorism office had been fully informed.

One eyewitness to the arrests in Rotterdam told the Telegraaf that two phone shop owners were arrested and 11 computers taken away for analysis.

The brother of one of the men said three people had been arrested at his home. One, the Danish Somali, was on holiday.

The men are expected to appear in court on Monday.

Earlier this year, the AIVD added Somalia to its list of potential terrorist threats against the Netherlands.

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



Pope Condemns Christmas Day Violence

At least 38 people were killed in Nigeria and six wounded in the Philippines over the festive period in attacks targeting churches and Christmas shoppers.

Pope Benedict XVI, told pilgrims and tourists in St Peter’s Square that he was saddened by the attacks on Christians and a suicide bomb attack in Peshawar, Pakistan which claimed 40 lives. “I want to express my heartfelt sorrow for the victims of these absurd acts of violence and repeat an appeal to abandon the path of hate and seek instead peaceful solutions to conflicts, “ he said. “The earth is once again stained with blood as we have seen in other parts of the world.”

A week ago, he said Christians are now the world’s most persecuted religious group and lamented that some had to risk their lives to practise their faith.

In one of two Christmas Eve attacks on churches in northern Nigeria, dozens of armed men dragged a pastor of out his home in the city of Maiduguri and shot him dead. Two male choir members rehearsing for a late-night carol service were also killed, along with two people passing the Victory Baptist Church, which was then set alight. Danjuma Akawu, the church’s secretary, escaped by climbing over the fence.

“I cannot understand these attacks,” he said. “Why Christians? The police have failed to protect us.”

At the Church of Christ in Nigeria at the opposite end of Maiduguri, Rev Haskanda Jessu said three men attacked around an hour later, killing a 60-year-old security guard.

The attacks have been blamed on the radical Muslim sect Boko Haram, which has its headquarters in Maiduguri.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Gothenburg: Coptic Church Closed Down Due to Internet Threats

The Coptic Christian church in Agnesberg (Gothenburg) was closed down after receiving an internet threat. The threat was vague, but the Swedish security service was called in .

There are about 400 Coptic families in Sweden, most living in the Stockholm area. The community in Gothenburg has about 200 members.

On Christmas Eve the community’s pastor, Father Shenouda, was visited by four police officers who said that there were calls on the internet for what the police called ‘activities’ against certain Christian churches in Europe.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



UK: Boxing Day Violence: Armed Police Called After Shooting and Stabbing at One of Europe’s Busiest Shopping Centres

Shoppers dived for cover at one of Europe’s busiest shopping centres today after a youth was shot in a suspected gang clash.

Eyewitnesses described an apparent confrontation between two groups at Birmingham’s Bullring centre and police originally reported that a second man had been stabbed in the head, although a spokesman later said his facial injuries may have been the result of being slashed with a knife.

The incident, which was captured on CCTV, happened close to the flagship Selfridges department store on what was expected to be one of the busiest shopping day of the year as shoppers flocked into city centres to take advantage of the Boxing Day sales.

West Midlands Police sent armed officers to the Bullring, which has two three-storey wings separated by a central pedestrianised plaza. A number of areas inside and outside the shopping centre were cordoned off, although it was thought the shooting took place outside the mall.

A police source said it appeared that one group of around eight youths had chased a second, smaller group, through a section of the shopping centre.

One of those being pursued, a 26-year-old man who suffered the minor facial injuries, is under arrest in hospital on suspicion of violent disorder.

The second man, aged 19, was shot in the leg and is also in an undisclosed hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

It is understood both men are black, although some of those involved in the violence were Asian, police said.

The source said: ‘It could be that this disorder was the result of something which was pre-planned and we may be looking at a gang-type incident.

‘In my experience people don’t usually carry guns around with them unless they are planning to use them.’

Birmingham has been blighted by gun crime, much of it rooted in gang rivalries, over the past 15 years.

A drugs turf war between the two most notorious groups, the Burger Bar Boys and the Johnson Crew, came to national attention in 2003 when innocent teenagers Letisha Shakespeare, 17, and Charlene Ellis, 18, were gunned down at a New Year’s party in a drive-by attack by four Burger Bar Boys aiming for a member of the rival gang.

While both groups are predominantly black, the Johnson Crew were known to have made loose affiliations with local Asian heroin gangs in the city’s Aston suburb earlier this decade.

The Bullring expected around 180,000 bargain hunters to pass through its doors as retailers reduced items by up to 70 per cent in a bid to make up for the dent in sales caused by plummeting temperatures last week and heavy snow.

A West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman said its crews arrived at the scene to find the 19-year-old being treated by security staff.

The second man was found in a ‘different location’ but also within the vicinity of the Bullring. He refused treatment and was left with police at the scene.

Today the entire shopping centre was cordoned off. A West Midlands Police spokesman said officers were patrolling the city centre to provide reassurance.

Ealier this month Birmingham became the first city in the country to install install sensors which alert police to the exact location of gunshots.

West Midlands Police has installed dozens of the Shotspotter sensors to public and private buildings in a two square mile of north-west Birmingham, in a bid to combat gun crime in the area.

The transmitters, which can determine exactly how many shots are fired, the direction the shots were fired in and pinpoint their location to a 25 metre radius, have already helped to reduce gun crime by up to 70 per cent in some American cities.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: English Defence League Claim 78 Got Whiplash in Crash… But Only 25 Were on Coach

Almost 80 far-Right extremists are trying to claim for whiplash injuries after a coach crash — when there were only 25 people on board the vehicle and just 57 seats.

Supporters of the English Defence League have been accused of attempted insurance fraud after dozens sought compensation for neck injuries.

The claims were lodged after the coach carrying members to a rally was in a collision in which it sustained minor damage.

Driver Christopher Cartwright said he would be amazed if any of those on board were hurt, adding: ‘There was not much more than a scratch on the back corner.’

But days after the accident during a journey from Gateshead to Preston last month, the claims for injuries allegedly caused by the crash began to flood in from EDL supporters.

Coach firm bosses said only 25 people were on the vehicle, but more than three times that many claims had been made.

Maria Caris, of Caris Coaches in Gateshead, said she is considering legal action amid fears that EDL members are trying to cheat her company.

She said: ‘They must think we’re idiots. There are 78 claims in so far and the phone is still going with people asking for our insurance details. They are all saying they were on the coach.’ The rally in Preston ended in violent clashes with the police, who arrested 14 people for public order offences and drunk or disorderly behaviour.

Mrs Caris said: ‘These ‘‘whiplash injuries’’ could have been caused when they were fighting with the police in Preston.’

Yesterday even EDL supporters were protesting over the stupidity of so many making claims.

Member Alan Spence wrote on the party’s Facebook site: ‘Are you taking the p*** or what? There were only 20 people on the ****ing coach.’

Hel Gower of the Tyneside branch said: ‘Don’t look good, does it?’

Last night a senior police source said: ‘Making a false statement to seek financial benefit following a road traffic accident is a criminal offence.

‘We would urge the owners of the coach company to supply us with the details of any of those who may have wrongly made such claims against their insurance.’

No-one was available for comment at the EDL.

The group was at the centre of controversy earlier this month after a U.S. pastor who threatened to burn the Koran was said to have been invited to address one of its rallies.

The group later said it felt an invitation was inappropriate.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: New 5p and 10p Coins Delayed Over Parking Chaos Threat

The new coins are 0.2mm wider than the existing 1.7mm version and are being made from cheaper materials in a bid to save £10m a year. Industry bodies warned of a “disaster”, saying it was impossible to alter millions of vending machines and 400,000 parking meters to accept the new coins in time for their slated introduction from 1 January. Now the Treasury and the Royal Mint say the coins will not be introduced until at least April.

Jonathan Hilder, chief executive of the Automatic Vending Association, said: “We’re relieved the coins have been put back to April and we are hopeful there could be a further delay until next January. “This has already saved the industry £16.3m in costs and will prevent millions of machine users having coins rejected.” He added: “The Treasury has been much more responsive to the needs of the industry than under the previous government.” The current coins — made from nickel and copper alloy, cupro-nickel — will be replaced by those made from nickel-plated stainless steel in a bid to save money as global copper prices are driven up by demand from China and India.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Unwanted Attention: German Far Right Praises New Swiss Law

The NPD, a German far-right party, has been sending out new postcards. “The Swiss Example,” they read. “Make Quick Work of Criminal Foreigners.”

It’s the kind of attention the Swiss would rather avoid. Following last month’s referendum in Switzerland approving the deportation of criminal foreigners, Germany’s extreme-right party the NPD has praised the Alpine nation — and sent out hundreds of thousands of fawning postcards.

The country used to be renowned for its breathtaking Alpine landscapes, ultra-punctual train service and luxurious standard of living. Lately, however, Switzerland’s reputation has taken a bit of a hit.

In 2009, Germany and several other countries, including the US, heavily criticized the country’s banks for their alleged assistance to those who would evade paying taxes. In November of last year, the Swiss voted in a referendum to ban the construction of minarets in the country. And early this month, American dispatches from Switzerland, released by WikiLeaks, revealed deep US frustration with the country’s desire to play an outsized role in finding a solution to the dispute with Iran over that country’s nuclear program.

Now, however, it would appear that Switzerland has found an unwanted ally. At the end of November, Swiss voters passed a referendum mandating the swift deportation of non-citizens who have been convicted of certain crimes. Since then, the German far-right party NPD has handed out postcards praising the Swiss initiative.

The postcards depict an idyllic mountain landscape with the famous Matterhorn in the background. “The Swiss Example,” they read. “Make Quick Work of Criminal Foreigners.”

NPD spokesman Klaus Beier told the Swiss news website 20 Minuten Online that since the start of December, “We have distributed several hundred thousand of the postcards in Germany.”

Black and White Sheep

The Swiss referendum was heavily criticized by human rights groups and by the European Commission in Brussels. The NPD, however, wants to highlight what it sees as the benefits of direct democracy as practiced in Switzlerland. “The introduction of Swiss-style direct democracy has been a priority of ours for decades,” Beier told 20 Minuten Online.

It’s not the first time Germany’s far right has borrowed a tune from the Swiss right wing. During a 2007 parliamentary campaign, the populist Swiss People’s Party (SVP) — which launched the November referendum — printed posters showing white sheep kicking a black sheep off the Swiss flag. The image found its way onto NPD posters for a state election in the German state of Hesse in 2008.

In late 2009, a German court banned an NPD poster depicting two ravens pecking at a €100 bill, captioned “Stop the Polish Invasion.” The SVP had earlier printed a poster with the same black ravens picking apart a map of Switzerland.

The SVP has been adamant about denying any connection to the NPD. The Swiss party even considered legal action for the 2009 appropriation, though nothing came of it.

The propaganda from Switzerland, moreover, hasn’t done much for the NPD. After a brief surge of support several years ago, the party has lately had trouble attracting supporters.

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

North Africa


Eight US Tourists Killed in Egyptian Bus Crash

The bus, which was carrying 37 tourists from the United States, was headed to the ancient Egyptian Abu Simbel temples when it hit a damaged truck parked on the side of the road.

A police official said six of the dead were women. The bus driver and a tourist guide were also injured in the crash, which occurred early in the morning about 19 miles from Aswan.

Four tourists were in critical condition, the police official said, adding that the injured were taken to a military hospital in Aswan. Some of the wounded, he said, were to be airlifted in the afternoon to a hospital in Cairo that often treats injured tourists. Seventy-nine tourists on board two other buses in the convoy were unharmed.

A US embassy press official said the mission was aware of the accident and would provide consular assistance to the tourists and their families but did not provide any toll.

Traffic accidents occur frequently in Egypt, often because of poor road condition and lax regulations.

The government estimates that there are 8,000 road accidents a year in the country.

The US State Department warns on its website that travelling on Egyptian highways can be dangerous. Embassy officials are prohibited from travelling outside Cairo after dark because of driving hazards.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: 18,000 Women at the Head of Enterprises

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, DECEMBER 20 — Women enterprise directors number 18,000 in Tunisia, according to the figures elaborated by the National Chamber of Women Heads of Enterprises (CNFCE), which noted that 11% are employed in the crafts sector, 41% in services, 25% in industry, 22% in trade and 1% in other activities. The study indicated that most are in their forties and married, 70% have children and 74.5% have a high school diploma. Another interesting figure is that 87% of the projects had been accomplished without using household assets. According to the press agency TAP, “enterprises run by women are characterised by higher productivity, reflexive financing policies, strategic positioning adapted to the economic trend and an ability to use Information and Communications Technology”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Abbas Vows: No Room for Israelis in Palestinian State

PA president says US has failed to pressure J’lem, accuses Israel of ‘deception’ for blaming PA for impasse in talks.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas announced on Saturday that when a Palestinian state is established, it will have no Israelis in it.

“We have frankly said, and always will say: If there is an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, we won’t agree to the presence of one Israeli in it,” Abbas told reporters in Ramallah.

He was commenting on unconfirmed reports suggesting that the PA leadership might agree to the presence of the IDF in the West Bank after the establishment of a Palestinian state.

“We are ready to have peace on the basis of international legitimacy and the road map, which we have accepted, as well as the Arab Peace Initiative,” Abbas said. “But when a Palestinian state is established, it would have no Israeli presence in it.”

The PA president criticized Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and accused him of placing obstacles on the road to peace.

“He who prefers settlements over peace is responsible for the obstacles to peace,” he added.

“If he really was interested in peace, he would have at least preferred peace to settlements.”

Abbas accused the Israeli government of “deception” with the purpose of blaming the Palestinians for the current impasse in the peace talks. He also criticized the US administration for failing to put pressure on Israel to stop the construction in the settlements and east Jerusalem.

“The US administration has tried to stop the settlements, but Netanyahu refused,” he said. “We know that there’s a clear American position, but these days we don’t hear it any more. We hope we will hear it in the future.”

Abbas said that the PA has presented in writing to the US its position regarding all the core issues, but has still not heard Israel’s reply.

“All the final-status issues must be solved according to international resolutions,” he said. “All these issues will be resolved at the negotiating table, and this includes the issue of the refugees, which Israel tried to get rid of, but to no avail.”

On Friday night, Abbas met in Bethlehem with members of the tiny Christian community in the Gaza Strip who received permission from Israel to travel to the West Bank for Christmas.

Abbas expressed hope that his Fatah faction and Hamas would be able to resolve their differences so that the Gaza Strip would be part of the future Palestinian state. He also voiced hope that he would be able to travel to the Gaza Strip in the near future.

Abbas hailed Bolivia, Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil and Ecuador, which have recognized a Palestinian state with the 1967 borders. He said that the Palestinians were now hoping that other countries, especially the EU, Russia, Canada, the US and Japan, would follow suit and declare their recognition of a Palestinian state.

“The whole world is now with us,” Abbas said. “These countries have recognized us because they love peace and want to support peace.”

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Christmas: Mixed Feelings in Bethlehem

(ANSAmed) — BETHLEHEM (WEST BANK) — A giant illuminated Christmas tree in Manger Square welcomes the masses of tourists who have returned this year to spend the most important day of the year in Jesus’ birthplace. The visitors come as a blessing to the usually depressed and trouble-ridden town, in which one person in three is unemployed.

“You only see so much life here at Christmas time,” taxi-driver Isha’ sighs: “everybody goes crazy, including the traffic. But I’m happy: the pilgrims help me earn a living — as well as a feeling of hope”.

In this symbolic city, Christmas also means business. The town is covered in lights and does its best to host the floods of arrivals. Ninety thousand visitors are expected over the coming days — twenty thousand more than in 2009. “The hotels are all full and pilgrims are staying in the monasteries or as guests in priests homes”, Deputy Mayor George Saade told ANSA” The Christmas period is vital for our economy. Most of the earnings come from tourism, which we try to promote through an event-filled schedule”. And this year, the arrivals don’t appear to be letting his hopes down, as the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Msg. Fouad Twal, said in his pre-Christmas message a few days ago: the town has welcomed 1.1 million visitors in the course of the year.

The citizens of Bethlehem are not the only ones trying to attract tourists: Israeli business also wants to partake of the market and this common interest leads to shared efforts.

Recently, the country’s Tourism Minister, Stas Misezhnikov, referred to “friutful collaboration” with the Palestine National Authority (PNA) — in this respect at least, and despite the current stalemate in the peace talks. Misezhnikov went on to stress how during the festive season the Israeli army is issuing special passes to Arab Christian faithful wishing to visit the holy places. But, referring to cooperation with Israel, Saade showed much less enthusiasm: “It’s true that there is a higher level of cooperation during this festive season, but let’s not exaggerate. This story about the special passes is also only partly true. A lot of applications have been turned down or have not received any reply. My mother, for example, an old woman, was denied permission to visit Jerusalem”.

Both politics and the conflict remain prominent during Christmas: we decorated and set up lights, but this isn’t enough to hide this fact. Just as it fails to mask over Bethlehems tough economic and social conditions. In the town where Christianity was born 2,000 years ago, Christians are threatening to disappear with time. According to Palestinian scholar Bernard Sabella, the phenomenon “is due, first of all, to the separation wall dividing Israel from the Territories”.

Although he is no academic, Milad — who runs a stall opposite the Nativity Basilica — agrees, and goes straight to the point: “A lot of us used to commute to Jerusalem to work. But since it has been necessary to cross the check-point, this is no longer so easy and the youngsters prefer to move”. The numbers speak for themselves: “Across the whole of the West Bank, the number of Christians has now dropped to just 1.25% of the population: a tiny percentage”, Sabella notes.

Not a few commentators speculate that among the reasons for this exodus is the hardening of the inter-Palestinian conflict between Christians and fundamentalist Muslims. This has been sharpened by the appearance of Hamas supporters — who are present in force — after smuggling themselves into Bethlehem’s town council, despite the fact that the town is still administered by Fatah, the party of the moderate PNA President Mahmoud Abbas. But the expert plays down this element: “There is a problem of religious intolerance here as well,” he concedes, “but the West Bank is not the Gaza Strip and the government of Abbas and Salam Fayyad is doing a first class job in guaranteeing security and law and order”. “If the Christians are fleeing, this is for other reasons: because there is no work and because of the difficult political situation,” in a land that is still looking for peace even at Christmas time.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Christmas in Gaza is a Celebration Tempered by Fear

The Christmas tree is crooked and covered with dust. Before Najib M. (not his real name) can decorate the cypress in his family’s living room in the center of Gaza City it has to be rinsed and wiped off. But finding a suitable tree is the smallest problem that Christians in the Gaza Strip face over their most important festival of the year.

“There is no future here for our children”, says Najib. His son has left for Europe, his eldest two daughters are studying in the West Bank and can not reach the family home either. “This year is our last chance to visit them because our youngest daughter turns 16 soon.”

As a “gesture of good will” the IDF has announced it will let 500 Christian Palestinians visit their families in Israel or the West Bank “for religious and family gatherings”. But the arrangement excludes residents between 16 and 35 years of age.

Pictures of Jesus and Virgin Mary hang on the walls of the family living room. The doors of the children’s rooms are covered with stickers of Hannah Montana and Sponge Bob Squarepants.

“We may get our permit tomorrow,” Najib’s wife, Yulia, says as she serves apple juice and burbara, a dough cake made from wheat grains, almonds and raisins. The family has just celebrated Eid il-Burbara, another Orthodox holiday similar to Halloween. The main Orthodox Christmas takes place on January 7.

“My Christian family history in Gaza goes back over 500 years. As far as I remember religion has never been an issue like it is today, Najib says.” He has heard stories about imams who are preaching about Christians collaborating with Jews against Islam.

When his wife and daughter go out on the street they are subject to stares and sometimes even verbal abuse; Muslim men yell at them to cover their hair.

As a child in Gaza more than 30 years ago, Nabil went to a mixed school and “never felt special”. His friends, both Christians and Muslims, did not discuss religion. “For Palestinians there used to be only the national issue. But Hamas and other groups have used it since the Intifada to recruit fighters.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Israel Won’t Attend Racism Conference Fete

Israel says it won’t participate in the 10th anniversary commemoration of a U.N. conference on racism that singled out Israel for criticism and likened Zionism to racism.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said the conference had “anti-Semitic undertones and displays of hatred for Israel and the Jewish world.”

The U.S. and Israel walked out of the 2001 World Conference Against Racism in the South African city of Durban over a draft resolution that criticized Israel and Zionism.

The U.N. General Assembly voted Friday to commemorate the event’s 10th anniversary during its annual ministerial meeting on Sept. 21.

Many African and Muslim countries have sought a commemoration, saying racism and religious intolerance remain prevalent.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Militants Killed as Violence Surges on Gaza Border

Israel and Hamas traded threats of war amid fresh skirmishes along the tense Gaza Strip border on Sunday in which two militants were killed. The escalation of violence comes on the eve of the second anniversary of Israel’s devastating assault on the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip — known as Operation Cast Lead — and follows weeks of rocket fire from Gaza and a string of retaliatory Israeli air raids.

Turning up the rhetoric, both sides said they were prepared for another round of bloodletting.

“I hope there is no need for another operation like ‘Cast Lead’,” Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom told public radio ahead of a cabinet meeting

“But if this situation continues — if missiles keep being smuggled in without hindrance, if they continue shooting into Israel, trying to hit innocent civilians — then, obviously we will have to respond and respond with all our force,” he said.

On Saturday, a spokesman for the military wing of Hamas said his group was also ready for a new conflict.

“There is a truce in effect in the field. It is real if Israel stops its aggression and ends its siege. But if there is any Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip we will respond strongly,” said a masked spokesman for the group, who identified himself as Abu Obeideh. “We are completely ready to answer any Israeli aggression,” he said, speaking at a press conference in Gaza City with three guards, who were all masked and armed.

The fresh threats come as Israeli forces, backed by tanks and helicopter gunships, killed two Islamic Jihad militants, who were apparently trying to place a bomb along the Gaza border, the army and the militant group said.

“Soldiers opened fire on members of a terrorist cell which was trying to place an explosive charge in the immediate vicinity of the security barrier,” an Israeli army spokeswoman told AFP. The barrier separates Israel from the Gaza Strip.

“The incident happened in the south of the Gaza Strip and helicopters backed up the fire of the soldiers,” she added. She said “soldiers received instructions not to hesitate to open fire when they saw terrorists placing booby-trap devices near the barrier.” Islamic Jihad confirmed the two dead men were members of the group.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



‘Musical’ Christmas Greetings From Peres on YouTube

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 24 — In a holiday message to Christians around the world for Christmas, Israeli head of state Shimon Peres briefly joined in the singing of a choir of Christian children from Galilee that paid him a visit. Along with the children — from a village near Nazareth — a smiling Peres softly sang a few lines from a traditional Christian song. He then made sure the brief footage went on Youtube.

“From the Holy City of Jerusalem,” said the head of state, “I would like to wish all the Christians of the world a happy holiday. May the heavens bring prosperity, tranquility and peace to the Middle East and the entire world during this Christmas and the New Year.” “All of us — Jews, Muslims and Christians,” he continued, “are praying in our heart for a better world for all the children of the world. There are a number of types of weapons: however, the strongest is that of prayer alongside the hope to change reality.” Shimon’s words have taken on a special meaning in these days in Israel, with nationalist rabbis opposing Christmas trees in public and the taking part of New Year’s Eve celebrations since — from their point of view — they are incompatible with the country’s Jewish character.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



New Rules in Force for Consumer Protection

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 23 — A minor revolution has occurred concerning consumer rights. New regulations concerning refunds for items purchased in shops and retail chains came into force, the Economic Commission of the Israeli Parliament said. Previously it had only been possible to return the goods purchased and receive credit equal to the amount spent. The regulation, as reported by the Italian Institute for Foreign Trade (ICE) office in Tel Aviv, will enable consumers to return a product or service purchased within fourteen days of the day of purchase so long as the product has not been used.

The regulations concern products and services over 50 shekels (about 11 euros).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Raed Salah in Rahat: Israeli Land Belongs to Muslims

Sheikh Raed Salah, head of the Islamic Movement’s northern branch, said over the weekend that Israeli land is occupied Muslim, Arab and Palestinian territory, Israel Radio reported Sunday.

During a visit to Rahat, Salah called on Beduins to fight for the Muslim land, saying “we have no intention of leaving our land or even starting negotiations about the issue.”

Salah visited the site of a mosque that was built in Rahat without a permit and destroyed by Israel Lands Authority officials after courts ruled the structure to be in breach of the law.

In November, hundreds of Israel Police officers, backed by border policemen, protected the officials as they took down the 400- square meter structure, which was built over seven months ago in the parking lot of a soccer stadium to mark Land Day, an annual day of rallies held by Israeli Arabs to protest what they say is government seizure of their lands.

A small team entered the building before it was demolished to remove all sacred items from it with care, police said.

Rioters threw rocks at police during the clearance, resulting in five arrests, Israel Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

The mosque has been described by courts as a direct provocation toward Israeli sovereignty due to its manner of construction and location.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Afghanistan’s Karzai Welcomes Taliban Setting Up Office in Turkey

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has supported the idea of Turkey becoming a venue for reconciliation talks with the Taliban, which he says could even open a representation office in Turkey. Turkish officials, however, stress that Ankara is focused on the reconciliation talks between Afghan groups and that the opening of such an office has not yet come onto the agenda of talks with the Afghan government

The Afghan president has indicated his potential support for the idea of Taliban officials setting up an office in Turkey as a means for reconciliation talks, though Turkish officials said Sunday the idea was still “hypothetical.”

“The idea was that Turkey would serve as a place where gatherings can take place, where representation [of the Taliban] could be established in order to facilitate reconstruction and reintegration,” Afghan President Hamid Karzai told a joint news conference in Istanbul with his counterparts from Turkey and Pakistan, saying figures close to the Taliban had previously shared the idea with him.

“If Turkey provides such a venue, we, as the government, as the state [of Afghanistan], will be pleased to walk on the path that Turkey has opened,” Karzai said.

The proposal to open a representation office for the Taliban in Turkey did not come onto the agenda during the talks held with the Afghan government, Turkish Foreign Ministry officials told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review on Sunday.

“Opening a representation office for the Taliban in Turkey is still hypothetical,” one official said. “If the Afghan government seizes on that notion, then we can consider it. There are complicated legal issues with that, including that [the Taliban] is not a political party.”

The same official noted that Ankara is focusing on reconciliation talks among Afghan groups, something that has long been on the agenda of the international community. Responding to Karzai’s statement, the official said: “The question asked to the Afghan president was on the issue of a representation office; however, what the Afghan president pointed out was that Turkey could be a venue for a reconciliation meeting of Afghan groups.”

Karzai’s comments came after an interview with a former Taliban official, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, in the British newspaper the Daily Telegraph, in which he suggested that the Taliban opening offices in neutral countries would be a beneficial step for the negotiations.

“If I was a Taliban I would choose a country close to Afghanistan but neutral, like the United Arab Emirates, somewhere that is not interested in interfering in Afghanistan, like Pakistan or China [are],” he said.

Ahmed Rashid, another Taliban expert, told the paper he had recently conducted interviews with five former insurgent leaders, who each said the Taliban wanted to open an office in a neutral country — such as in one of the Gulf states, or in Germany, Turkey or Japan — since their strongholds of Kandahar and Helmand were being hit by special-forces teams.

Turkish officials preferred to support the idea of talks in general terms, declining to go into detail on how Turkey could make a contribution.

Responding to the same question posed to Karzai at the news conference, President Abdullah Gül said he had not seen the Daily Telegraph report, but supported the idea in general terms. “Whatever will serve the future reconstruction of Afghanistan — we will be there,” Gül told reporters.

Asked about Karzai’s welcoming of Taliban offices in Turkey, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said the ministry was always ready to answer all proposals, execute all processes in Turkey or contribute to ones outside Turkey, as long as the Afghan government accepted the efforts. He reaffirmed that Turkey had participated, and would take part in the future, in all attempts to maintain internal peace in Afghanistan.

“Mr. Karzai has made very important statements today,” Davutoglu told reporters in a press conference Friday. “There were some works being executed confidentially. Mr. Karzai called on Turkey more openly, giving voice to contributions Turkey could make. We are grateful for this confidence and ready to answer that on all levels.”

Karzai recently formed a peace council to lead talks with the Taliban in order to end the war. The peace council has been seeking to bring insurgents to the negotiating table. Qiyamuddin Kashaf, spokesman for the High Peace Council, appealed in October to all Muslim nations, in particular the Organization of the Islamic Conference, or OIC, and Saudi Arabia, for help in brokering an end to the war.

The recent negotiations have suffered a serious setback, however, as the Taliban has said it will not enter into dialogue with the Afghan government until all 152,000 U.S.-led foreign troops based in the country leave.

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



Al-Qaida Threat on Iraq Christians Linked to Egypt

The wives of two Egyptian Coptic priests, forbidden by the Church from divorcing their abusive husbands, desperately sought another way out by converting to Islam. When their intentions were discovered, police handed them over to the Church and their whereabouts since have been unknown.

The cases caused a furor at home that spilled over the borders and turned deadly when al-Qaida in Iraq cited the women as the reason behind the bloodiest attack ever on Christians in Iraq — a five-hour siege of a church in October that left 68 people dead.

It was a stark example of the schism between Christians and Muslims that runs through the Middle East and periodically erupts into violence. “Amid the current sectarian discord, the timing is perfect for al-Qaida to show it is defending Islam and to exploit the situation to rally extremists against the churches,” said Ammar Ali Hassan, an expert in Islamic movements.

Both Wafaa Constantine, 53, and Camilla Shehata, 25, lived in remote rural towns and enjoyed prestige as devoted and pious wives of conservative Coptic priests. But behind that veneer, a lawyer and a church official said the women were trapped in abusive relationships. Both tried to seek a divorce through Church channels, but hit a dead-end because the Coptic Orthodox Church forbids divorce — a rule enforced even more strictly against the wives of priests. And they decided to rebel, not only against their husbands, but against the whole religion. They sought to convert to Islam, something viewed as a disgrace in their community. The Coptic Church considers those who convert to other religions such as Islam dead, making the marriage contract invalid. Though Egyptian religious authorities say the women never succeeded in converting, the controversy in both cases escalated with angry protests by Egyptian Christians, who accused Muslims of abducting the women and forcing them to convert.

That in turn galvanized Muslim hard-liners in Egypt who protested and accused the church of holding them against their will and forcing them to convert back to Christianity.

Al-Qaida in Iraq turned it into a cause celebre when it cited the women as the reason behind the Baghdad church siege. The group followed with more threats against Iraq’s Christian minority, creating such fear that most Christmas celebrations in the country were canceled. Egypt’s Christian minority, estimated at about 10 percent of the country’s 80 million people, has grown more religiously conservative over the past three decades as has the country’s Muslim majority. Egypt’s Salafi movement — extreme conservative Muslims — have long accused the Coptic Church here of conspiring to “Christianize” Egypt. Though Salafis in Egypt reject violence, their doctrine is only a few shades away from that of groups such as al-Qaida. Both adhere to a strict interpretation of Islam that supposedly is a purer form of Islam said to have been practiced by Islam’s Prophet Muhammad in the 7th century.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Jordan: Christmas for Iraqi Christians Tainted by Attacks

(by Mohammad Ben Hussein) (ANSAmed) — AMMAN, DECEMBER 24 — Preparation for the traditional midnight Christmas mass among Iraqi Christians in Jordan is carried out solemnly but exuberantly in a small church in West Amman. With an eye on relatives left behind in the war-torn homeland, prayers of the small congregate has been dedicated to families left to face uncertain future following a spat of attacks by extremist groups.

At the church’s main door, the priest placed on a board instructions for asylum seekers.

The board also carries a headline by a local Iraqi newspaper: “Deadly attacks on Christians in Iraq continue,” a reminder of daily suffering Christian Iraqis face in the wake of the American lead invasion to their country seven years ago.

Enas George arrived in Jordan nearly three months ago on way to the US. “There is no pleasure in Christmas. How can we enjoy in Amman while at the same time there are others who are being killed for no reason except that they are Christians,” she said.

The attack on the Assyrian Catholic church in Baghdad earlier this year saw 100 people taken hostage by an extremist group.

Police raided the church, the biggest in Iraq, to free the hostages, leading to the death of at lest 40 people. The attack was the latest in a series of bombings that targeted churches across Iraq, forcing hundreds of thousands to be internally displaced or leave seeking a safe heaven in surrounding countries.

Iraq’s Christians once numbered 1.5 million out of Iraq’s population of about 30 million. With the formation of a new government, hopes are high that a sense of stability and security is back.

Father Remon, priest of Chaledean congregate said he wanted the new government to provide badly needed protection.

“I extend my hand to Muslims in Iraq and to the new government to protect Christians, who built Iraq thousands of years ago,” Remon told ANSAmed. He said celebration of Christmas has been tarnished by the recent attacks.

“We are praying for peace to prevail in Iraq after years of bloodshed. Christians only want peace,” he added.

Chaldeans belong to a branch of the Roman Catholic Church that practices an ancient Eastern rite. Most of its members are in Iraq and Syria, and they form the biggest Christian community in Iraq.

In a world where the true meaning of Christmas is sometimes lost, for the Chaldeans it still holds a strong symbolic and emotional meaning, linking them to the war torn country and their families in diapora. Christian denominations in Iraq include Chaldeans; Copts; Roman, Assyrian and Melkite Catholics; Maronites and Greek Orthodox. Jordan is home to a large Iraqi community of nearly 250,000 including Christian asylum seekers who live temporarily in the kingdom waiting immigration procedures before heading to a third country in Europe, north America or Australia.

Among the crowd in the church is Maria, a mother of 47 year old man who has been kidnapped four years ago. Maria said she comes to church to pray for her son. “I only want to know what is his fate. Is he dead or alive, we can not continue like this,” she said as tears glistened in her rugged eyes.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Somalis Protest Discrimination by Landlords in Turkey

Somali women living in the Mediterranean province of Isparta protested in front of the governor’s office Wednesday, claiming they have been discriminated against by landlords and cannot find houses to rent.

“They do not rent to us because we are black and have many children,” the women said in their statement, which was reported by news agencies Thursday. “We do not behave [toward foreigners] like that in Somalia,” they added.

Somalis living in boarding houses said their rental contracts expire Dec. 31 and none of the landlords in the city would agree to rent to them. Twenty people appealed to the state for help with the situation, speaking on behalf of 400 women and children from Somalia who came to Turkey to escape their country’s ongoing civil war.

Members of the protesting group held banners that read, “Our hotel is forcing us to leave,” “Protect us!” or “Everyone sends their greetings to the governor,” saying they wanted the provincial governor to hear their voices. The demonstrators continued shouting despite police efforts to calm the group down, reports said.

Deputy Gov. Tahir Demir, who also serves as the province’s social aid director, asked to talk to the refugees and reportedly met with two of their representatives. During the meeting in the Governor’s Office, other refugees started to sing the Somali national anthem.

“There are some advertisements saying people have houses to rent, but whenever they realize we are from Somalia, they refuse us,” said one of the protesters, who said she has seven children and will be homeless soon due to having to leave the boarding house. “Are you Muslims or not?” she asked.

After Demir promised their accommodation problems would be solved, members of the group were taken back to their boarding house in official cars.

‘Worried for no reason’

Deputy Gov. Demir said none of the refugees suffer from being homeless. “We provide housing, heating, food and drink,” he said. “It is not clear that we can make an agreement with the owner of the boarding house. I believe that the protest strengthens the owner’s position.”

Demir said Isparta is a very sensitive province when it comes to taking in refugees. “None of the women will be forced to live outside; they worry for no reason,” he said.

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



Turkey Ties Frayed, Israel Turns to the Balkans

With relations between Turkey and Israel are at their lowest level, Israel is on the lookout for new allies and is boosting ties with Balkan countries. Israel is in low-key talks with Ankara to restore relations, but in the meantime has been noticeably upgrading ties with other nearby countries including Greece, Greek Cyprus, Romania and Bulgaria

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu (L) shakes hand with his Greek counterpart George Papandreou after a joint news conference in Athens. AP photo.

Israel is boosting its ties with Balkan countries after a deep freeze in relations with Turkey, formerly its closest and strongest regional ally.

For over a decade, Ankara and Israel shared warm relations, bolstered by important agreements on defense and the high-tech industry. Ties were so strong that Ankara even acted as an intermediary for indirect peace talks between Israel and Syria.

The relationship faltered in December 2008, when Israel launched a devastating military operation in the Gaza Strip, prompting Turkey to abandon its mediation efforts. But the final blow to the once-solid partnership was a May 2010 Israeli raid on a convoy of ships trying to break the Israeli blockade on Gaza. The navy operation killed nine people and caused a major crisis in bilateral ties.

Israel is in low-key talks with Ankara to restore relations, but in the meantime has been noticeably upgrading ties with other nearby countries including Greece, Greek Cyprus, Romania and Bulgaria.

In August, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu became the first Israeli premier to visit Greece, traditionally a pro-Arab country, after signing a series of military and economic cooperation deals.

Israel hopes to one day export some of the natural gas recently discovered in marine gas fields off its northern shore to Europe via Greece. As part of its development of the fields, Israel has signed a deal delineating an economic free zone with Greek Cyprus, prompting an outcry from Turkey. Ankara criticized the signing of the deal as an “unfortunate development” and said it is “null and void” because it disregards the rights and jurisdiction of Turkish Cypriots.

But Israel brushed off the criticism, and has forged ahead with other agreements to fill the gaps created when relations with Ankara turned sour. In particular, the troubled ties mean Israel can no longer train its air force in Turkish skies, a blow to a small country with little space of its own.

In recent months, it has begun carrying out joint air force exercises with Greece, Romania and Bulgaria. Despite the slew of new initiatives aimed at Balkan countries, Israel officially denies that the improved ties are intended to supplant Turkey’s role.

“There is an amazing and constant improvement in our relations with Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Romania and other countries, with whom our cooperation is increasing at all levels,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said. “This warming of ties is a natural development which we welcome and is not a substitution measure directed against a third country,” he said.

Despite the still-frosty ties between Israel and Ankara, commerce has actually grown, with bilateral trade up 30 percent over the past 11 months from the same period in 2009. Israeli imports from Turkey were valued at $1.6 billion this year, up from $1.2 billion in 2009, and exports stood at $1.2 billion, up from $974 million.

Still, the strained atmosphere seriously affected tourism, with the 300,000 Israelis who had visited Turkey each year shunning the country of late. “Our relations with Turkey are at their lowest level, and so we have looked for new friends in the Balkans,” said Alon Liel, a former Israeli ambassador to Turkey.

“It’s very interesting, but it’s a stopgap measure, because Israel is in the Middle East,” he said, noting that Ankara recently made a “very important” deal on economic and cultural cooperation with Syria, Lebanon and Jordan. “If the peace process continues to lag,” he warned, Israel faces “regional isolation.”

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



Turkey ‘Wants to Repair Ties With Israel’

Turkey’s foreign minister says he wants to repair ties with Israel, damaged when Israeli troops killed eight Turks and a Turkish-US national amid clashes on a pro-Palestinian aid ship in May.

Ahmet Davutoglu reiterated that Israel must apologise for the deaths, which led Turkey to withdraw its ambassador.

Israel, which insists the commandos fired in self-defence, said it was also seeking better relations with Ankara.

Meanwhile, crowds have welcomed the ship, Mavi Marmara, back to Istanbul.

The two nations have had 15 years of good relations, including a number of military and trade pacts, and have held talks in Geneva recently to try to restore ties.

But the talks foundered, reportedly because Israel refused to apologise for the 31 May raid. ‘Unchanged goal’

“Turkish citizens have been killed in international waters, nothing can cover up this truth,” said Mr Davutoglu.

“We want to both preserve relations and defend our rights. If our friendship with Israel is to continue, the way for it is to apologise and offer compensation.”

He said Turkish attempts to repair ties — including helping Israel tackle devastating forest fires — had not been reciprocated.

Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said improving the relationship was an “unchanged goal”.

He said Israel’s record in sending humanitarian aid to Turkey “speaks in a much more truthful and friendly manner than this statement by the Turkish foreign minister”.

The Mavi Marmara, which has been undergoing repairs, sailed back to its home port of Istanbul on Sunday afternoon.

Large crowds, including family members of the nine killed activists, greeted the vessel in a ceremony organised by the activists who sent it.

The Mavi Marmara was part of an aid flotilla which was trying to break the Israeli naval blockade of the Gaza Strip.

A blockade has been imposed on the Gaza Strip by Israel and Egypt since the Islamist militant group, Hamas, seized control in 2007.

In the wake of the outcry over the raid, Israel began allowing most consumer items into Gaza, but still maintains a complete air and naval blockade, limits the movement of people, and bans exports.

Israel says the measures are needed to stop weapons being smuggled to militants, but the UN says they amount to collective punishment of Gaza’s 1.5 million people.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Russia


Anti-Racism Rally Draws 2,500 in Moscow

Several thousand people rallied in central Moscow on Sunday to protest against a wave of ethnic violence that shook the Russian capital this month following the deadly shooting of a football supporter. The demonstrators chanted “Russia is open to everyone” and held up signs reading “Russia without fascism, Russia without Nazism” during the sanctioned gathering on Pushkin Square, just a few blocks from the Kremlin.

An AFP reporter said about 2,500 people had gathered at the rally, which was attended by opposition leader Vladimir Ryzhkov and liberal Kirov region governor Nikita Belykh, in one of the largest such gatherings in months.

“I think that the Moscow unrest has been caused by all the rot that has accumulated in our society and which is only now rising to the top,” the RBC Daily website quoted popular radio personality and columnist Viktor Shenderovich as telling the crowd.

The December 4 shooting of a Moscow football fan by a Muslim suspect has sparked a wave of ethnic disturbances in the Russian capital, with groups of ultra-nationalists holding several large rallies throughout the city.

Police said that racism was the probable cause of a spate of recent deadly attacks against ethnic minorities from Central Asia and Russia’s predominantly Muslim southern republics.

In one of the most shocking cases, Russian investigators said that a boy aged just 14 had been arrested on suspicion of the apparently racist murder of a citizen of the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan. Recent opinion polls have shown that Muscovites are growing increasingly anxious about the number of non-ethnic Russians in the city — a xenophobia that underscores the fragile coexistence of the country’s Slavic majority and its 160 smaller ethnic groups.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Russian Islamic Leaders Against the Kremlin

The chief mufti attacks the State guilty of hindering the unification of the Muslims of the Federation and condemn those religious leaders who are working as puppets to quell the community’s presence in the country.

Moscow (AsiaNews) — The leaders of the Russian Muslim community have launched a strong attack against the authorities in the country. The head of the Council of muftis of Russia, Ravil Gainutdin, accuses the state of wanting to obstruct the unification of Muslims and attempting to “suppress Islam” in the Federation. He has also described as “puppets” and “squalid people,” those mufti who work in government institutions.

The project of unification of the Russian followers of Muhammad dates back to 2009. Then, Gainutdin said in an interview with Radio Liberty, “the mufti Talgat Tadzhuddin had proposed to merge the three central organizations of the Muslims of Russia.” “After studying the idea — continued the religious leader — I together with the leader of the Caucasus Muslims, Berdiyev, met him. We created a working group to structure this unification. But the government did not approve of our decision. They claimed Talgat Tadzhuddin’s idea was not in line with government policy”.

Gainutdin’s charges against the State are also motivated by the recent creation of the fourth muftiyat (Islamic Council), the “Russian Association of Islamic agreement” designed precisely to prevent any process of unification. “The new ‘ pocket muftis ‘, who oppose the growth of Islam are mere puppets” says Gainutdin. “These puppets, like those who work in government, for example, the Islamophobic Grishin (the director of the Presidential Administration in charge of relations with Islamic organizations, ed), will not hesitate to suppress Islam in Russia … which is already taking place, “he added.

Commenting on the recent clashes between Nationalist hooligans and mostly Muslim immigrants from the Caucasus, Gainutdin emphasized the existence of tensions in the capital home to more than two million Muslims. He also pointed out the need to build new mosques in Moscow, where the faithful are forced to pray, for lack of space, “in the streets, on tram lines, and even in the courtyards of churches.” “This humiliation, this discriminatory policy against civil rights continue, before the eyes of Muslims around the world.” (N.A.)

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

South Asia


‘German Mother Theresa’ Saves Lives in Pakistan

Every morning Ruth Pfau stands short and frail before a tall crucifix in Karachi’s St Patrick’s Cathedral. She bows her head, shuts her eyes, places her right hand on her heart and prays.

It is the beginning of another long day for the 81-year-old nun known locally as Pakistan’s Mother Teresa, who has spent half a century caring for some of the country’s poorest and most ostracised people.

Pakistan is one of the most dangerous countries in the world, where Washington says Al-Qaeda is based. Its northwest mountains border Afghanistan and are subject to US drone strikes and Pakistani military operations.

Bombings have killed 4,000 people in three years, kidnappings are common, Islamist groups violently opposed to all but their extremist interpretation of Islam control significant territory.

Sister Pfau, who needs a stick to walk, admits some disquiet over security, but says nothing would stop her serving people in distress. “I find no difficulties even in the northwestern tribal areas, where most people know me because of my work and never create any hurdle when I go there to serve them,” she said, adjusting her white scarf on her silver-hair.

It was after the horrors of World War II in her native Germany that she decided to dedicate her life to serving humanity, become a doctor and join the Daughters of the Heart of Mary order, founded during the French Revolution.

Not required to take the veil or live in seclusion, she ended up in Pakistan by chance. En route to work in India, visa complications forced her to break the journey in Karachi, where she visited a lepers’ colony.

That was 1960 and the rest is history. The sub-human misery of what she saw persuaded her to stay in Pakistan to help the cause of leprosy. The living conditions were appalling. The gutters were overflowing and sewer rats feasted on limbs of patients unable to feel the rat bites.

“I felt saddened when I saw people living in caves, crawling like animals. They had compromised with their fate, but it was not their fate, they deserved a much better and happier life,” she said.

Sister Pfau’s makeshift clinic soon became a two-storey hospital, then the Marie Adelaide Leprosy Centre with branches across Pakistan. She trained doctors and treated thousands of victims. Her dedication inspired an otherwise hesitant government to establish in 1968 a national programme to bring leprosy under control.

Half a century ago, there were leper colonies across the country but now the programme puts the incidence of the disease at 0.27 people out of 10,000, meeting benchmarks from the World Health Organisation.

At times of natural disaster Sister Pfau was there: Drought in Baluchistan in the southwest in 2000, the 2005 earthquake in Kashmir and this year’s floods, the country’s worst natural disaster that affected 21 million people.

In Sindh, where more than a million people were affected by the floods, she targets areas mainly populated by Hindus, one of Pakistan’s clutch of religious minorities largely neglected by the government and Islamic charities.

She is a frequent visitor to flood-affected areas, largely bone-crunching drives from Karachi, which seem to tire her team more than her. “She still has amazing stamina. She is an amazing person,” said Venu Gopal, coordinator of Sister Pfau’s charity.

Born in Leipzig, she was just 17 years old when she headed for the border to cross from East into West Germany, braving Soviet soldiers who were ordered to shoot on sight.

She walked two days and nights before she was spotted by a Russian and a German soldier. “The German soldier told the Russian he would deposit me at the detention camp and walked with me a few paces ahead. Then, pointing in one direction, he whispered: ‘There lies the West’.”

Now, in places like the remote village of Begna in flood-hit Sindh’s Thatta district, people look upon the elderly German nun as a mother. “We’ve lost everything, but Amma (mother) is helping us and we hope to be on our feet soon,” said snake-charmer Sanwal Jogi.

“Thanks to her, I managed to replant some oilseeds and mustard, nobody else apart from her and her team comes down here,” said farmer Kaser Hero.

She has provided them with shelter, helped them rebuild their houses, gives them seeds and money to help them cultivate the land again.

“It is not just leprosy. We’re doing our share in healing partial blindness and tuberculosis and helping people stricken by disasters. Dr. Pfau commands respect in the West and gets funds for all this,” Gopal said.

“One should not compare one great legend with another, but we rightly call her Mother Teresa as she is serving people with the same empathy, dedication and love as Mother Teresa did in India,” said Sindh health minister Saghir Ahmed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Muslim Radicals Colonising the Country, Indonesian Bishops Say

The bishop of Padang warns against the systematic and organised spread of radical Islamic ideology. Political authorities are criticised for failing to stop the wave of violence. In the meantime, police is out in force to prevent anti-Christian violence over the Christmas period.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Mgr Mathinus D Situmorang, president of the Indonesian Bishops of Conference’s (KWI), warned Indonesian political elites on a potentially serious threat to the national interest. The prelate, who is the bishop of Padang (Western Sumatra), delivered his word of caution during the admission ceremony for new members of the Indonesian Catholic University Student Association (PMKRI). In his address, he criticised the state for its powerlessness in the face of dozens of attacks carried out by Islamic fundamentalist groups against churches and Christians.

“In the past, Indonesia was occupied and colonised by foreign rulers. However, the present situation is not much better even if we are ruled by fellow Indonesian citizens,” the bishop said. Here, he was referring to recent attacks carried out by the Islamic Defender Front (FPI), which stormed two places of worship in Rancaekek, Bandung Regency (West Java), forcing their closure. More broadly, he is deeply concerned that religious intolerance is spreading and taking rook among ordinary people.

Muslim extremists, he explained, had no legal right to interfere with the aforementioned places of worship even if they did not have a building permit. What is more, the situation is getting worse because law enforcement is not stopping the Islamists, and it is not clear why. Nonetheless, for the prelate, “A spirit of intolerance is finding fertile ground because of political interests”.

In Parung, Bogor Regency, local authorities issued a ban against the Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church to prevent Christmas celebrations.

“If some Christian communities in Indonesia hold religious ceremonies in the streets or in the open, it is out of necessity because they have been unable to secure a building permit for their place of worship, and this, for years,” Bishop Situmorang explained.

“If the [central] government and local authorities are stopped by every extremist Muslim group, the situation will get worse and the state’s sovereignty will be given away to illegal groups that will carry out actions against the law,” he lamented.

Still, the 3,000 parishioners who belong to the Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church will be able to celebrate Christmas at a local nuns’ compound.

Indonesia’s Defence Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro, who is Catholic, rejected the accusation, saying that any violent act would be punished.

Mgr Situmorang is not so sure. For him, the state is powerless and incapable of dealing with the problem. Yet, he is still “proud to belong to a multicultural society, where the spirit of intolerance is restrained”.

In the meantime, hours before the start of Christmas services, the country has been placed under tight security with thousands of police deployed near churches, 8,000 in Jakarta alone. In Bali, police has secured every strategic site, including churches.

A study by the Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace warns that whilst most violent actions are carried out by the infamous FPI, less noticeable actions by other radical Muslim groups are equally worrisome, especially since they are increasingly supported by ordinary people and are attracting even liberal groups and moderate clerics.

There are also rumours that radical elements have infiltrated the moderate Indonesian Ulemas Council (MUI), the country’s most important organisation of Muslim clerics, which wields the greatest influence in moral and political terms.

According to the Setara report, beside the FPI, other important violent Islamist groups are the Islamic Reform Movement (Garis) and the Islamic People’s Forum (FUI).

The same study noted that in “2005, FUI’s chief Al Khaththath [. . .] made it to the MUI’s board of directors,” and at the organisation’s annual meeting that year, he was among those who “actively lobbied the MUI to issue an edict forbidding the practice of liberal Islam”.

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



Pakistan’s Rape Victim Who Dared to Fight Back

Kainat Soomro should have stayed silent. After being battered and gang raped for four days her traditional, conservative village in rural Pakistan expected the 13-year-old girl to keep her story to herself. She refused.

Since then her dark brown eyes and striking features have become a staple of the country’s newspapers and television news channels, as she fights for justice and a new voice for women in a deeply conservative country.

Nothing has stopped her. Not the murder of her brother, threats from the men she says raped her or a death sentence imposed by the elders of her village, Dadu, in Sindh province.

“This is what happens in Pakistan,” she said. “Poor women have no chance. These men set the rules and think they know how to deal with these issues. They don’t.”

Instead of bowing to the local summary justice, her family fled to the sprawling port city of Karachi.

That was almost four years ago. Today Kainat is a vocal campaigner for women’s rights as she struggles for justice in her own case and tries to overturn the traditional, conservative culture that expects rape victims to suffer in silence.

The young woman cuts a familiar figure at press conferences and on television talk shows, her dark hair covered in a lilac print dupatta as her confident words of Urdu belie her lack of schooling. Her pretty eyes convey a quiet dignity as they stare from the front pages of Pakistan’s newspapers.

This is a society where rapes often remain unreported — through shame, intimidation or bribery — and domestic violence is not an offence. Kainat is campaigning to become a role model and a symbol of resistance for a new generation of women.

But her position has not come without a huge cost. Her family cannot return to their house in Dadu. Instead they rely on charity in Karachi, living in a cramped two-room apartment.

Two of her brothers have been in and out of jail, accused of everything from fraud to murder. Two of her sisters have lost husband or fiancé, such is the stigma attached to rape — or speaking out about rape. And this year she buried Sabir, her 24-year-old brother whose battered body was found after he went missing in March. She believes his murder was related to her case.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan Suicide Bomber Was Woman Covered in Burqa

A woman covered in a head-to-foot burqa carried out a suicide bombing that killed more than 40 people in Pakistan, government officials said on Sunday, adding to security challenges confronting the U.S. ally.

Any increased use of women as bombers may complicate efforts by Pakistani security forces to stem a spreading wave of Islamist suicide attacks because it is harder to spot and search burqa-clad attackers in conservative tribal society.

Saturday’s bombing illustrated the resilient ability of militants to stage attacks despite army offensives against them.

The woman blew herself amid a crowd of men, women and children heading toward a food distribution center of the World Food Program in the Bajaur region on the Afghan border.

“Initially there was confusion as to whether the attacker was a man or woman but now we have established that (it) was a woman,” senior government official Sohail Ahmed told Reuters.

Government officials in Bajaur said they had recovered the head, burqa and clothes of the bomber.

Previous Woman Bomber in 2007

It was the second such attack by a female militant in Pakistan. In the first episode, a woman detonated explosives near a military checkpost in the northwestern city of Peshawar in 2007, but she killed no one except herself.

On Saturday, the woman initially threw hand grenades at people heading toward the food center to receive aid before blowing herself up. Forty-three people were killed and more than 60 were wounded in the attack.

“If militants use more women for such attacks then it is going to be a very huge problem for the security forces,” said Rahimullah Yusufzai, an expert on tribal and militant affairs.

“They don’t have enough women (in the) police force and even (if) they have policewomen, because of our conservative culture, people don’t want their women to be subjected to body searches. It’s going to be a big problem.”

The attack happened a day after battles between security forces and insurgents in the neighboring Mohmand region that killed 11 soldiers and 40 insurgents, the government said. Militants disputed the official death toll.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pricey Onions Threaten India’s Growth and Government

India’s rapid economic growth is unequally distributed. Some states and social groups benefit as the poor languish. Rapidly rising food prices are fuelling social dissatisfaction in a country where tens of millions of people still lack adequate nutrition.

New Delhi (AsiaNews/Agencies) — India’s economy is expected to grow 8.5 per cent this year, making it the fastest growing large economy after China. However, most Indians are angry about a more down-to-earth problem, i.e. the skyrocketing price of onions, which has more than doubled from Rs35 (US$ 0.78) per kg to Rs80 (US$ 1.75) in the past few days, confirming a broader trend of rising food and fuel prices. As economic development helps a minority of India’s 1.2 billion people, the rest remain poor, often without enough to eat.

The gap between the two Indias is visible for all to see. On the one hand, the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and the National Capital Territory of Delhi are the established economies driving India’s growth, with dynamic manufacturing and service sectors. They generate the bulk of exports and attract most foreign investment. There, a small business class is taking advantage of growth with most people settling for low-level blue and white-collar jobs. On the other, there is the rural and populous hinterland of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Chhattisgarh, Bihar and Jharkhand, long characterised by low growth and some of the lowest per capita income. Of these, Bihar has surprised many by recently recording higher rates of growth, but Uttar Pradesh, with a population the size of Brazil and notorious for social marginalisation, trails badly behind.

Overall, food prices are rising faster than growth, and onions are a basic part of this dietary staple, especially in the North. In an attempt to cool prices, the government on Wednesday slashed import duties for onions, after banning exports of the vegetable earlier this week. It has already started importing onions from its neighbour Pakistan, buying back produce that it had just sent across the border.

A drop in supply caused by unseasonable rains in the western producing states triggered the sudden spike, which was exacerbated by traders keen to cash in on shortages.

Analysts remember the dramatic rise in the price of onions in 1998, which is credited with ousting the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in that year’s Delhi election. It is therefore little surprise that Mr Singh’s office has written to the Agriculture and Consumer Affairs ministries urging them to take all necessary steps to bring prices back down to an “affordable level”.

The problem however is structural. On Tuesday, Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate economist, issued a stark warning to New Delhi about how “stupid” it was to aspire to double-digit economic growth without addressing the chronic undernourishment of tens of millions of Indians and the underdevelopment of highly populated states such as Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, which continue to fall behind in terms of income. Rather than seeking to drive growth higher, Sen recommends higher public spending on health and education.

Despite rising growth, the average calorie intake among India’s poorest has been stagnant for more than a decade. Eleven out of 19 states have more than 80 per cent anaemia, and more than half of India’s children under the age of five suffer stunting and poor brain development from inadequate nutrition.

Analysts warn that the country’s development cannot continue if it exacerbates differences and holds back some states. In fact, social unrest is a real danger in a political situation of high tensions fuelled by allegations of corruption in government circles over a multibillion-dollar telecoms corruption scandal.

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

Far East


Hu Jintao to Washington January 19, To Save China and U.S. From Disaster

The likely issues on the agenda: Korean tensions, the currency war and the possible collapse of the U.S. and the Chinese economy. The devaluation of the dollar could mean a Chinese speculative bubble in the areas of raw materials, real estate and construction, and bank loans.

Washington (AsiaNews) — The White House announced today that Barack Obama will receive Chinese President Hu Jintao on 19 January. Among the topics on the agenda: the tensions on the Korean peninsula, the currency war and the possible collapse of the U.S. and the Chinese economy.

So far Beijing has not confirmed the date, but has recently announced that Hu’s visit to the United States will be held in early 2011.

According to the Washington, the forthcoming visit will aim to “build a partnership that will improve the common interests and concerns that we share.” In recent months, the disagreements between the two countries have increased: on the one hand there is the tension between the two Koreas and accusations against Beijing of not doing enough to rein in Pyongyang. And on the other there are the complaints of American business leaders that China keeps its yuan currency too cheap, giving it an unfair trade advantage, and shaking the balance of trade between the two superpowers. The U.S. trade deficit with China rose by 20% this year, surpassing the 2008 peak of 268 billion dollars.

But the meeting should also find some solution to the risk of collapse of both economies. Many American scholars are concerned that Fed policy will lead to a greater inflation of the dollar (see 19/11/2010 Currency wars and the Fed’s demise.) But there are also worrying signs on the Chinese side. According to economist Mark Hart, a huge speculative bubble is building in the areas of raw materials, real estate and construction, and bank loans[i]. In his opinion, China, instead of being “the engine of global growth,” has become “it’s greatest danger”.

[i] See:

http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Hu-Jintao-to-Washington-January-19,-to-save-China-and-U.S.-from-disaster-20330.html

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Islamic Clerics Reject South Sudan Referendum, Demand Islamic Laws

A group of radical Muslim clerics on Friday overtly faulted the Sudanese government for accepting south Sudan’s referendum on independence, and demanded imposition of Islamic Shar’iah law in the entire country whether citizens of the mainly Christian region of south Sudan like it or not.

South Sudan, whose population mostly follows Christianity or traditional beliefs, is bound for secession from the Muslim-ruled north in a referendum vote due in January 2011, a plebiscite stipulated by the 2005’s Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) which in 2005 ended nearly half a century of intermittent civil war between north and south Sudan.

Under the CPA, north Sudan maintained Islamic laws whereas the south was given extensive autonomy under a secular government led by the former southern rebels Sudan People’s Liberation Movement [SPLM].

The legitimate League of Muslim Preachers and Clerics (LLMPC), a group of radical clerics existing in parallel to the official clerical body known as the Association of Muslim Scholars, marched in protest on Friday, 24 December, and held a press conference in which the group’s leaders declared rejection to south Sudan’s referendum on independence and called on the government to implement Shari’ah law in full.

The group’s prominent member Mohamed Abdel-Karim addressed the protestors and demanded the government in the north fulfills its long-standing promise to implement Shari’ah Islamic law regardless of what southerners want.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Somali Islamists Beg Al Qaeda Help

Somalia’s extremist group of Al-shabaab has urged Al-Qa’ida network to help them out in fighting the Somali governmentand the AU peacekeepers in Mogadishu.

speaking to the reporters ata function to announce the merger with Hisbul Islam, the spokesman of Al-Shabab, Sheikh Ali Mahamud Rage says rifts and difference in opinion among the two group’s fighters are no more.

“ We are appealing our brothers in Alqaeda to help us in fighting the appostate government and the infidels in Somalia” Rage flanked by Hizbul Islam officials said.

He has particularly entreated Al-Qa’idah fighters in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya and Yemen to support their group.

At the function over the weekend, Shaykh Abdifattah Muhammad Ali, who was the spokesman of the defunct Hisb al-Islam group, read a statement which was jointly written by Al-Shabab and Hisb al-Islam.

The statement said that the TFG and AU peacekeepers have failed in their attacks against their group.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Bolivia’s Recognition of Palestine as an Independent State Sets Off Alarm Bells in Israel

Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela have already recognised Palestine. Uruguay is expected to do the same next year. The issue is debated in Chile. The United States warns against unilateral recognition. The European Union is still waiting. Israel orders its diplomatic missions to oppose such initiative around the world.

Jerusalem (AsiaNews) — Late last night, Bolivian President Evo Morales announced that his country would formally recognise Palestine as a state within the 1967 borders. Morales added that he planned to write to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, informing him of the decision.

Earlier this month, Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela had already recognised Palestine within 1967 borders and Uruguay plans to do so next year.

Legislators from ruling and opposition parties in Chile have stepped by pressure on the government of President Sebastian Pinera to grant the same recognition to Palestine. Chile has a large Palestinian community of more than 300,000 people.

For the leaders of these states, such recognition will help lead to peaceful and secure coexistence with Israel. At a minimum, it should breathe new life into the deadlocked peace process.

Unable to stop Israeli settlements on the West Bank, a Palestinian precondition for renewed talks, the United States has warned against unilaterally recognising the Palestinian state.

The European Union is waiting instead for the right moment to grant its recognition.

The Palestinian diplomatic offensive is worrying Israel. Sources tell AsiaNews that the Israeli government has ordered all its embassies to monitor and stop all initiatives that would increase the number of nations recognising a Palestinian state.

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

Culture Wars


UK: Multi-Faith Chaplains to Make House of Commons More Inclusive

John Bercow has backed the creation of a team of multi-faith chaplains, which will also include representatives of the Hindu, Buddhist and Jainist religions.

Members of the House have expressed surprise at the move, which some have described as “an exercise in politically-correct box ticking”. It could mean that religious leaders of non-Christian faiths will take part in parliamentary ceremonies, though there would need to be constitutional reform to allow them to read the daily prayers. At present, the Speaker’s Chaplain is the only person allowed to say the prayers before each day’s sitting and the role has been filled by an Anglican cleric since the office was created in 1660. The proposal to introduce a multi-faith chaplaincy was made by the current chaplain, the Rev Rose Hudson-Wilkin, who was appointed by Mr Bercow against the wishes of the Very Rev John Hall, the Dean of Westminster.

Mrs Hudson-Wilkin has fought for greater recognition of ethnic minorities in the Church of England and said she was excited by the move.

The new chaplains will not receive a salary and their role is yet to be specified, but she said they will help to ensure everyone’s pastoral needs are cared for.

“Hospitals and prisons already have this type of chaplaincy system so it’s no big deal we’re now doing the same,” she said.

“As I move around the House I discover people from all walks of life and this seems like the responsible thing to do.”

However, MPs have questioned whether there is a need to set up a multi-faith chaplaincy.

“I welcome the news that this is being introduced if there is a demand for it, but until now I haven’t been aware of such a demand,” said David Amess, the Conservative MP for Southend West.

“I’m puzzled by it as I can’t imagine who has asked for this.”

While there are now eight Muslim MPs, there are not thought to be any Jains, Bahá’ís or Zoroastrians.

“It smacks of an exercise in politically-correct box ticking,” said one MP.

Ann Widdecombe, the former minister, said: “I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it if a number of staff want a visiting chaplain, but it starts to become ridiculous if you have every last religion.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: St George’s Flag Protest Lands in Court

THE English Defence League staged a protest in Reading today (Thursday) in support of a man arrested after hanging a St George’s flag outside a mosque.

Around 20 members of the controversial campaign group came from across the South East to demonstrate outside Reading Magistrates’ Court monitored by a heavy police presence.

Among them was co-founder Tommy Robinson, who told The Chronicle: “Our argument is with militant Islam. What’s far right about protecting women’s rights and gay people’s rights? The problem is the teachers of Islam, it’s got nothing to do with your colour. It all comes back to the Koran.”

Inside the court 37-year-old Tilehurst man Ronald Peterson was on trial for religiously aggravated harassment. The court heard he went to the partially built mosque in Oxford Road, west Reading, on May 30 to protest over the way its planning application was handled by the borough council.

Peterson, with two other men, draped the St George’s flag on a fence, posed for pictures and chanted “E, E, E.D.L” and “England”. Witness Urfan Azad, 32, told the court he was in the nearby Reading Tea House and went outside after hearing the chanting. He said he dialled 999 because he was concerned the situation could escalate, and added: “My concern was the flag needed to be taken off the fence because it might be seen by Muslims as a religious symbol. I felt upset about the whole incident. I’m British myself, I was born in Reading. It’s made me feel a bit socially excluded.” Police arrived on the scene within minutes and, without warning him or giving him a chance to move on, arrested Peterson on the spot. Sgt Lee Barnham said he spoke to Mr Azad, and added: “He was offended by the use of what he considered to be a religious cross against the site of worship.

“It was clear he was upset and felt intimidated. I was satisfied an offence under the public order act had been committed.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101225

Financial Crisis
» China Raises Interest Rates on Christmas Day
» China Fears Euro Debt Crisis Will Go From ‘Acute’ To ‘Chronic’
 
USA
» ACLU Bristles Over Terror List
» Answering Khaled Abou El Fadl
» Compact Fluorescent Light Bulb to Blame for Hornell Fire
» Congressman McClintock Remembers Fallen Roseville Soldier
» Feds Sneaking Around Congress to Regulate Firearms
» For Hawaii Governor, Discrediting Anti-Obama ‘Birthers’ Is a Top Priority
» How to: Run Snitches Inside Terrorist Groups
» Military Says Soldier Had No Right of Self-Defense
» Obama: After START, Tactical Arms Treaty
» Park51 Imam Plans National Speaking Tour
» The Freaky Fantasies of a Former Guantanamo Detainee Explain Why Sufi Islam Won’t Defeat the Jihadists
» The Thermos Flask Terror Threat: U.S. Warns Airlines to Prepare for New Tactic During Christmas
» Vice Admiral: Obama Was Outmaneuvered by Russians on START
» ‘We the People’ To Open Next Congress
» What I Really Said About Radical Jihadism
» WikiLeaks Suspect
 
Europe and the EU
» Being Nice Hasn’t Protected Sweden
» Britain on Course for Flu Epidemic
» Crime Boss Opens Up About Mob in Switzerland
» Dutch Police Arrest 12 Somali Terror Suspects Following Secret Service Tip-Off
» Eco-Bulbs ‘A Health Hazard for Babies and Pregnant Women Due to Mercury Inside’
» Greece: Leading Priest Blames Jews for Greece’s Problems
» My Son the Terrorist
» The EU Calls Ravello to Account for Silent Auditorium
» UK: Albanian Asylum Seeker Who Dumped Loaded Handgun Outside Tony Blair’s House Facing Years in Prison
» UK: Cyber Attack: A Very Modern Theatre of War — The IT Men Whose Mission is to Rescue the World From Cyberterrorists
» UK: Christmas at the East London Mosque: ‘Season’s Rantings’ From Your Favourite Islamic Extremists
» UK: MI6 Spy Gareth Williams Had a Secret Double Identity and Was Not Gay Friend Insists
» Wales: Police in Terror Plot Meeting With Muslim Community
» WikiLeaks: British Outreach to Muslim Community Fails
» William Tell as You’ve Never Seen Him
 
Balkans
» The Big Cleanup Begins
 
North Africa
» Son of Mubarak: Succession Without Success?
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israeli Anti-Polygamy Activists Run Into Islamic Opposition
» To Julie Burchill (In Regards to Liberal Judaism and Islam)
 
Middle East
» Arab Cartoons Continue to Vilify Israeli Leaders
» Ashamed Iraqi Man ‘Killed His Daughter, 19, After She Was Recruited as Suicide Bomber by Al-Qaeda’
» European Terror Attack Feared as Al-Qaida Fighters Disappear From Base in Lebanonintelligence Services Hunt for Jihadists Based in South Lebanon Refugee Camp Who Are Thought to Have Gone Abroad
» Hizballah Fears ‘Qaeda’ Type Attacks From Lebanese Sunnis
» Hizbullah’s Throne of Bayonets
» House Bombings Kill Five in Iraq
» Iran Poised to Execute Student Accused of Being Kurd Terrorist
» Iraqi Dad Says Killed Daughter Linked to Al-Qaida
» New Mossad Chief to Apologise for Use of UK Passports in Dubai Killing
» One Day Turkish Parliament Will Discuss Armenian Genocide
» The Christians Who Suffer for Their Faith at Christmas
» Traumatized Iraqi Christians Lie Low for Christmas
» Turkish Man Goes on Trial for Plot to Kill Rabbis
 
South Asia
» Boom! Indian Space Scientists Watch in Horror as Rocket Explodes Minutes After Take-Off
» In Afghanistan, Shifting Political Fortunes
» In Pakistan, No Cowering on Christmas
» India: Mumbai Terror Fears as Police Hunt for Four Militants Believed to be Planning Holiday Attack
» No Truce in Afghanistan: Dramatic Pictures Capture U.S. Troops Repelling a Taliban Attack on Christmas Morning
» Pakistan: Son of Notorious Insurgent Leader is Arrested
» Pakistan Suicide Bomb Kills Scores
» Report: Karzai Open to Taliban Setting Up Office in Turkey
» Taliban ‘Want Base in Neutral Third Country Before Peace Talks Begin’
» Taliban Launch Attacks Along North Pakistan Border
» Violence Up in Afghanistan, UN Warns
 
Far East
» China Matches U.S. Space Launches for First Time
» Philippines: Fresh Attacks on Christians Mar Christmas
 
Australia — Pacific
» WikiLeaks: Kiwi Mosque Spied on by US
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Christmas Eve Explosions Kill 32 People in Nigeria After Two Churches Are Targeted
 
Culture Wars
» Book Review — Holy Ignorance — by Olivier Roy
» The New Polytheism and Its Tempter Idols
 
General
» A Wave of Christianophobia is Sweeping the World
» ‘Jihadist’ Issues Christmas Bombing Threat

Financial Crisis


China Raises Interest Rates on Christmas Day

The People’s Bank of China said in a brief one-line statement that it will raise the one-year lending and deposit rates by 25 basis points each. The move takes the rates to 5.81pc and 2.75pc respectively from Sunday.

Expectations of a rate rise have weighed on investor sentiment this month and could hit stock markets next week.

In October, policymakers raised rates for the first time in nearly three years as they resort to stronger measures to try to slow a flood of liquidity which has been fanning inflation and driving up property prices.

Analysts said the latest interest rate rise would be followed by more next year as stability-obsessed leaders step up efforts to calm growing consumer anxiety about rising costs.

“The choice of Christmas Day is a little surprising but I think the market generally expected interest rates to rise,” Ken Peng, a Beijing-based economist for Citigroup, told AFP. “The central bank needed to do this to win credibility to fight inflation.”

Ever fearful of inflation’s potential to spark unrest, authorities have been pulling on a number of policy levers to rein in consumer prices and cool the red-hot real estate market.

Earlier this month, the central bank ordered lenders for the sixth time this year to keep more money in reserve, effectively limiting the amount of funds they can lend.

Despite these measures, bank lending has remained stubbornly high and property prices have continued to rise, frustrating first-home buyers who feel apartment prices are out of their reach. Property prices in 70 major cities recorded their third straight month-on-month rise in November, defying Beijing’s attempts to cool the red-hot market by hiking minimum downpayments and ordering banks not to provide loans for third home purchases.

Prices were up 0.3pc last month from October and 7.7pc higher than a year ago.

The value of new loans issued by China’s banks fell in November from October but was still well above forecasts as Beijing struggled to stem the flood of liquidity.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



China Fears Euro Debt Crisis Will Go From ‘Acute’ To ‘Chronic’

Chinese media reported that Commerce Minister Chen Deming saying that the crisis may worsen in January and February, and that the €50bn (£635bn) European and International Monetary Fund rescue fund would not solve the problem as the rescue financing would eventually have to be repaid at high interest rates.

“These measures just turn an acute disease into a chronic one, and it’s really hard to say whether these countries that are in deep trouble over the debt crisis can recover in the coming three or five years,” Mr Chen was quoted as saying.

His comments step up the rhetoric against Europe as indebted eurozone nations attempt to rein in public spending and bring borrowing down. China has been supportive of Europe so far, indicating it could use its vast reserves to buy sovereign debt to keep yields down. However, Mr Chen’s call for Europe to take more urgent action to solve its problems suggests China’s patience may be wearing thin.

China is keen to see Europe recover. Europe is China’s biggest trading partner, and the giant Asian nation has been reducing its reliance on the dollar by switching a larger portion of its $2.65 trillion (£1.7 trillion) reserves from dollars into euros.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


ACLU Bristles Over Terror List

State anti-terrorism officials listed the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee on an Internet map detailing “terrorism events and other suspicious activity” after the group warned schools to ensure holiday celebrations “are inclusive.”

ACLU-Tennessee Executive Director Hedy Weinberg called the Tennessee Fusion Center’s tracking of First Amendment-protected activity “deeply disturbing.”

While saying improving and sharing anti-terrorism intelligence among different levels of government is “legitimate and important,” Weinberg said, “Equating a group’s attempts to protect religious freedom in Tennessee with suspicious activity related to terrorism is outrageous. Religious freedom is a founding principle in our Constitution — not fodder for overzealous law enforcement.”

[…]

ACLU’s Weinberg said in an interview she spoke to state officials about the posting.

“I will take at their word that they made a mistake by posting it under terrorism activity,” she said. “I have not heard a good explanation for why school resource officers, who have a very important job in schools, would at all be interested or need to know about the letter we sent to local school superintendents about the need to keep holiday celebrations all inclusive.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Answering Khaled Abou El Fadl

“Shari’ah Watch: A View from the Inside” blares the headline of a talk announced for Nov. 3 by the Center for Near East Studies at UCLA, “Lecture and Extended Q&A with Professor Khaled Abou El Fadl, Moderated by Professor Asli Bali. Please join us for an informed discussion about Shariah and its role and impact in the West.”

I, sadly, could not make it to the “informed discussion.” Fortunately, however, the center posted an audio version of the talk by Abou El Fadl, a professor whom I have repeatedly criticized.

Announcement of “Shari’ah Watch: A View from the Inside” by Khaled Abou El Fad.l

For a Campus Watch report on the lecture as a whole, see “UCLA’s Professor of Fantasy” by Cinnamon Stillwell and Eric Golub. They pay particular attention to Abou El Fadl’s false statements about Robert Spencer and Steven Emerson — that’s the “fantasy” in the title. His falsehoods about them are so egregious, they deserve to get Abou El Fadl sacked.

He also mentions me repeatedly in the course of his lengthy, rambling, and self-indulgent meander. First, he wonders whether my colleagues and I even matter:

The various discourses that we find by the Steven Emersons, the Robert Spencers, the Daniel Pipes’s, the countless “watch” folks, the Jihad Watch folks — various pseudo-experts on whatever they wish to be experts on. Does it make a difference? Does it actually have a concrete effect in any form or context?

Oddly, Abou El Fadl avoids replying to his own question but, obviously, his devoting a whole talk to us strongly suggests we do make a difference.

Second, he distorts our shared hope that moderate Muslims will arise to challenge the Islamist hegemony:

at the same time that the Daniel Pipes’s, the Robert Spencers, the Steven Emersons, the Glenn Becks … say “Well, in order for Muslims to prove to us that Islam can change, is capable of changing, we need to see a virtual civil war between the moderates and the others-extremists, militants, whatever you want to call them … something akin to a religious civil war in the Muslim world.” At the same time, they often point to any inter-Muslim violence as evidence of the failure of these people as a people.

For the record: We hope that moderate Muslims will challenge Islamists in the realm of ideas, not by starting a religious war or engaging in violence.

Third, Abou El Fadl gets personal, referring to my lengthy 2004 analysis of his work titled “Stealth Islamist: Khaled Abou El Fadl.” What I mean by “stealth,” he replies

does not necessarily mean that all Muslims are stealth agents, but, rather, stealth in the sense of sleeper cells, that Muslims, just being in the right set of elements, environmental elements, the right set of circumstances, and they will come into contact with this essential core of their faith and therefore, immediately become prone to turning jihadi or violent.

No, that’s another distortion: My article does not suggest that Abou El Fadl is a sleeper agent who might engage in terrorism; it argues that he is an Islamist posing as a moderate.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Compact Fluorescent Light Bulb to Blame for Hornell Fire

A compact fluorescent light bulb (CFL) is to blame for an accidental electrical fire in Hornell Wednesday morning, said Steuben County Fire Investigator Joe Gerych.

“Those are the lights everybody’s been telling us to use,” he said. “It blew up like a bomb. It spattered all over.”

A CFL on the ceiling burst, said Gerych, and gas inside the CFL bulb helped start the fire. He added exploding CFLs are rare.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Congressman McClintock Remembers Fallen Roseville Soldier

Congressman Tom McClintock delivered a speech to the House of Representatives Dec. 14 in memory of Roseville’s Private Sean A. Silva, age 23, who was killed in Iraq on Oct. 9, 2003.

“In the aftermath of the attack of September 11th, a young man from Roseville, California answered his country’s call to duty and volunteered to take the war against radical Islam from our shores to theirs,” McClintock said.

On the night of Oct. 9, 2003, Silva returned from patrolling in Sadr City, Iraq when a night patrol was ordered unexpectedly in which Silva insisted he took part in despite fulfilling his duty earlier that day.

After his commander reminded him that he had done his duty that day, Silva replied, “I just want to learn to do my job.”

McClintock attributed his death to defending other troops.

“He saw his countrymen threatened and instinctively rose to shield them,” McClintock said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Feds Sneaking Around Congress to Regulate Firearms

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, or ATF, has a long history of excess and overreaching … and they’re at it again.

Using exaggerated reports of gun smuggling from the U.S. into Mexico as their justification, the agency has filed for an emergency regulation requiring gun dealers to keep track of their customers and file special reports to ATF whenever a customer purchases more than one semi-automatic rifle within any 5-day period. Such special reporting is already required for multiple sales of handguns and has proven to be thoroughly useless as a law enforcement tool.

ATF’s requested regulation — which is unconstitutional, violates a statutory prohibition against firearms registration schemes and was obviously filed as an “emergency” simply as a means of bypassing Congress — would be “temporary,” meaning that it would have to be renewed in four or five months, and is said to only apply to gun dealers in states bordering Mexico, though the regulation, as submitted, seems to be missing that specific limitation.

At this point the proposed regulation is awaiting approval from the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. Political observers will recall that OIRA is headed by President Obama’s old friend Cass Sunstein, who famously advocated for the abolition of all hunting and for the extension of legal rights — including the right to have a court-appointed attorney — to animals.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



For Hawaii Governor, Discrediting Anti-Obama ‘Birthers’ Is a Top Priority

Democrat Neil Abercrombie, who knew Obama’s parents, is determined to torpedo the conspiracy theory. Underlying his effort may be a desire to dispel the view that Hawaiians aren’t Americans in the same way as mainlanders.

Neil Abercrombie knew Barack Obama’s parents when the future president was born here in 1961, and he has been aggravated by the so-called birther movement, which alleges Obama was not born in the United States and thus should be expelled from office.

Now Abercrombie has an office of his own — he became governor of Hawaii on Dec. 6. — and he intends to do something about it.

What, exactly, is unclear. But in an interview this week at the state Capitol, he left little doubt that torpedoing the conspiracy theorists was a priority.

“What bothers me is that some people who should know better are trying to use this for political reasons,” said Abercrombie, 72. “Maybe I’m the only one in the country that could look you right in the eye right now and tell you, ‘I was here when that baby was born.’ “

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



How to: Run Snitches Inside Terrorist Groups

Need to penetrate the closed circle of a terrorist cell? Then it’s time to recruit like terrorists do: pick out the outcasts and prey on their numerous, numerous anxieties.

In 2005, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service put together a tip sheet for the FBI on how to run sources inside extremist organizations — even though it didn’t appear to have a lot of experience actually recruiting terrorist sources. An ideal source, it noted, was the same for counterterrorists as for terrorists: someone disciplined, capable of keeping secrets, and highly motivated. Based on its interviews with Guantanamo detainees, NCIS found additional patterns within terrorist organizations: often, they’re people with low self-esteem who turn to religious extremism after experiencing a crisis. That makes them ripe for savvy agents to exploit.

The best snitches, NCIS argued, have some kind of anxiety about their identities. Western converts to Islam fit the bill, as do Muslims living in or educated in western countries. That’s true not just because “there have been a number of successful operations using converts of Western ethnicity” — demonstrating their value to terror groups — but because they’ll feel like they’ve got the most to prove.

But that also means they’ll feel apprehensive about putting their fellow extremists in the crosshairs of law enforcement. Not to worry, NCIS instructs: “That ambivalence is often best managed by developing a strong relationship with the source by activating his core motivation to ‘stop the killing’ and bring peace to the world, including the Muslim world.” More irony: terrorist groups like al-Qaeda recruit their own adherents by stressing the dignity and peace that the Muslim world will enjoy after they kill enough westerners to lay the Americans low.

Once recruited, a snitch can be expected to repeatedly freak out. “For the source to be successful, he will be making commitments to the target group as he becomes a more trusted brother. The source will feel the pull of the fundamental human need to be valued and validated.” A good agent has to talk his source through the guilt of betrayal: let him know “that there is an open line of communication with the Special Agent to discuss this issue.” It doesn’t make any sense to pretend that the source isn’t snitching.

It may seem obvious, but well adjusted people don’t join terrorist groups. It’s the “anxious,” those with a “need for belonging/affiliation,” those with a “relatively low… level of assertiveness,” with low-self esteem who see themselves as “disorganized and undisciplined… incapable, lackadaisical, and unreliable.” They join terror groups to belong, and suspect they’re not doing the right thing — thereby opening up the door to betraying the organization.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Military Says Soldier Had No Right of Self-Defense

Clemency request refused in case over death of al-Qaida operative

The U.S. military has argued on appeal that Lt. Michael Behenna had no right of self-defense when he killed a known al-Qaida operative who allegedly lunged for the soldier’s weapon.

The appeal for Behenna, 27, who is serving a 15-year term in Ft. Leavenworth, came only days after a clemency board separately rejected a request to reduce his punishment.

According to the Daily Oklahoman, in the soldier’s home state, the appeals court officers were told by prosecutors that during the attack the al-Qaida operative was naked and unarmed while the soldier was dressed in battle gear with a weapon.

“The right of self-defense doesn’t exist under the facts of this case,” said Madeline Yanford, arguing for the prosecution.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama: After START, Tactical Arms Treaty

A day after ratification of an arms treaty with Russia, U.S. officials said the White House will seek to limit U.S. and Russian tactical nuclear weapons.

Limiting stockpiles of tactical nuclear weapons — which include nuclear landmines, artillery shells and short-range missile warheads — will be just as important and possibly more difficult to accomplish than the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty the Senate ratified in Washington Wednesday, the federal government’s broadcasting service, Voice of America, reported.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Park51 Imam Plans National Speaking Tour

The controversy over plans to build an Islamic center in downtown Manhattan subsided in November, almost abruptly, with the end of an election season that amplified its most emotional underlying

But the imam behind the project has decided to risk reigniting that opposition by setting out on a nationwide speaking tour next month to promote the planned center and to foster dialogue about Muslim life in America.

“Controversy has never been a problem for me,” said the imam, Feisal Abdul Rauf, whose proposal to build the high-rise community center and mosque two blocks north of ground zero made him the prime target last summer of opponents who viewed the plan, known as Park51 for its address on Park Place, as a Trojan horse for Muslim triumphalism. “I think the controversy of last summer helped initiate a discourse that has been very good for the country. I’m an American, and I believe that Americans are problem solvers. So I believe further discussion can only be good.”

The tour, which he described in an interview on Wednesday, is scheduled to begin in Detroit, the city with the largest Muslim population in the United States. It will include stops in Chicago, Washington, San Antonio and several college campuses, starting with Harvard, Yale, Georgetown and the University of North Carolina.

Because of death threats that the imam has received, none of his addresses will be open to the general public, though the local news media in each place will be invited to attend, and to ask questions afterward, he said.

Some of the project’s most outspoken opponents welcomed the imam’s plan for a speaking tour, though for reasons of their own.

“I think this will help to revive the opposition, not only from Americans in general but from Muslims in this country, who don’t want this thing built,” said Ryan Mauro, a conservative blogger and the producer of a documentary about the planned community center.

The film, “Sacrificed Survivors: The Untold Story of the Ground Zero Mega-Mosque,” focuses on opposition by some families of 9/11 victims.

Pamela Geller, another conservative blogger who organized many of the public demonstrations against the center last summer, said she planned to marshal protests when the City Council meets next month to review Wal-Mart’s proposal to open a store in Manhattan. “Christine Quinn is against Wal-Mart, but she’s in favor of the megamosque. Typical liberal elitist thinking,” she said, referring to the City Council speaker.

Ms. Geller also predicted that the imam’s speaking tour would serve the opposition. “The opposition has never gone away, and will never go away,” she said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Freaky Fantasies of a Former Guantanamo Detainee Explain Why Sufi Islam Won’t Defeat the Jihadists

The strangest things kept happening to Walid Muhammad Hajj during his years as a prisoner in Guantanamo Bay. “Once, when I was sleeping — on the floor, not on a bed — I suddenly felt that a cat was trying to penetrate me”, he told al-Jazeera in a recent interview. “It tried to penetrate me again and again.”

Then there was that “incident with a guy who sat next to me in the morning. When they brought the milk, he began to urinate into the milk.” “That’s when we knew that he was under a spell,” Mr Hajj recalled. “After he had recovered a little, after we read Koranic verses to him, he said to me: ‘The birds on the barbed wire would talk to me, and tell me to urinate in the milk.’“

Jewish staff in Guantanamo Bay, Mr Hajj concluded, practiced witchcraft on the inmates.

For some years now, we’ve been hearing about how Sufi folk Islam can defeat the Salafist Islam on which the jihadist movement is purported to be built. Put crudely, Sufism has been cast as a kind of “good Islam” that can take on Osama bin-Laden’s belligerent reading of his faith. Both the UK and the US are spending millions funding organisations to pursue that objective (for obvious reasons, I’m not going to name names here).

This pursuit is about as founded in reality than Mr Hajj’s belief that Jewish practitioners of the dark arts sent a cat to rape him. Islamism — like communism or capitalism — is a system of thought born in response to the real world. Few people embrace capitalism because they happen to read a particular commentary on Adam Smith; fewer still, I suspect, become suicide bombers simply because of a textual encounter. Sales of the Quran are reported to have surged in the weeks after 9/11, as Americans sought to understand bin-Laden, but I fear they were looking in the wrong place.

Mr Hajj demonstrated a sharp, rational mind during legal proceedings at Guantánamo — which makes it significant that he chose the language he did during his interview. The audience he was reaching out to is drenched in the folk practice of Islam, suffused with faith in miracles and black magic. Beliefs like these, which predate Islam, continue to have wide currency: a recent Saudi study estimated Arabs spend $ 5 billion a year on magic and sorcery.

[…]

Writing in the New York Times, the historian William Dalrymple described Sufism as “deeply rooted resistance movement against violent Islamic radicalism”; writers at the BBC and the Economist agree. It isn’t necessarily so: last year, I reported on the story of Sufis who had joined a jihadist group determined to bring down the Indian state. Is it important to challenge Islamist claims to speak for Islam? Yes. Will it defeat the Islamist movement? No.

Osama bin-Laden isn’t fighting the West because he believes in a particular kind of Islam. It is precisely the other way around: he has found in a certain reading of Islam an ideological foundation for his rage against the West, and legitimacy for the violence he uses to expresses it. If the jihadist movement is to be defeated, we must first acknowledge that it rests on more than words alone.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Thermos Flask Terror Threat: U.S. Warns Airlines to Prepare for New Tactic During Christmas

American anti-terror chiefs have warned airlines to prepare for possible attacks involving Thermos flasks during the Christmas holiday.

They warned passengers to be extra vigilant if travelling during the festive period — although no specific details of the new tactics were revealed.

President Barack Obama, who is in Hawaii with his family, has also ordered U.S. security services to be on heightened alert.

It follows last year’s attempt to blow up a passenger jet by a terrorist who had sown an explosive powder into his underwear.

The timing of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s Christmas Eve effort on board the Northwest flight from Amsterdam to Detroit was reminder that holiday periods are ripe moments for attacks.

White House counterterrorism chief, John Brennan, held an inter-agency conference call yesterday to review steps the government is taking to ensure vigilance.

They include enhanced security measures and coordination with foreign partners such as Britain.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and FBI Director Robert Mueller were among those on the call.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Vice Admiral: Obama Was Outmaneuvered by Russians on START

President Barack Obama was outmaneuvered by the Russians and should have abandoned the New START negotiations instead of seeking a political victory, says former nuclear plans monitor Vice Admiral Jerry Miller, USN (Ret).

“The Obama administration is continuing a dated policy in which we cannot even unilaterally reduce our own inventory of weapons and delivery systems without being on parity with the Russians,” Miller told the U.S. Naval Institute in Annapolis, Md. “We could give up plenty of deployed delivery systems and not adversely affect our national security one bit, but New START prohibits such action — so we are now stuck with some outmoded and useless elements in our nuke force.”

After meeting resistance from several Republicans, the U.S. Senate ratified the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) with Russia by a vote of 71-26 on Wednesday.

“The Soviets/Russians were done in by Reagan and our missile defense program because they cannot afford to build such a system,” said Miller. “They instead try to counter our program with rhetoric at the bargaining table. And they won by outmaneuvering Obama. START plays right into their hands.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘We the People’ To Open Next Congress

The Constitution frequently gets lip service in Congress, but House Republicans next year will make sure it gets a lot more than that — the new rules the incoming majority party proposed this week call for a full reading of the country’s founding document on the floor of the House on Jan. 6.

The goal, backers said, is to underscore the limited-government rules the Founders imposed on Congress — and to try to bring some of those principles back into everyday legislating.

“It stems from the debate that we’ve had for the last two years about things like the exercise of authority in a whole host of different areas by the EPA, we’ve had this debate in relation to the health care bill, the cap-and-trade legislation,” said Rep. Robert W. Goodlatte, Virginia Republican, who proposed the reading. “This Congress has been very aggressive in expanding the power of the federal government, and there’s been a big backlash to that.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



What I Really Said About Radical Jihadism

In a Dec. 12 Outlook piece [“Radical jihadism is not a mental disorder”], Stephen Xenakis mischaracterized my testimony in Omar Khadr’s Guantanamo sentencing proceeding.

Since the Supreme Court cemented the contribution of psychiatry to risk assessment in Estelle v. Smith (1981), forensic psychiatry has refined such dangerousness evaluation to focus on context. Assessing risk of dangerous jihadist activity borrows from clinical understandings about criminal and violent recidivism, but it must reflect the context of actual jihadist violence or an individual’s ability to facilitate that violence. My testimony related only to this defined context. Neither this methodology nor my qualifications were contested.

The validity of risk assessment also draws from statistical base rates. The figures of released Guantanamo detainees who return to active battle have climbed sharply from just 6 percent in 2008 to 25 percent, according to this month’s report from the director of national intelligence. My testimony demonstrated several reasons why U.S. government recidivism figures are a significant underestimation. This testimony was not contested on cross-examination or rebutted.

My effort also included the research data of Danish correctional psychologist Nicolai Sennels, precisely because Sennels has studied and treated large-scale groups of young Muslim and non-Muslim inmates. Sennels’s work has been lauded by the Danish Psychological Association. That he has now become a foe of unregulated Muslim immigration to Europe does not negate what he learned from giving of himself to help Muslims stay out of prison. Sennels’s research findings also were not contested on cross-examination or rebutted.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks Suspect

MONTHS of “inhumane” solitary confinement are taking a toll on the US Army private suspected of passing secret government files to WikiLeaks, a friend says.

“It has become obvious to me that Bradley Manning’s physical and mental well-being are deteriorating,” David House wrote on the blog Firedoglake, recounting a visit to the military brig where the accused soldier is being held.

“It’s become increasingly clear that the severe, inhumane conditions of his detention are wearing on Manning.”

Held at a military brig in Virginia at the Quantico Marine base since July, Manning, 23, has been placed under a maximum-security regimen because authorities say his escape would pose a risk to national security.

Under the strict rules, Manning is allowed out of his cell for only one hour a day for exercise outside or at an indoor gym, military officers say.

Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar.

Related CoverageWikiLeaks founder: Assange fears execution in US jail

.End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.

But Mr House said the Pentagon’s description of conditions was contradicted by what he learned from Manning.

“He has not been outside or into the brig yard for either recreation nor exercises in four full weeks,” Mr House said.

“When told of the Pentagon’s statement that he indeed receives exercise, Manning’s reply was that he is able to exercise insofar as walking in chains is a form of exercise,” he wrote.

As a “precaution”, prison authorities have decided not to issue Manning cotton sheets and instead have provided two blankets and a pillow made of material that cannot be torn into pieces.

Manning said that “his blankets are similar in weight and heft to lead aprons used in X-ray laboratories”, Mr House said.

The army soldier was under a “Prevention of Injury” order that was the cause of some of the more strict conditions, Mr House said, even though Manning allegedly had been cleared by a military psychologist.

“What Manning needs, and what his lawyer has already urged, is to have the unnecessary ‘Prevention of Injury’ order lifted that severely restricts his ability to exercise, communicate, and sleep,” he wrote.

The Pentagon has rejected allegations Manning is suffering from any abuse and insists he is being treated in the same way as other inmates under the “maximum custody” regime.

The WikiLeaks website has yet to disclose its source for a massive trove of classified US military and diplomatic documents published in recent months, but suspicion has focused on Manning, who worked as a low-ranking army intelligence analyst in Iraq.

Manning was arrested in May, and US authorities have yet to say when he will be put on trial on charges of violating federal criminal and military law, including transmitting classified information to a third party.

If found guilty, Manning faces up to 52 years in prison.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Being Nice Hasn’t Protected Sweden

The Grinch Steals Christmas. Sweden, a country that has prided itself on its good sense, openness, decency, and neutrality has suddenly encountered the unexpected: the terror war coming home to them. Fortunately, the suicide bomber who wanted to blow up Swedes doing their Christmas shopping was incompetent—and he succeeded only in blowing up himself. You can be sure that the Swedes are now revisiting their practices regarding Islamist immigrants, as have all other European countries that have been under attack.

On December 15, the Security Police in Stockholm presented a report on “violence-prone networks” in Sweden. They conclude there are perhaps 200 Jihadis in the country, about 30 of them trained in Somalia. These networks live in three of Sweden’s major cities: Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmo. Malmo has long been identified as having a social democratic City Council that is so pro-Muslim that a large part of the Jewish population has left the city.

An audio file in Swedish and Arabic was sent to the Swedish news agency ten minutes before the jihadist suicide bomber killed himself in one of two explosions in central Stockholm. The audio said: “Now the Islamic state has been created. We now exist here in Europe and in Sweden. We are a reality. Now your children, your daughters and your sisters will die as our brothers, our sisters and our children are dying.”

While we in the west protect freedom of speech, the Islamists fight it. “Insulting Islam” in print or cartoon is enough motive for murder. Will we start censoring ourselves as a result of this?

The bomber was Abdulwahab Al-Abdaly, a 29-year old citizen of Sweden whose Iraqi parents were given sanctuary from the horrors of Iraq. He was a typical young Swede—wearing bluejeans, spiked hair, and was once a disc jockey until he married a fanatical Muslim woman in Luton, England who, according to her grandmother, “turned her husband into an extremist.” She is in hiding with her three beautiful children, including the youngest, who is named Osama (to honor 9/11, it seems). Wife Mona Thwany, a Romanian, was converted to radical Islam on a trip to North Africa.

Sweden is also in the news because of its arrest warrant against anarchist publisher of other people’s mail, Julien Assange. Assange is accused of rape—and his defenders are sure that this is a frameup— showing how Sweden is the lap dog of the United States, whose diplomatic cables were stolen by an American soldier and broadcast on line to the world by WikiLeaks. Assange’s techno-terrorist organization.

WikiLeaks’ Tarnished Underbelly. Reason.com has done a little investigating of WikiLeaks and has found that one of its most trusted operatives is a Swede with the pseudonym “Israel Shamir” (a.k.a. Adam Ermash or Joran Jermas). Shamir’s job is to select and distribute the stolen cables to Russian news organizations. Echo Moskvy radio in Russia has identified Shamir as the fabricator of a cable that claimed that there was collusion among those who walked out on Iran’s president Ahmadinejad’s nasty speech to the United Nations in October. Shamir calls Amhadinejad the “brave and charismatic leader” of Iran.

He refers to the Auschwitz death camp as “an internment facility attended by the Red Cross, not a place of extermination. He told a Swedish journalist that “it’s every Muslim and Christian’s duty to deny the Holocaust.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Britain on Course for Flu Epidemic

The level of influenza — including the swine flu strain — in the population is now higher — and rising more sharply — than they were at this point in 1999, when the country was heading for an epidemic which triggered a major NHS crisis.

With millions of people visiting friends and family over the Christmas period experts believe that the rate could reach epidemic levels within a week.

The number of flu victims in intensive care has more than doubled in one week, with 460 patients now in critical care beds. Meanwhile, a Government memo is warning of shortages of Tamiflu — the main drug used to treat flu patients — in some parts of the country. The rate of flu in England and Wales is 87.1 cases per 100,000 of the population, a rate which has tripled in seven days.

In the run-up to Christmas 1999, levels were less than 60 per 100,000 population, yet by early January 2000 the outbreak had reached epidemic proportions, with more than 200 cases per 100,000. The records, which only represent those who visit their GP, always underestimate the true extent of sickness.

Influenza expert Prof John Oxford said: ‘The numbers now are worse than they were in winter of 1999, and the curve is steeper; when you look at the graph the line for this year it is incredibly unsettling; it looks like scaling Everest,” said the virologist.

“If that trend continues I would not be surprised if we get to epidemic levels within one week.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Crime Boss Opens Up About Mob in Switzerland

A former mafia boss has come clean on Swiss public television as Italian justice authorities level charges against 174 alleged members of a powerful mob.

Felice Ferrazzo, 55, said he ran the clan that bears his name for ten years before becoming a police informant in 2000. He spoke to Swiss filmmakers Gianni Gaggini and Marco Tagliabue at a secret location in Italy.

Ferrazzo, who is currently under witness protection along with his family, said he was the boss of a Ferrazzo clan in Calabria, southern Italy, a stronghold for the ‘Ndrangheta crime ring.

“I commanded a dozen people,” said the former boss, who dropped out of school in third grade. “I decided what we did and who should be executed.”

The filmmakers say the Ferrazzo clan ran weapons and drugs, namely cocaine, into Lugano and Zurich using well-established connections through northern Italy and Switzerland.

The Swiss connection

Ferrazzo knows the country well.

The Calabrian was 17 years old when he came with his parents to canton Ticino, first near Locarno, then in Lugano, where a large community of people from his home region lived.

With no training, the young Ferrazzo worked as a labourer on a road construction company, a life he would not lead for long. He still thinks back on that time.

“If I had continued to work in Ticino construction, today I’d be close to retiring,” he said. “But that’s not how things turned out.”

In 1982, Ferrazzo was found guilty of smuggling hashish and was sent to prison in Lugano. He escaped a year and a half later and fled home to Mesoraca, where he was well received.

“They baptised me and I became a made man — a messed-up honour in the end,” he said.

In 1990 Ferrazzo consolidated his power at the top of the clan by eliminating those standing in his way, like Ernesto Russo, an ex-boss of the family. He used weapons purchased in Zurich or Lugano to control the area, smuggling them in bags of rice and coffee past guards in Chiasso or Ponte Tresa.

“We were never checked once,” he said.

A network of thugs

It was also in Switzerland that the Ferrazzo clan laundered its money, using mostly Ticino- and Zurich-based banks.

“With him, the ‘Ndrangheta moves into Switzerland, a well established fact with profound ramifications,” said Gaggini, the director of the documentary, called Blood Honour, which aired last week.

“In Ticino, especially in the northern outskirts of Lugano, where a lot of people from Mesoraca live, Ferrazzo developed a thug network—his relationships with his captains in Switzerland were stable and well consolidated,” Gaggini said.

In fact, Ferrazzo, who was arrested in 1993 in Italy and stayed there until 1996, returned to Switzerland upon being freed. It was a certainly an underground visit, but one he used to expand his hold on the Lugano-Zurich axis.

The boss’s life took a decisive turn in 2000 after a return trip to Mesoraca. That year, Ferrazzo and his son narrowly escaped an assassination attempt by his cousin and rival Mario Donato Ferrazzo, who is currently in jail…

Translated from French by Tim Neville

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



Dutch Police Arrest 12 Somali Terror Suspects Following Secret Service Tip-Off

Twelve Somali men have been detained in the port city of Rotterdam on suspicion of terrorist-related activities, the Dutch public prosecutor said Saturday.

The men aged 19 to 48 were seized Friday on a tip from the intelligence services that they were planning a terrorist attack shortly in the Netherlands. There was no immediate information on the intended target of the alleged attack.

European officials often step up security around the holidays, but this year especially after a Nigerian man last Christmas Day taped explosives to his underwear and allegedly tried to blow up a plane as it approached Detroit.

There also have been growing concerns in Europe about holiday season attacks following a suicide bombing in Sweden and attacks on two embassies this week in Rome.

Dutch police searched a call centre, four houses and two motel rooms in the Rotterdam area, prosecutors said in a statement Saturday. No weapons or explosives were found.

Six of the suspects live in Rotterdam, five have no permanent residence and one man comes from Denmark, they said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Eco-Bulbs ‘A Health Hazard for Babies and Pregnant Women Due to Mercury Inside’

Energy-saving light bulbs were at the centre of a fresh health scare last night after researchers claimed they can release potentially harmful amounts of mercury if broken.

Levels of toxic vapour around smashed eco-bulbs were up to 20 times higher than the safe guideline limit for an indoor area, the study said.

It added that broken bulbs posed a potential health risk to pregnant women, babies and small children.

The concerns surround ‘compact fluorescent lamps’ (CFLs), the most common type of eco-bulb in Britain, which are mini-versions of the strip lights found in offices.

The European Union is phasing out the traditional ‘incandescent bulbs’ used for more than 120 years and is forcing people to switch to low-energy alternatives to meet its climate change targets.

A CFL uses a fifth of the energy of a conventional bulb and can save £7 a year in bills. However, critics complain that CFLs’ light is harsh and flickery. Medical charities say they can trigger epileptic fits, migraines and skin rashes and have called for an ‘opt out’ for vulnerable people.

Incandescent bulbs do not contain mercury, along with other variants of energy-saving lights, such as LEDs and halogen bulbs. The study, for Germany’s Federal Environment Agency, tested a ‘worst case’ scenario using two CFLs, one containing 2 milligrams of mercury and the other 5 milligrams. Neither lamp had a protective casing and both were broken when hot.

Scientists at the Fraunhofer Wilhelm Klauditz Institute found that they released around 7 micrograms (there are 1,000 micrograms in a milligram) per cubic metre of air.The official guideline limit is 0.35 micrograms per cubic metre.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Leading Priest Blames Jews for Greece’s Problems

A high-level priest on the morning show of the largest television station in Greece blamed world Jewry for Greece’s financial problems on Tuesday.

The Metropolite of Piraeus Seraphim also blamed world Jewry for other ills in the country during his appearance on Mega TV.

Mixing Freemasons with Jewish bankers such as Baron Rothschild and world Zionism, the Metropolite said that there is a conspiracy to enslave Greece and Christian Orthodoxy. He also accused international Zionism of trying to destroy the family unit by promoting one-parent families and same-sex marriages.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



My Son the Terrorist

Experts on terrorism throughout the world, including Muslim family members and even lay people are completely puzzled and baffled as to how a “good kid” can suddenly turn terrorist. More and more research and studies are done such as the most recently published book by Ariel Merari indicating their finding that many of these “good guys” are loners and because of that they are isolated, becoming easy targets to the seduction of the warmth of the brotherhood. See for example Robert Fulford: When we bother to notice, suicide bombers have much to teach in which he cites Ariel Merari’s new book Driven to Death: Psychological and Social Aspects of Suicide Terrorism, Oxford, 2010. As psychoanalysts and authors of many articles on this subject. Our goal is to expand beyond “the loner” routine parlance.

Yet, the Swedish suicide bomber’s in-laws and wife experienced this nice guy differently. Indeed, his father-in-law went on record saying that he was grateful for his son-in-law’s death because now his daughter could have freedom from brainwashing and his control. Do you mean to tell us that her father could not even do an intervention on behalf of his very own daughter, that he had to let her succumb to chronic brutality?? Good grief — his daughter was terrorized by his son-in-law. This is not unusual in Muslim society where the father does not protect the woman, let alone his daughters, often as a defense against shame and saving face in an honor society. The extreme, of course, is the honor killing of the daughter.

Once again, we highlight another unspoken link between domestic violence and jihadi violence, a link that few counter terrorists want to explore. In our opinion it is because it is too terrorizing, even for the experts. However, Taimour is not like every other nice young man as the press or friends of the mosque would like to describe because it is he who carried out a suicide attack.

Many have noted that these “good kids” are basically loners and that their loneliness begins to consume them to the point that they long for some kind of connection. It is not unusual for these people to join up with the seemingly love and warmth under the pretense of a friendly brotherhood? Yet, behind the shadows of the brotherhood lurks a group of enraged hostile brothers that not only would betray the alleged loner but in a flash would kill him off.

From our perspective we believe that this confusion about the loner turned suicide bomber is psychologically based, a concept most people are not aware of, but it is what we have made reference to concerning domestic violence in previous articles and publications called — splitting — where one part of the personality that can be loving and kind while the other part of the personality is sadistic and cruel. This dissonance creates confusion and ambivalence. The evidence of this kind of splitting speaks volumes in the imagery of the suicide attack because it is murder-suicide as routinely found in domestic violence.

In addition, some have suggested that Taimour underwent a change in his emotional life when he married, suggesting that he then suddenly blossomed into a full-blown jihadi terrorist. In our assumption is that nothing changed. Under the pretense of the “good guy,” his rage was exquisitely hidden under the guise of a false self. Consider the idiosyncratic nature of marriage and how marriage demands a deepening of intimacy and how terrifying that can be for an emasculated male who has grown up in a culture which views the female as garbage.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The EU Calls Ravello to Account for Silent Auditorium

Only two concerts this year in Niemeyer’s theatre. Work cost €16m, with €5m from Brussels

BRUSSELS — The internet site www.auditoriumoscarniemeyer.it politely explains that “the website is under maintenance, but will soon be back online with a new look. We apologize for the inconvenience”. The “inconvenience” is a touch on the long side, having lasted more than five years. And in the real world, the project’s “maintenance” involves dealing with an unending series of problems.

First there were three years of permits promised then cancelled, amidst heated environmental debate, followed by another three years of work. Finally came the official inauguration in January 2010, followed by 11 months in which the venue was to all extents boarded up. The 400-seat Auditorium in Ravello designed by the grand old Oscar Niemeyer, who recently turned 103, is like a ship moored to the Amalfi coast, ready to set sail but never actually casting off. The project was not cheap either, at around €16m according to rumours still to be confirmed, no less than €5m of which was granted by the European Union. Now the EU is asking to see the accounts, with informal meetings taking place between the European Commission and the Campania regional council. As reported in a critical article in the Guardian, Brussels wants to clarify “both when the concert hall is planned to open and what the real situation is”…

English translation by Simon Tanner

www.simontanner.com

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



UK: Albanian Asylum Seeker Who Dumped Loaded Handgun Outside Tony Blair’s House Facing Years in Prison

An asylum seeker who tried to hide a loaded handgun outside Tony Blair’s home faces years in jail after he was convicted

Vladimir Kendella, 56, was cornered by police in Connaught Street just yards from the former Prime Minister’s residence after a car chase through Central London.

The Albanian managed to dump the gun in the road moments before he was arrested, but it was later found by a neighbour out walking his dog.

Another three rounds of ammunition were uncovered in his home in Wembley, North West London, the following day.

Kendella now faces a lengthy jail term and deportation after he was convicted of possessing the handgun and ammunition following a short trial at Southwark Crown Court.

The drama began on December 12 last year when Kendella’s white Seat Ibiza sped out of a junction in front of marked patrol car, forcing it to brake.

The two constables in the police car flagged him down and spoke to him, before running a check on his vehicle and realising that he was driving with no insurance.

As they searched their database, Kendella drove off at speed, and the officers set off in pursuit.

Minutes later, they spotted him parked up in Connaught Street, where he was ‘leaning over by the passenger door side’.

When approached by the officers, he gave them a different name from before, and was duly arrested.

Believing they were making a routine traffic arrest, the two constables took the Albanian back to the station, failing to spot that he had hidden a handgun in the gutter next to the kerb.

But 20 minutes later, local resident William Salisbury spotted the pistol as he took his family dog for a walk.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Cyber Attack: A Very Modern Theatre of War — The IT Men Whose Mission is to Rescue the World From Cyberterrorists

The location of Northrop Grumman’s only non-U.S. cyber-range is hardly glamorous. An industrial estate just off the M27 near Fareham, Hampshire; a nondescript grey building. Not quite WikiLeaks’ Blofeld-esque lair. The glass doors are perhaps more polished than the other sheds around it.

They are certainly more bulletproof. But the first inkling that this is no ordinary office facility comes when the receptionists insist that everyone hand over their mobile phones, backed up by polite but steely security guards. ‘I’m sorry, sir. Security’s our business. We can’t allow anything with an internet connection to be brought into the building,’ insists one.

Inside, in a spacious lecture hall, an audience is about to watch a demonstration. It is given by a blend of IT professionals and high-ranking British military officers, as betrayed by their clipped accents and military-cut suits. All fall silent as the demonstration begins.

It’s conducted partly on stage and partly on a video link to an office in America, where a ponytailed hacker wearing a Guy Fawkes mask sits at a computer screen. On it are four windows filled with text; other windows show the system he is about to attack. The windows of text are the hacker’s jemmies — weapons for probing security systems, cracking passwords and stealing data. They can cut through firewalls, protective software and heavy-duty computer encryption.

This demonstration is a live firing exercise for a new kind of war. In a room nearby, a team of computer experts are preparing to defend the target system from Mr Fawkes’ imminent attack. On stage a demonstrator will narrate the action and explain the incomprehensible electronic babble in the text windows. There are no 3D graphics, no Matrix-style avalanches of numbers and no genius teenagers; just professionals who approach their job with efficiency.

Fawkes’ first action is to do a ‘port scan’ — a process that analyses the connections used by the system he’s targeted. The weakness he’s looking for might be a simple mistake by the owner of a PC — a port ‘held open’, for example, so the computer can talk to others in online games or chat programs. Or it might have been opened by a program that offered free games or word processing but in fact contained a hidden back door that left the computer vulnerable to attack.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Christmas at the East London Mosque: ‘Season’s Rantings’ From Your Favourite Islamic Extremists

In his richly-entertaining, car-crash interview with the BBC’s Stephen Sackur which I covered yesterday, Muhammad Abdul Bari, the chairman of the East London Mosque, was heavily pressed on his mosque’s unfortunate predilection for hate and extremist speakers, specifically the al-Qaeda cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

Dr Bari told Sackur that, while mistakes might have been made in the past, it was all quite different now at this renowned centre of tolerance and harmony. In one of the many hurt letters he has written to the media lately (the climate for Islamism seems to be turning rather chillier) he further insisted: “The controversial speakers who were able, in the past, to speak via third-party bookings of our facilities (circumventing our procedures) have now all been banned. “All accusations of ‘extremism’ links are also historical: it is two years since the Awlaki issue arose, for example, and since then we have tightened our procedures and policies accordingly, to ensure no such issues arise again. Let me state once more: we deplore extremism of all kinds and fully support democracy.”

Oh dear, but what’s this I see — happening at the East London Mosque this evening, organised by our very dear friends the Islamic Forum of Europe? An event on “The Fiqh Of Social Ills.” Fiqh is normally translated as “understanding” or as “knowledge of the rules of God.” It’s the last of a four-week seminar series. For the first two weeks the IFE’s “social ills” were pretty uncontroversial — “drug and alcohol abuse,” “domestic violence.” In week 3, it started to get a bit wackier — “jinn possession and black magic” was on the agenda. But tonight is the big one.

Tonight’s social ill to be condemned? That well-known scourge, “child-rearing in the Western context.” If the Western context, or society, around this mosque, can be described as a “social ill,” that doesn’t bode too well for cohesion and inter-community harmony, does it? Will the people at this seminar be raising their kids to mix with fellow Londoners of other cultures — or to stand apart from them?

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: MI6 Spy Gareth Williams Had a Secret Double Identity and Was Not Gay Friend Insists

The spy found dead in a sports bag had been given a new identity by his MI6 bosses in the months leading up to his mysterious death.

Gareth Williams, a GCHQ codebreaker on secondment to MI6, had two passports and told his best friend that he was preparing for an undercover operation.

Details of the 31-year-old’s role within the secret services are disclosed today in an interview with his confidante and childhood sweetheart, Sian Lloyd-Jones.

In an interview with The Mail on Sunday, she said: ‘I find it difficult to see anything in his personal life which could lie behind this.’

She reveals:

He was training to take on a new identity eight months before he was found dead.

He often purchased designer women’s clothes, but she insists they were gifts for her and his sister.

The maths genius was found dead two days before he was due to visit Paris with his sister.

The revelations shed new light on Mr Williams’s work which, until now, had been regarded as highly technical and carrying little risk.

His body was found inside a zipped and padlocked North Face holdall in the bathroom of his

MI6 flat on August 23. A post-mortem was inconclusive.

Last week police released e-fits of a couple they wish to question and provided intimate details about Mr Williams’s life, including his interest in bondage websites and his extraordinary collection of women’s designer clothes and shoes, worth about £15,000.

But Ms Lloyd-Jones, 33, claims Mr Williams would have confided in her and his sister, Ceri, if he had any homosexual urges. Ms Lloyd-Jones, a fashion stylist, said: ‘I’m not in denial and nor is his mum, dad or sister. It would have been fine if he was [gay].

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Wales: Police in Terror Plot Meeting With Muslim Community

Police have met Muslims at a Cardiff mosque to discuss the arrests of five men in the city suspected of terrorism offences.

Properties across Cardiff have been searched by officers after dawn raids on Monday, when 12 arrests were made in total across the UK.

There was disquiet among some of those at the mosque about the arrests.

But the Muslim Council of Wales said the police visit was “reassuring” to the community.

Of the 12 men were arrested during the anti-terrorist operation, four others were from Stoke-on-Trent and three from London.

They were detained on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in the UK.

Police met community leaders at the Jahalia Mosque and Islamic Education Centre in Riverside, Cardiff, on Friday.

Reassurance

Saleem Kidwai, of the Muslim Council of Wales, welcomed the visit, and said: “The chief inspector came in the mosque and talked to the community just to reassure them that we are all in this together and we have to deal with this together,” he said.

Some members of the Muslim community said they were concerned about the arrests.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks: British Outreach to Muslim Community Fails

According to one of the cables released by WikiLeaks, the U.S. believes that the British have made “little progress” in winning over its Muslim community. The author is right to be alarmed but shouldn’t be surprised. The U.K., like the U.S., has been courting extremists in moderate clothing as part of its outreach and has failed to stop Islamist trends in the country as a result.

The August 2006 document says that although the British government invested “considerable time and resources” into reaching out to the Muslim community after the terrorist attacks in London on July 7, 2005, a productive relationship has not been established. As an example, the cable mentioned “The Muslim community’s reaction to the arrests of 24 of its own sons—a kneejerk reaction blaming [the government]—shows that its leaders too have far to go.” It complained about how Muslim leaders attributed homegrown extremism to British foreign policy, using the problem to vindicate their political views.

The cable correctly points out that the British Muslim community has not waged an ideological offensive against Islamic extremists, instead denying that an ideological motivation is even the cause. The British government is also at fault, as its ignorance of who it embraces has sidelined moderates and empowered those with the views it seeks to combat.

For example, a supporter of Hizb ut-Tahrir who once referred to the “terrorist slaughter machine of the Zionist state of Israel” named Azad Ali was appointed to an advisory panel for the counter-terrorism chief of the Crown Prosecution Service. Asim Hafeez, who became the head of intervention at the Office of Security and Counterterrorism, has been described as a “hardcore Salafi.” And Mockbul Ali, who was put in charge of countering extremist ideology at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office has used his position to try to gain entry to the U.K. for Sheikh Yousef al-Qaradawi, the rabidly anti-Semitic, pro-terrorist Muslim Brotherhood theologian. Ali is also a member of the Foreign Office’s Engaging with the Islamic World Group and has been accused of promoting the Brotherhood.

The ignorance of the British government is so strong that then-Prime Minister Gordon Brown attended an event by a charity tied to Hamas called Muslim Aid, which Brown heaped praise upon. It was well-known that the charity sends money to the Islamic University of Gaza, which is operated by Hamas, and the al-Ihan Charitable Society that acts as a front for Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Muslim Aid is also part of an umbrella organization led by the aforementioned al-Qaradawi and has given money to at least six other Hamas fronts. The British government has also made the mistake of using Muslim Brotherhood-connected groups like the Muslim Council of Britain to manage relations with the Musllim community. The government suspended its engagement with the organization in March 2009 after the deputy-director general signed a letter calling for attacks against any warships assisting the blockade of the Gaza Strip and urged the “Islamic nation” to “carry on with the jihad and resistance against the occupier until the liberation of all Palestine.”

Taxpayer money has even been given to these fake moderates. The Centre for Social Cohesion has reported that $80,000 was given to the Muslim Welfare House, a member of the Federation of Islamic Organizations in Europe, an umbrella organization often viewed as a representative of the Muslim Brotherhood. The think tank writes that three of the Muslim Welfare House’s directors also served as directors of the Muslim Association of Britain and one verbally supported Hamas.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



William Tell as You’ve Never Seen Him

The year is 2032. Zurich, ravaged by the economic crisis, has become a violent, lawless no-go zone. But then a giant vigilante turns up in medieval hunting gear…

Tell: The Legend Returns sees the Swiss national hero with a nice line in crossbow tricks appear as a comic superhero in the mould of Batman and Superman, but with a hint of the Terminator and RoboCop.

The comic’s Swiss creator, David Boller, who studied in the United States and worked for Marvel and DC among others, tells swissinfo.ch about Switzerland’s relationship with comics, how he got the idea for Tell and whether there’s a moral to the story (listen to audio for extended interview).

swissinfo.ch: What are your first memories of comics?

David Boller: My very first memory was when my mother gave me Tintin in America. I was five years old and I’d never seen anything like it — for a five-year-old Tintin just blew everything away.

Of course Mickey Mouse was really big and I had a subscription to the Mickey Mouse magazine which was fantastic — and those little pocket books, Walt Disney’s Lustige Taschenbücher, which were little collections of mostly Scandinavian and Italian material. Then there was Fix and Foxi, a sort of German Walt Disney knock-off…

swissinfo.ch: Are the Swiss big comic readers?

D.B.: It was fairly common in my school at the time, but you’ve got to remember that that was the heyday of kiosk comics — you’d go to the newsstand and have dozens and dozens of comic book series.

When I was 13, I went to school in Zurich. The first comic store opened there in the early Eighties and it was literally El Dorado! Simply unbelievable. They had graphic novels from all over the world and pretty much all my lunch money went on that stuff.

swissinfo.ch: Are there regional differences within Switzerland? I imagine the French-speaking part of the country is closer to the French and Belgian comic tradition.

D.B: Asterix [by French cartoonists Goscinny and Uderzo] was always big in the German-speaking part, too. As were Lucky Luke and Tintin [by Belgian cartoonists Morris and Hergé respectively]. Asterix and Lucky Luke never really appealed to me, but certainly the Suisse Romande is extremely French-centric. Bear in mind that the most popular cartoonist in France at the moment is Swiss: Zep [Philippe Chappuis] has a series called Titeuf and it’s an incredible success; they sell millions of every new issue.

The Germans have always been an import country; they’ve never really produced anything on their own and the reason’s very simple: after the Second World War comics were forbidden, and they’ve never really recovered from that.

swissinfo.ch: How did you get the idea for Tell?…

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

Balkans


The Big Cleanup Begins

Croatia, Kosovo, Montenegro: in the space of a fortnight, the leaders or ex-leaders of all three countries have been arrested or accused of wrongdoing. Meanwhile, reports a Montenegro weekly, the EU is paving the way for the accession of all three Balkan countries.

Milka Tadic Mijovic

Like something out of a political thriller, former Croatian prime minister Ivo Sanader was arrested in Austria [on 10 December] under a warrant issued by his own country. He is now waiting for extradition in a Salzburg jail and says he’s prepared to answer corruption charges. A day or two prior to his arrest, right before parliament lifted his immunity, he fled Croatia and was planning to “attend” his trial from the United States. But his plan fell through when the Americans cancelled his visa and his Austrian “friends” put him in lockup. Yet only a year ago, Washington and Vienna were praising him to the skies.

The winner of the recent elections in Kosovo, prime minister Hashim Thaçi, didn’t even have time to celebrate. The day after Thaçi’s victory, Dick Marty, the Council of Europe rapporteur renowned for sleuthing out the CIA’s secret prisons on European soil, published a report describing Thaçi as the head of an organisation that bears a striking resemblance to a mafia: it traffics in arms, drugs and, as in a horror movie, even organs.

Marty’s accusations follow up on revelations by Carla Del Ponte, former chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for ex-Yugoslavia, in her book The Hunt: Me and the War Criminals. In the 1990s, in his capacity as “boss” of the Drenica group [“a small but inestimably powerful group of KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army) personalities” according to the Marty report], Thaçi is said to have arranged kidnappings and had the prisoners sent to Albania, where their organs were removed.

Life in the Balkans is grislier than fiction. As if the wars and atrocities of the 1990s hadn’t been enough, most of the countries in the region have now fallen prey to firmly entrenched systems based on kleptocracy, organised crime and sham patriotism. Out of the ruins of a one-time single state, strange elites have emerged, elites that should have been jailed or exiled.

The unbounded power of these elites rests on tremendous wealth. The leaders of the region, from Zagreb to Pristina, have siphoned off national funds into their pockets and those of their cronies. Their colossal clout has been shored up by an army of propagandists, who are forever doing their bidding in the media or in university history and political science departments. They describe their national leaders as messiahs, and their opponents and those who testify against them as criminals. The impoverished masses, when called to the polls, have merely endorsed the lie that the liberators have come to power and are the guarantors of states that are exposed to endless threats.

Admittedly, the international community is largely to blame for the shambles in the Balkans. “I reread the secret documents on Thaçi drafted by Western analysts, with a feeling of horror and moral shame,” writes Marty. They knew everything, but were betting on Thaçi. Marty’s report reveals what Western diplomats admitted off the record: in Kosovo, the West favoured stability to the detriment of justice, writes the Reuters agency in one analysis. As if stability could be established without justice!

The diplomats in Podgorica who publicly praise Milo Djukanovic [the prime minister and ex-president of Montenegro resigned on 21 December] allow in private that, in terms of its political system, Montenegro is closer to Kosovo than to Croatia. Djukanovic would be elated if the main problem facing his government were its illicit ties to a close friend’s advertising agency or some loans granted to his friends by Hypo Alpe Adria [Austrian bank implicated in various graft scandals]. Those happen to be the main charges against Croatia’s prime minister Sanader.

Let’s get back to the analogy with Thaçi. Fortunately, here in Montenegro we did not indulge in organ trafficking, but we did excel in other rackets. We had our own dealings with the devil. After cigarette trafficking, Montenegro became the hub of cocaine and heroin trafficking. In 20 years of practically unshared power, our prime minister, along with his partners and family, has cornered the country’s economic resources and launched into some highly dubious enterprises, including the privatisation of the Aluminium Combine in Podgorica and of the steelworks, or the Prva Banka [owned by Aco Djukanovic, the prime minister’s brother], to name just a few. In any normal country, the Prva Banka affair alone, which brought the whole financial system down in Montenegro, would have been enough to put the prime minister, his brothers and his godfathers behind bars. But the West watched it all benignly and sang Djukanovic’s praises for a long time.…

Are we now finally coming round to the realisation that the greatest menace to stability in the Balkans is not ethnic conflict but organised crime? The West finally seems committed to fundamental changes that have been put off for too long. Witness the Sanader case in Croatia, the Council of Europe report on Kosovo, and the demand for top-level anti-corruption measures — the EU’s precondition for commencing accession talks with Montenegro [the country obtained accession candidate status on 17 December].

The big cleanup that has begun in Zagreb is bound to hit Montenegro, where the supremo and his business cronies are likely to be put on trial for pillaging the state. And for starters, the boss has got to go.

Translated by Eric Rosencrantz

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

North Africa


Son of Mubarak: Succession Without Success?

By Barry Rubin

Some of the more interesting Wikileaks concern the U.S. diplomatic perspective on the succession in Egypt from President Husni Mubarak to his son, Gamal. Let’s remember that Egypt is the single most important country in the Arabic-speaking world. Dramatic instability there would be disastrous for U.S. interests. And it might happen.

Even compared to Jordan and Saudi Arabia, Egypt has been remarkably passive in the region’s international affairs over the last two decades. It has not acted as one might have expected, by taking the lead in organizing the Arab nationalist opposition to Iran and revolutionary Islamism.

But Mubarak has certainly been aware of the threat. While Jordan’s King Abdallah compared Iran to an “octopus” reaching out its tentacles to seize control of the region, Mubarak called it a “cancer.” A U.S. State Department cable of April 28, 2009, reports:

“President Mubarak has made it clear that he sees Iran as Egypt’s-and the region’s — primary strategic threat. His already dangerous neighborhood, he has stressed, has only become more so since the fall of [Iraqi dictator] Saddam [Hussein], who, as nasty as he was, nevertheless stood as a wall against Iran, according to Mubarak. He now sees Tehran’s hand moving with ease throughout the region, ‘from the Gulf to Morocco,’ as he told a recent congressional delegation.”

Yet Mubarak also stresses the immediate danger is not so much Iran getting nuclear weapons as it is Tehran’s subverting almost everyone else in the Middle East:

“While he will readily admit that the Iranian nuclear program is a strategic and existential threat to Egypt and the region, he sees that threat as relatively ‘long term.’ What has seized his immediate attention are Iran’s non-nuclear destabilizing actions such as support for Hama, media attacks, weapons and illicit funds smuggling, all of which add up in his mind to ‘Iranian influence spreading like a cancer from the GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council countries] to Morocco.’“

But President Barack Obama also frightens Mubarak:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israeli Anti-Polygamy Activists Run Into Islamic Opposition

A women’s group campaigning to stop polygamous marriages among Israeli Beduin is running into strong resistance from Islamic groups and even some politicians.

The organizers of the “No Excuse for Polygamy” campaign, launched at the end of November, have been called infidels in newspaper editorials and accused of serving the Zionist agenda by limiting the Arab birth rate. Last Friday’s sermon in a mosque in the Beduin town of Rahat warned worshipers to protect their wives and daughters from the woman’s movements.

Even heads of Negev regional councils representing Beduin towns have publicly denounced the anti-polygamy campaign.

Safa Shehadeh, director of Ma’an — the Forum for Arab Beduin Women’s Organizations of the Negev, one of the groups behind the anti-polygamy campaign, said she expected traditionalists to push back. But the reaction has been more aggressive than she had expected.

“There were no personal threats against us,” Shehadeh told The Media Line, “but some of the articles published by members of the Islamic Movement and municipal leaders included tacit threats.”

In Islam, a man may marry up to four wives on condition that he provides for them equally. But in most Arab societies the phenomenon is frowned upon and in Israel polygamy is illegal, punishable by up to five years in prison. Nevertheless, the custom is deeply rooted in the culture of the Beduin Arabs who traditionally were tent-dwelling nomads but who have gradually been settled in permanent towns like Rahat.

Husbands will have their polygamous marriages sanctified religiously but not in the government marriage registrar. Indeed, many second, third and fourth wives are officially listed as single parents, entitling them to allowances.

Since polygamous marriages aren’t recognized by the government, no official statistics exist. But the Research and Information Center of Israel’s Knesset, or parliament, estimates that somewhere between 20% and 36% of Beduin households in the southern Negev region, where most of Beduin live, are polygamous.

The Working Group for Equality in Personal Status Issues (WGEPSI), which organized the campaign against multiple marriages, believes the number is at the high end of that range. It blames a lack of education and an undeclared Israeli policy of legal non-intervention as the main causes.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



To Julie Burchill (In Regards to Liberal Judaism and Islam)

Dear Julie Burchill,

It saddens me to read that you have given up with attending synagogue and converting to Judaism. I can see how you would be put off after what you have experienced. You are not alone.

I am a Jew who attends a Liberal Synagogue and I too feel put off sometimes. So do many others that I know.

There are times that I leave synagogue on Shabbat feeling frustrated and angry rather than at peace and happy.

I know that the rabbi that you are referring to is Elizabeth Tikvah Sarah. You will find her name in the “About Us” section of the Jews for Justice for Palestinians website of which she is a signatory among a few other “progressive” rabbis.

On the 27th of this month, there will be a protest vigil in front of the Israeli Embassy where according to Jews for Justice for Palestinians ‘Between 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009, over 1400 Palestinians were killed by Israel in a brutal and illegal attack on the Gaza Strip, destroying lives and infrastructure”.

They will be there alongside Palestine Solidarity Campaign who believe that all of Israel is illegitimate and that ‘from the river to the sea’ is all Palestine. Their goal is the destruction of Israel. Why our Liberal “leaders” choose to stand with those that wish our destruction just does not make sense.

I am not writing this out of spite, but out of frustration. I want to give them the benefit of the doubt and hope that they are just being naive.

Among many of their misguided and hateful campaigns, the Jews for Justice for Palestinians believe in boycotting Ahava, they have a campaign on their site called Stop Arming Israel, they support the Russell Tribunal.

They also really push Palestinian olive oil which you can by at Liberal Judaism’s headquarters in London, the Montagu Centre.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Arab Cartoons Continue to Vilify Israeli Leaders

A new report issued by the Anti-Defamation League Wednesday illustrates that newspapers in the Arab and Muslim world consistently vilify Israel’s prime ministers, often in hateful, anti-Jewish and inflammatory ways.

The report, “Personalizing the Conflict: A Decade of an Assault on Israel’s Premiers in the Arab Media,” states that by cartoon and caricature, publications in the Arab world have deliberately and consistently sought to demonize Israeli leadership since 2000.

“Political caricatures are a visually powerful medium and have a profound impact on public opinion,” ADL National Director Abraham Foxman said in a press release. “The harsh demonization of Israel’s political leadership in the Arab media is another form of incitement against the Jewish state and its people. In Arab societies, there is virtually no alternative to the images of Israeli leaders as blood-thirsty, monstrous Nazis with aspirations of carrying out war crimes or controlling the region and the world.”

The report, prepared by ADL’s Israel office, includes cartoons that appeared in the mainstream daily newspapers of Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Oman, Palestinian Authority, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, United Arab Emirates, and other nations. Israeli leaders are routinely portrayed as Nazis, as bloodthirsty butchers, devils, and vicious or leeching animals such as attack dogs, worms and serpents.

These mainstream newspapers are often under direct or indirect government control, implying that the governments in question endorse the controversial imagery.

Ariel Sharon, Israeli prime minister from March 2001 through April 2006, attracted the most vilification in the Arab press, consistently portrayed as a murderer with bloodied hands, eating Palestinian children, drinking their blood and butchering them. Sharon was frequently compared to the Nazis and Adolf Hitler.

Ehud Barak drew comparisons to Hitler and Slobodan Milosevic, surrounded by skulls or dead Palestinians. Ehud Olmert was portrayed as a Nazi, swastikas on his uniform, or a killer of Palestinians and Lebanese in the 2006 Lebanon War.

In recent months, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has been portrayed as the devil, holding the US government hostage.

While the level of vitriol is not entirely unexpected, Foxman said, he noted that it constitutes yet another form of anti-Israel incitement, and that it often plays on anti-Jewish themes to the point that each prime minister is virtually indistinguishable from the other.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Ashamed Iraqi Man ‘Killed His Daughter, 19, After She Was Recruited as Suicide Bomber by Al-Qaeda’

An Iraqi man killed his 19-year-old daughter out of shame after he discovered Al-Qaeda had recruited her as a suicide bomber. in the town of Mandali, about , searching for her on suspicion she had become involved with terrorists.

Najim al-Anbaky was arrested at the family home in the town of Mandali, about 60 miles northeast of Baghdad.

Security forces had carried out a raid after suspecting his daughter Shahlaa had joined the terror group.

The father at first denied his daughter had any links to the terror group, but after further questioning admitted to killing her.

He described it as an attempt to protect the family’s dignity and said his daughter had been recruited by al-Qaida to be a suicide bomber.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



European Terror Attack Feared as Al-Qaida Fighters Disappear From Base in Lebanonintelligence Services Hunt for Jihadists Based in South Lebanon Refugee Camp Who Are Thought to Have Gone Abroad

Intelligence services throughout the Middle East and Europe are scrambling to track down more than two dozen fighters linked to al-Qaida who have recently left their base in southern Lebanon.

The missing men are thought to have gone to Europe by a newly established route through Syria, Turkey and the Balkans, and multiple intelligence sources in Lebanon warn that the group appears to be operational and could be planning attacks in Europe in the holiday season.

“Yes, they have left the camp,” confirmed Munir al-Maqda, a senior Palestine Liberation Organisation official in the Ain el-Hilweh refugee camp, where the fighters had been hiding for the past few years. Because the Lebanese army is not allowed to enter the country’s 13 Palestinian refugee camps, militants have long sought refuge inside them.

Two Lebanese intelligence service officials — who could only discuss the matter off the record — said Lebanon was co-operating with European intelligence organisations to track down the militants, who are described as “extremely dangerous”.

The militants, who based themselves in an area on the outskirts of the Ain el-Hilweh camp — Lebanon’s largest and most densely populated refugee centre, with more than 50,000 people living within one square mile — had been a disparate group of freelance fighters and jihadists thought to have carried out a series of attacks in Lebanon over the last five years that targeted the Lebanese army, Christian districts and UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.

Stephen Tankel, of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, has done field research in the Ain el-Hilweh camp and describes the band of militants as potentially dangerous because of their lack of overall control. This means that the group are receptive to outside direction, and leaves them open to new ideas and strategies, such as becoming operational in Europe as their options in Lebanon dwindle, Tankel said.

“They may not have been super-organised, but that does not mean they are not potentially dangerous,” he said. “First, a number of them fought in Iraq, where they will have gained combat experience and, perhaps, some explosives expertise.

“Second, it’s safe to assume that many of them are prepared to undertake ‘martyrdom’ operations. That said, they would benefit from guidance in terms of targets [choosing and surveying them] and logistical support in Europe.”

In view of their experience in Iraq and overall “street credibility” among European jihadists, Tankel suggested that the group might be better able to operate successfully in Europe than in Lebanon, where they were closely monitored, not only by the intelligence services but by the Shia militant group Hezbollah. Hezbollah, despite sharing a dislike of western policies in support of Israel, is bitterly opposed to the al-Qaida ideology, which is linked to Sunni Muslims.

One European Union intelligence official confirmed to the Observer that an operation to hunt down Arab fighters recently arrived from Lebanon was under way, but could not link this group to recent concerns about possible holiday attacks by al-Qaida.

“We have received warnings of a significant militant plot in Europe during the holidays and we have been warned about these missing fighters from Lebanon,” he said. “But we wish we knew if the two threats were related.”

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Hizballah Fears ‘Qaeda’ Type Attacks From Lebanese Sunnis

A day after the radical “Salafist” Sunni preacher Sheikh Omar Bakri was arrested last month, having been sentenced in absentia by a Lebanese court to life imprisonment on terrorism charges, he received an unexpected visitor in his holding cell at Beirut’s police headquarters. Nawar Sahili, an MP from Lebanon’s militant Shi’ite Hizballah movement — the Salafists’ most powerful local enemy — and a lawyer by training, offered Bakri his legal services.

“I have been delegated by [Hizballah leader Sheikh Hassan] Nasrallah to represent you. He has heard your voice,” Bakri recalls Sahili telling him. Hizballah’s decision to help Bakri may seem odd given that the Salafist cleric has in the past criticized the Shi’ite organization. In 2007, he told a Lebanese newspaper that he rejected Hizballah’s “armed cantons” in Lebanon, and questioned why the “resistance” against Israel should be monopolized by the Shi’ite sect.

Still, with a bleak future ahead of him, Bakri accepted Hizballah’s offer and has since been released on bail pending a retrial scheduled for March.

“Now I’m working to bring Sunnis and Shi’ites together on certain issues, such as confronting Israel,” Bakri said in his home in Tripoli, Lebanon’s religiously conservative second largest city.

With Sunni-Shi’ite tensions on the rise in Lebanon, Hizballah has been seeking allies within the small but potentially dangerous Salafist community — a sect that generally does not even recognize the Shi’ite branch of Islam. Salafists practice an austere version of Sunni Islam that emulates the seventh century ideals of the Prophet Mohammed and his followers. While a majority of Salafist scholars reject terrorism, many al-Qaeda leaders claim to be inspired by the sect.

Hizballah is increasingly on edge as Lebanon awaits the findings of an international tribunal into the 2005 assassination of Rafik Hariri, the former Sunni prime minister. Speculation is rampant that members of Hizballah will be indicted. The Shi’ite movement has vigorously denied any involvement in Hariri’s murder, and is pressuring the Lebanese government — headed by Saad Hariri, son of the slain Rafik — to end all cooperation with the tribunal, which it accuses of promoting an American and Israeli agenda to weaken the Iran-backed party.

Many Lebanese fear that an indictment of Hizballah personnel could lead to sectarian clashes between rival Sunni and Shi’ite factions. “Accusing a Shi’ite group of killing a Sunni leader leads to a catastrophe,” Ali Khreiss, a Shi’ite MP and ally of Hizballah said Tuesday.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Hizbullah’s Throne of Bayonets

By Jonathan Spyer

It is obvious that given the true balance of power in Lebanon, the special tribunal investigating the murder of former prime minister Rafik Hariri is largely a virtual exercise. As Michael Young pointed out in a column in the Beirut Daily Star this week, tribunal prosecutor Daniel Bellemare is currently on his end of year vacation and left without submitting draft indictments. This means that indictments cannot be issued before mid-January at the earliest.

Once they are issued, they will not be made public, but rather will be subject to the perusal of a pre-trial judge, Daniel Fransen. This process is likely to take up to a further two months, meaning that the very earliest a trial could begin would be late March or April.

At that point, if Hizbullah members are indicted, the movement will declare its nonrecognition of the court, and in real world terms, that is likely to be that.

But if this is the case, and it is, why is the Iran/Syria/Hizbullah camp so clearly jittery and worried by the events surrounding the tribunal? Why the wishful thinking in the newspapers evident this week, when the pro-Hizbullah Al-Diyar published a statement by Saad Hariri apparently abandoning the tribunal, which turned out to be entirely fictional?

More importantly, why the stark and repeated threats from Hizbullah and Iranian officials regarding the consequences if the Tribunal is not abandoned?

Hizbullah this week reiterated its promise to “cut off the hand” of anyone trying to arrest members of the movement. Many analysts saw the recent visit of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Lebanon as an act of preemptive intimidation. He was reminding Hizbullah’s opponents just how strong it is, and just how determined its backers.

Even Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei descended this week from his lofty heights to issue a fatwa regarding the tribunal. “This tribunal is receiving orders from elsewhere,” he said in a meeting with the emir of Qatar, before pronouncing “any ruling it hands down” as “null and void.”

Hizbullah immediately hailed his words, interpreting them in the most unambiguous terms as supporting its war to the end on the tribunal. A Hizbullah MP, Walid Sucarieh, said that the statement was meant to “tell those who seek strife through the indictment: stay right there. We won’t stand idle while the fire is burning our homes.”

SO WHAT is the reason for the very obvious concern of the pro-Iranian axis regarding the tribunal, even though there is no way that its indictments or rulings can be enforced?…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



House Bombings Kill Five in Iraq

Two houses were blown up on Friday south of Baghdad, killing five people, including three children, and wounding four other people, Iraqi police said.

The pre-dawn attacks occurred within four hours of each other in Qariya al-Asriya near Iskandiriya, a city considered an Al-Qaeda stronghold before the militants were pushed out by Iraqi and American forces in 2008.

Police said among those killed were a man, a woman and three children — one of them a one-year-old — and the wounded included a woman, a young man, and two children.

The houses, which belonged to Shiite Muslim families, were blown up using dynamite, with the first attack occurring at 1:00 am (2200 GMT Thursday) and the second at 5:00 am, according to police. Also on Friday, gunmen killed two policemen and burned their vehicle in an ambush in the city of Samarra, north of the Iraqi capital, police said.

“Two members of the federal police were carrying out a patrol in the Qadissiya area when they were stopped and killed by unknown assailants carrying automatic weapons,” said a police official, on condition of anonymity.

The attackers “then burned the (police) vehicle with the driver still inside and the other outside. They managed to escape,” the official said.

The same day, four members of the Sahwa militia which opposes Al-Qaeda, including a leader, were wounded by a bomb while driving in Al-Muqdadiya, northeast of Baghdad, police said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Iran Poised to Execute Student Accused of Being Kurd Terrorist

A 29-year-old Iranian student activist is facing execution tomorrow unless an international campaign launched by human rights groups can persuade authorities to quash his conviction.

Habibollah Latifi, a politically active student of civil engineering at Azad University, in the south-western province of Ilam , is scheduled to be executed in Sanandaj prison tomorrow, following what his lawyer has described as an unfair trial.

His family is pleading with the international community to urge Iran to stop his execution.

“We do not have any other hope than reaching out to the international community,” Latifi’s sister Elahe told the Guardian. “Please help my innocent brother not to be executed while people of the world are celebrating Christmas.”

Latifi, a member of the Kurd minority in Iran, was arrested on 23 October 2007 in Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province, and was taken to prison where he has been kept for the past three years and two months.

Iran says he was a member of Kurdish Independent Life party (PJAK), an armed opposition group and has convicted him of Muharebeh (enmity against God) but his family denies his connection with PJAK and claims the charges were fabricated .

“This is nonsense, they’re just angry with his political activities as a student and have charged him with the false claim that he was a member of PJAK, that’s absolutely a lie, it’s just an excuse for them to execute him,” his sister said.

According to Amnesty International, his trial was held behind closed doors and his lawyer was not allowed to be present to defend him. His death sentence was upheld by the appeal court in Sanandaj on 18 February 2009.

Human rights advocate Peter Tatchell, who has campaigned in defence of Iran’s ethnic minorities, said: “Iran has a long history of persecuting its Kurdish ethnic minority population, including framing peaceful, lawful Kurdish rights activists on false charges.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Iraqi Dad Says Killed Daughter Linked to Al-Qaida

When police came hunting for a 19-year-old woman they believed had been recruited by al-Qaida to be a suicide bomber in a town north of Baghdad, they found she was already dead: Slain by her father, who told police he strangled his daughter out of shame and then cut her throat. The killing of Shahlaa al-Anbaky, reported by police Friday, appeared to be from an unusual melding of motives — part to defend the family honor, part to prevent her from joining the militants. But how much of each weighed in her father’s mind remains unclear, with police still investigating the details.

Al-Qaida has been recruiting women for suicide attacks because they can pass police checkpoints more easily than men by concealing explosives under an abaya, a loose, black cloak that conservative Muslim women wear. Suicide bombers have been al-Qaida’s most lethal weapon in Iraq, killing hundreds of civilians and members of Iraq’s security forces. The slaying took place in the town of Mandali, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad in Diyala province, which only a few years ago was one of Iraq’s deadliest regions, torn by attacks by al-Qaida and Sunni insurgents and vicious sectarian killings between Sunnis and Shiites.

After Sunni tribal militias turned on al-Qaida, the province has become much safer, like much of Iraq. But al-Qaida militants still carry out deadly attacks in the area.

Authorities were still trying to put together a complete picture of the killing.

A Diyala police spokesman, Maj. Ghalib al-Karkhi, said security forces had information the young woman had ties to al-Qaida and raided her father’s home Thursday. When questioned by police, the father, Najim al-Anbaky, told police he killed his daughter a month earlier because he found out she intended to blow herself up in a suicide attack for al-Qaida.

The father, described by authorities as a small-time trader of chickens and sheep, led police to her grave in the backyard. The woman had been strangled and then her throat cut for good measure, al-Karkhi said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



New Mossad Chief to Apologise for Use of UK Passports in Dubai Killing

Tamir Pardo, who took over as Mossad’s chief earlier this month, will also promise that Israeli agents will never again be allowed to use fake British documents during operations abroad.

Mossad insiders say he will make the pledges to officials in London and, he hopes, in private meetings with the foreign secretary, William Hague, and the home secretary, Theresa May, as part of an urgent drive to rebuild relations with the UK government, thrown into disarray earlier this year.

In March Britain expelled Mossad’s station chief in London, a key foreign posting, after an investigation blamed Israel’s secret service for cloning 12 British passports that were found among 26 forged identity documents used by the hit squad that murdered Mahmoud al Mabhouh in January.

David Milliband, then foreign secretary, told MPs that Israel had shown a “profound disregard” for British sovereignty, adding: “The fact that this was done by a country which is a friend, with significant diplomatic, cultural, business and personal ties to the UK, only adds insult to injury.”

Mr Pardo, 57, who was deputy director of Mossad for the past three years, is said by a source involved in the planning of the operation to have argued against using British, Irish and Australian passports for the team sent to murder al Mabhouh in his hotel room.

But Meir Dagan, the Mossad chief who stepped aside this month, insisted that with so many visitors from those three countries travelling to Dubai, their passports would not be scrutinised. After the Dubai debacle, the source said, Mr Pardo warned Dagan that the “whole business will come home to haunt us”.

Mr Pardo, known as “T” to fellow Mossad officers since he joined the service 30 years ago, is said to regard the expulsion of the service’s top official in London as a blow to the organisation. Since then official collaboration between Mossad and the British agencies responsible for security at home and abroad, MI5 and MI6, has been badly dented, to the detriment of both.

But Mr Dagan bluntly refused to apologise over the use of the faked passports — let alone offer the guarantee demanded by Britain that the theft would not recur.

Mr Pardo’s apology and pledge during a visit to London that is expected early in January would be the first official acknowledgement by Israel that it was behind the assassination of the Hamas leader in Dubai. He is expected to brief officials on Mossad’s plans to provide Britain and Nato with increased intelligence over Iran’s nuclear weapons programme. Mossad has a network of undercover agents in the country. He also intends to increase Mossad’s role in Yemen and to spearhead the hunt for al-Qaeda’s new chief of military operations, Saif al-Adel, who Mossad believe is based in Somalia.

At the same time he wants to expand Mossad’s watch over the SVR, Russia’s foreign intelligence service, which is an increasing presence in Syria and Turkey — and is using both countries as launch pads from which to enter Europe. In his first briefing to senior staff after he took up his new post, Mr Pardo said Mossad had a key role to play in helping the West win what he called “the new Cold War”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



One Day Turkish Parliament Will Discuss Armenian Genocide

In his article entitled “Armenian resolution”, Amberin Zaman of Haberturk, addressed Turkish-Armenian processes in the light of Resolution 252 at the U.S. House of Representatives.

At the last moment, Armenians in the U.S. tried to get the draft resolution qualifying the Armenian massacres in 1915 as genocide put on the U.S. House agenda. However, more important issues were on the agenda, and the resolution remained undiscussed. It was also due to the Obama Administration. As during previous years, Turkey explored every avenue. Erdogan addressed a letter to President Obama, and Turkish FM Ahmet Davutoglu made it clear for Hillary Clinton Turkey would take steps if the Armenian resolution were adopted. So one more crisis over the recognition of the Armenian Genocide was resolved, the author writes.

It is common knowledge, however, that it was not the first instance nor will it be the last. U.S. Armenians will never give up their campaigns. On the contract, as the 100th anniversary of the tragedy nears, they will intensify their efforts.

So what is Turkey to do? Turks should ask themselves a question: what happened to the millions of Armenians that lived in the land for thousands of years. The subject was a taboo until the murder of Hrant Dink. There is hardly any information on the experiences of about 1,300,000 Armenians in the Ottoman Empire before 1915. A betrayal by a group of Armenians proved an occasion for Young Turks to punish the whole Armenian people. They were murdering women, children and old people or deporting them. The deportees were dying of hunger, diseases or at the hand of marauder gangs. Thousands of Armenians died in the Deir ez Zor. Some of them were converted into Islam, others saved by merciful Turks or Kurds.

The survivors’ victims are now justly demanding an end to the denial policy and expecting apologies. More and more of them demand restitution. Ratification of the Armenian-Turkish protocols would not have prevented the developments. It would have delayed the adoption of the Armenian Genocide bill for a while.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Christians Who Suffer for Their Faith at Christmas

As Christians the world over celebrate the miracle of the Jesus’s birth, there are many for whom this season is a time of tension and uncertainty, while others languish in prisons around the world, from Iran to Vietnam, simply because they have chosen to follow their faith.

Around 3,000 Christians are in prison in Eritrea, held without trial in appalling conditions, and suffering threats and beatings simply on account of their faith. In Iraq, where 52 people died in Our Lady of Salvation Catholic church in Baghdad when security forces attempted to free worshippers taken hostage by militants, some Christian communities have decided against Christmas celebrations, for fear of attacks by extremist groups.

In Egypt, Christians gathering in church for Coptic Christmas Eve mass on 7 January will be acutely aware of the drive-by shooting after mass in Nag Hammadi just one year ago that claimed the lives of eight Christians and a Muslim security official, and which was the precursor to further attacks on Christian communities in the surrounding area.

Christians in prison for their faith bear the weight of fear and uncertainty without the comfort of their community around them, and in some cases in solitary confinement, like Iranian Pastor Behrouz Sadegh-Khanjani. Initially arrested in January after being summoned to Shiraz to explain church activities, Pastor Khanjani was released on bail in March but rearrested on 16 June and sent to an infamous political prison, where he has spent much of his detention in solitary confinement. He has only had access to his lawyer once between his arrest and late November, while his health has deteriorated steadily due to the harsh and unsanitary conditions in the prison, where Christian prisoners are reportedly subjected to eight hours of interrogation a day, and some are kept in cramped conditions where they are unable to sleep.

Pastor Khanjani is charged with apostasy — leaving Islam, blasphemy and contact with the enemy, and is facing a possible death sentence. Also facing a death sentence is Pastor Yousef Nadarkhani, who was charged with apostasy on 13 October after questioning the Muslim monopoly on the religious instruction of children in Iran, which contravenes the Iranian constitution, under which a parent is permitted to raise children in their own faith. The written confirmation of the court’s sentence — the death penalty — was delivered on 13 November. His appeal is pending.

In Pakistan on 7 November, Asia Bibi, a Christian, is believed to have become the first woman to be handed a death sentence for blasphemy under the country’s controversial blasphemy laws, a dubious distinction. She has been in prison since the case against her was registered in June 2009 and her appeal is pending. So far nobody sentenced to death for blasphemy has been executed in Pakistan; many await a decision on their cases in prison, including Waji ul-Hassan, a Christian who has been on death row since 2002. Although the majority of blasphemy cases are brought against Muslims, for Christians and other minorities, once an allegation has been made, they and their family become potential targets for extra-judicial violence.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Traumatized Iraqi Christians Lie Low for Christmas

As they gathered to celebrate the birth of Jesus, the congregation here first contemplated death, represented by a spare Christmas tree decked with paper stars, each bearing a photograph of a member of a nearby church killed in a siege by Islamic militants in October.

The congregants on Friday night were fewer than 100, in a sanctuary built for four or five times as many. But they were determined. This year, even more than in the past, Iraqi’s dwindling Christian minority had reasons to stay home for Christmas.

“Yes, we are threatened, but we will not stop praying,” the Rev. Meyassr al-Qaspotros told the Christmas Eve crowd at the Sacred Church of Jesus, a Chaldean Catholic church. “We do not want to leave the country because we will leave an empty space.”

He added: “Be careful not to hate the ones killing us because they know not what they are doing. God forgive them.”

Throughout Iraq, churches canceled or toned down Christmas observances this year, both in response to threats of violence and in honor of the nearly 60 Christians killed in October, when militants stormed a Syrian Catholic church and blew themselves up. Since the massacre, more than 1,000 Christian families have fled Baghdad for the Kurdistan region in northern Iraq, with others going to Jordan or Syria or Turkey. Though the exact size of Iraq’s Christian population is unclear, by some estimates it has fallen to about 500,000 from a high of 1.4 million before the American-led invasion of 2003. Iraq’s total population is about 30 million.

This week, a new threat appeared on a Web site that said it represented the Islamic State of Iraq, a militant group that claimed responsibility for the October church siege. The Web site referred to a church in Egypt that it said was holding two women because they had converted to Islam, and vowed more carnage. “We swear to God, if there are only two of us left,” the text read, “one of the two will keep fighting you.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Turkish Man Goes on Trial for Plot to Kill Rabbis

A Turkish news agency says a court has released a man whom prosecutors accuse of plotting to murder Jewish rabbis and the Istanbul-based leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians.

The Anatolia agency says suspect Ismet Recber was freed pending the outcome of the trial following the first hearing Wednesday. Recber, a carpenter, faces up to 15 years in prison if found guilty of plotting to kill Patriarch Bartholomew I. He denies the accusations. Anatolia says the man was arrested after an anonymous letter was sent to authorities claiming that a suspect in a separate trial had chosen Recber to carry out the killings.

The separate trial involves an alleged secularist plot to bring down the Islam-oriented government.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Boom! Indian Space Scientists Watch in Horror as Rocket Explodes Minutes After Take-Off

This is the dramatic moment when India’s ambitious space programme suffered one of its biggest setback when an advanced communication satellite exploded within a minute after its launch.

A stunned Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) did not give the reason for the blast in the sky but an officer told IANS that there was a fault in the second stage of the launch.

‘The rocket’s first stage seemed to have performed normally. The problem seems to have cropped up in the second stage as the rocket didn’t get sufficient thrust,’ he said.

But another official insisted that even the first stage was a failure.

The multi-million pound 310 kg GSAT-5P satellite, was to serve the needs of the telecommunication sector and the weather department.

It was at 4.04 p.m. that ISRO launched the rocket, with the satellite, in clear sky from the Sriharikota space centre, about 80 km from Chennai.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



In Afghanistan, Shifting Political Fortunes

IN KABUL Ethnic chauvinism, which has long bedeviled this fiercely tribal country and fueled a destructive civil war in the early 1990s, is erupting again in a tense dispute over recent parliamentary elections. The poll, held in turbulent wartime conditions, disenfranchised several hundred thousand voters from the ethnic Pashtun majority and unexpectedly empowered the long-persecuted Hazara minority.

The fight has brought the political system to a standstill, pitted fledgling democratic institutions against one another and raised the specter of sectarian strife. It has also further weakened the grip of President Hamid Karzai, a Pashtun, whose ethnic support is splintering under the combined pressure and persuasion of Taliban insurgents based in many rural Pashtun enclaves.

The Hazaras, meanwhile, are feeling their oats. Highly organized and motivated, this fast-rising Shiite Muslim group has essentially become a political party. It is eagerly embracing Afghanistan’s imperfect new democratic system as a steppingstone to power while larger, Sunni Muslim ethnic groups remain caught up in personality-based politics and warlord rivalries.

“We have been legally elected, and we are ready to go to parliament. We have the passion of a new generation behind us,” said Mohammed Alizada, one of 11 Hazara candidates who swept the elections in Ghazni, winning all seats in the Pashtun-majority province. “We will do our best to represent the whole province,” he said. “If our Pashtun brothers failed to vote, perhaps this will be a positive lesson for them in the future.”

‘No election at all here’

Pashtun leaders in Ghazni, however, assert that they were not given the chance to vote because of Taliban threats and poor security. Several Pashtun legislators from there, stunned after losing their seats, mounted a legal campaign to have the election results overturned nationwide, and the Supreme Court is reviewing the case. Of 249 seats in the lower house, 50 went to Hazaras, an outsize portion of power compared with their numbers.

“There was no election at all here. The Taliban are everywhere, and not a single government employee dares come to work,” said Abdul Bari, an educator reached by phone in Ghazni’s Andar district. More than 70,000 people registered to vote in Andar, which is virtually all Pashtun, but only three ballots were cast. “I have no doubt the Hazaras are eager to help the province, but 80 percent of the voters were disappointed,” Bari said. “We all want the election canceled.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



In Pakistan, No Cowering on Christmas

IN ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN Waris Masih spends his workdays sweeping and cleaning wide, tree-shaded streets, a job shared by many of the Christians who live in this serene capital city. The other afternoon, he turned his focus toward beautifying one of the trees in his own neighborhood — using lights, baubles and garland.

Aided by a throng of enthusiastic youths, Masih, 50, was spreading the Christmas spirit inside one of Islamabad’s “Christian colonies,” crowded shantytowns that stand in stark contrast to the city’s manicured lawns and stately villas. Nearby, others were constructing a wooden Nativity scene.

Asked whether they were afraid, they offered resounding nos.

It was, perhaps, a surprising answer in Muslim-majority Pakistan at the end of 2010, a year when animosity toward religious minorities appeared to escalate. Islamist insurgents killed hundreds in bombings on mosques belonging to minority Muslim sects such as Ahmadis and Sufis. Less than 5 percent of Pakistanis are Christians, and tensions rose further last month after a court sentenced a Christian woman to death for blasphemy, triggering debate over laws that critics say promote religious intolerance.

Instead of cowering, though, several Christians in Islamabad said they planned to make their celebrations as public as ever, and maybe even more so.

“There are, no doubt, problems for minorities in this country . . . but we have to live with them. This is our country,” Masih said. “It’s a great occasion for us.”

The municipal government has backed them up. Last year, city workers were instructed to adorn one tree on public property. This year — the 50th anniversary of Islamabad’s founding — they decorated 12, according to Razaman Sajid, a city spokesman.

“The efforts of the Christian community stand tall and need due acknowledgement,” Razaman said.

Christmas coincides with a national holiday in Pakistan, the birth date of the country’s founder, Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Though Jinnah envisioned Pakistan as a refuge for India’s Muslim minority, he advocated that it should be a place for all faiths.

More than six decades later, however, Pakistan still struggles with the role of Islam — and of other religions — in society, and with implementing Jinnah’s ideals. In recent decades, the views of hard-line Muslim clerics have gained strength, as have shocking attacks on minorities.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



India: Mumbai Terror Fears as Police Hunt for Four Militants Believed to be Planning Holiday Attack

Mumbai is on high alert after a fresh terror scare.

Police launched a manhunt in India’s financial and entertainment capital on Friday for four alleged Pakistani militants authorities believe entered Mumbai to carry out an attack, a top police official said.

Police have received credible information that at least four men belonging to the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group have entered the city and were planning to strike during the holiday season, according to Mumbai police commissioner Himanshu Roy.

Police have set up checkpoints along major roads in the city, put additional men on patrol duty at public places and released computer photographs of the four suspects.

‘The four men are planning violent attacks that are going to cause destruction,’ Roy said.

Indian authorities blame the Lashkar-e-Taiba for a deadly three-day terror attack in Mumbai in November 2008 in which 166 people were killed.

‘The four have recently arrived in Mumbai. We believe the threat is serious,’ Roy said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



No Truce in Afghanistan: Dramatic Pictures Capture U.S. Troops Repelling a Taliban Attack on Christmas Morning

These stunning images show US troops repelling a Taliban attack on a combat post in eastern Afghanistan.

Soldiers from the 2nd Platoon Bravo Company 2-327 return fires upon a sudden assault on Combat Outpost Badel in Kunar province, near the Pakistan border.

The primitive hilltop base overlooks a valley, but stands in the shadows of larger mountains.

Taliban insurgents attack the outpost an average of seven times a week. Quiet days or evenings often erupt with automatic weapons fire and the explosive crash of mortar rounds.

Elsewhere, Afghan and foreign troops killed two men during a raid in downtown Kabul after receiving a ‘credible threat’ to attack the U.S. Embassy in the capital, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said on Saturday.

ISAF confirmed Friday’s operation after Afghan security officials had said foreign troops were involved in a night raid that targeted a compound belonging to a private security firm.

The raid came after Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security said this week it had separately detained three people it said had been instructed by the Pakistani Taliban to attack the presidential palace and U.S. embassy in Kabul.

‘After receiving a credible threat to attack the U.S. Embassy, ISAF coordinated with Afghan security forces to move on an area of interest,’ ISAF said in a statement late on Friday. ‘Intelligence reports indicated there were two vehicles parked there that were thought to be loaded with explosives.’

As the troops moved in, they were shot at and during the clash two men, said by Afghan officials to be Afghan security guards, were killed, two wounded and 13 more apprehended, ISAF said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Son of Notorious Insurgent Leader is Arrested

A key member of an insurgent network in the Afghan-Pakistani region has been seized recent days, Pakistani military intelligence sources told CNN on Friday. He is Nasiruddin Haqqani, son of Afghan insurgent leader Jalaluddin Haqqani, whose notorious group, called the Haqqani Network, operates in Afghanistan and Pakistan and is closely tied to the Taliban. Nasiruddin Haqqani was detained in recent days while driving from Peshawar to the tribal region of North Waziristan, the sources said. The United Nations says he is believed to be based out of Miram Shah in North Waziristan, where the network operates. The Pakistani military intelligence sources asked not to be named because they are not authorized to speak to the media. This arrest comes amid concerns among U.S. officials that Pakistan has not been aggressively confronting militants operating in the tribal regions. The Haqqani Network “has been at the forefront of insurgent activity in Afghanistan, responsible for many high-profile attacks,” the United Nations says. Bill Roggio, managing editor of The Long War Journal, a website that tracks terror-related events and trends, calls the top leadership a “family business.” The United Nations says it consists of Jalaluddin Haqqani’s three oldest sons, one of whom is Nasiruddin, who operates as an emissary for the network and spends a lot of time fundraising, the United Nations says. He apparently speaks Arabic and is a close aide to his father, the United Nations says. His brother, Sirajuddin, is described by the U.S. Treasury Department as the overall leader of the network and the leader of the Miram Shah Regional Military Shura. The United Nations says the Haqqani Network is believed to have three main sources of funds: Gulf region donations, drug trafficking, and al Qaeda payments.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan Suicide Bomb Kills Scores

A female suicide bomber killed more than 40 people today at a food distribution centre near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, Pakistani officials said.

The attack, believed to be the first suicide bombing by a woman in Pakistan, took place in Bajur, a tribal region where the military has twice declared victory over Taliban and al-Qaida insurgents.

It came a day after some 150 militants killed 11 soldiers in a co-ordinated assault in a neighbouring region where the army has also been tackling insurgents.

The woman wearing a burqa lobbed two hand grenades into the crowd waiting at a checkpoint outside the food aid distribution centre in the town of Khar before detonating her explosives vest, according to local police official Fazal-e-Rabbi Khan.

He said the victims were gathering to collect food tokens distributed by the World Food Programme and other agencies to people displaced by an army offensive against Taliban militants in the region in early 2009.

Local government official Tariq Khan said the blast also wounded 60 people, some of them critically. He, and another local official, Sohail Khan, said an examination of the human remains had confirmed the bomber was a woman.

Male suicide bombers often don the burqa as a disguise. In 2007, officials initially claimed Pakistan’s first female suicide bomber had killed 14 people in the north-west town of Bannu but the attacker was later identified as a man.

Hasan Askari Rizvi, a Lahore-based security and political analyst, said today’s suicide bombing appeared to be the first carried out by a woman in Pakistan.

“It is no surprise. They can use a woman, a child or whatever,” he said. “Human life is not important to them, only the objective they are pursuing.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Report: Karzai Open to Taliban Setting Up Office in Turkey

Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai said Friday that he’d welcome a Taliban office opening in Turkey, that country’s state-run news agency reported, adding that such a development could help peace talks in his war-torn nation.

Karzai made his remarks during a joint press conference with Turkish President Abdullah Gul and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, following a meeting of the three leaders at Istanbul’s Ciragan Palace. The Afghan president acknowledged that there have been discussions about Taliban officials setting up somewhere in Turkey “in order to facilitate reconciliation and integration,” according to the Turkish news agency Anadolu.

“If Turkey can be kind to provide such a venue we, the government of Afghanistan will be pleased and happy to see that facilitation (in) Turkey,” said Karzai.

The president referenced an article published earlier this week in the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph, in which former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan Mullah Zaeef said that having the Taliban set up an office in a neutral country may help bring about peace. Zaeef — who served time in the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and is now living openly in Kabul — suggested that a country like the United Arab Emirates, “which is not interested in interfering in Afghanistan like Pakistan or China,” would be a good option.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Taliban ‘Want Base in Neutral Third Country Before Peace Talks Begin’

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, the Taliban’s former ambassador to Pakistan, said meaningful talks were not possible until insurgent leaders had a safe base from which to negotiate.

“Taliban are condemned by the world. They have no address,” he said in the sitting room of the Kabul safe house where he now lives. “If I was a Taliban I would choose a country close to Afghanistan but neutral, like the United Arab Emirates, somewhere which is not interested in interfering in Afghanistan, like Pakistan or China.” A formal office, he added, would help the Taliban make the transition from fighters to politicians. Mullah Zaeef , once the international face of the Taliban, was arrested after 9/11 and spent almost four years in Guantanamo Bay.

Although he claims no longer to speak for the Taliban, his eventual release and privileged position in Kabul have led analysts to conclude he retains close contacts with his former comrades and that he would act as an intermediary in any peace talks.

Ahmed Rashid, a noted Taliban expert, said he had recently conducted interviews with five former insurgent leaders, who each said the Taliban wanted to open an office in a neutral country — such as one of the Gulf states, Germany, Turkey or Japan — now that their strongholds of Kandahar and Helmand were being hit by teams of special forces.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Taliban Launch Attacks Along North Pakistan Border

At least 11 soldiers and 24 militants have been killed in clashes near the Afghan border in north-west Pakistan, officials have said.

About 150 Taliban launched co-ordinated attacks against five Frontier Corps checkpoints in Mohmand tribal region, they said.

The Taliban said only two of their fighters had died.

The military has launched offensives in the region in recent months, but insurgent attacks have continued.

Amjad Ali Khan, administrator of Mohmand, confirmed that 11 soldiers had been killed following initial reports that three had died. He said 12 other soldiers had been injured.

Mr Khan said the Frontier Corps paramilitary troops had “repulsed” the militant attacks in the Baizai area which began at 0200 local time.

“The troops responded with artillery fire and raids by helicopter gunships, killing 24 militants,” he said.

“Seven of their bodies are in our possession.”

He said that the fighting ended later Friday morning.

However, Sajjad Mohmand, spokesman for the Taliban in Mohmand, told the BBC that only two insurgents had been killed in the clashes.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Violence Up in Afghanistan, UN Warns

Afghanistan is seeing higher levels of violence this year than last year at this time, with 20% more civilians killed and the number of “security incidents” up by 66%, the United Nations says in a new report. The number of civilians killed by the United States and its allies was lower, but insurgent attacks are significantly higher, meaning the overall number of civilian deaths is up. More than 2,400 civilians were killed, and more than 3,800 injured in the first 10 months of this year, the report says. More than three out of four of the casualties were caused by “anti-government elements,” it says. That’s a 25 percent increase on last year, it said. Deaths caused by U.S. troops and their allies were down 18 percent. “Assassinations” of civilians and police reached “unprecedented numbers” in August, and there were an average of three suicide attacks per week, the U.N. said in its quarterly report. The United Nations report, which was finalized December 10, also tracked widespread kidnapping of aid workers. A total of 134 were abducted between June and the end of October, the U.N. said. Most were freed quickly, but one Afghan was killed by his captors, the world body said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Matches U.S. Space Launches for First Time

Outwardly, it looked like just another big space launch — and those happen about once a week, from spaceports all around the world. But Friday’s blast-off of a rocket, carrying a Chinese GPS-style navigation satellite, from the Xi Chang Satellite Launch Center was different. It set a record for successful Chinese launches in one year: 15.

The launch represented another important milestone. For the first time since the chilliest days of the Cold War, another country has matched the United States in sheer number of rocket launches.

To some observers, the rapid acceleration of the Chinese space program is perfectly reasonable, even expected. With nearly 20 percent of the world’s population and the planet’s second-biggest economy by some measures, it stands to reason that China would join other advanced, spacefaring nations — and on a grander scale.

But more cautious (or alarmist, depending on your point of view) China-watchers question Beijing’s motives, and warn of potentially dire consequences if China comes to dominate the heavens.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Philippines: Fresh Attacks on Christians Mar Christmas

Fresh attacks against Christians marred the Christmas festival Saturday as church leaders condemned religious persecution and called for peace and reconciliation.

As Christian leaders highlighted the plight of believers facing the threat of attacks around the world, a bomb in a church during Christmas mass in the southern Philippines wounded six people, including the priest.

Military officials would not immediately name any suspects in the blast on Jolo island, but the island is a known bastion of the Abu Sayyaf, a group linked to the Al-Qaeda network.

“The explosion occurred at around 7:15 in the morning while the mass was going on. Six people were slightly wounded in the explosion,” military spokesman Lieutenant Randolph Cabangbang said. In the northern Nigerian city of Kano on Friday, suspected Islamist sect gunmen attacked a church during Christmas Eve services but were fought off by soldiers, a military spokesman said.

No one was hurt in the incident, but in the central Nigerian city of Jos the same day, an explosion killed at least eight people and wounded another eight, police said.

Gregory Yenlong, the information commissioner of Plateau State, of which Jos is the capital, said there had been rumours of attacks aimed at disrupting Christmas celebrations in recent days. There was no immediate indication however that the two incidents were linked and police in Jos cautioned that the cause of the explosion had not yet been established.

The latest violence came as a self-proclaimed jihadist said in an audiotaped threat that countries celebrating Christmas would be targeted for attacks, the SITE monitoring group said Friday. “Your (Christmas) fireworks will act as an alarm for the time of our devices to blow up — devices that we, not Santa Claus, are going to offer to you as gifts, to turn your night into day and your blood into rivers,” said a translation provided by SITE. The recording, directed to “the unbeliever and Christian countries celebrating Christmas,” bore the voice of a member of the Shumukh al-Islam forum, said the US-based monitor.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


WikiLeaks: Kiwi Mosque Spied on by US

The muslim community in New Zealand was probed by United States diplomats for signs of extremist behaviour — even visiting a mosque to listen to a preacher’s teaching.

Signs of a Kiwi al-Qaeda failed to emerge despite mosque visits, quiet dinners with members of the Muslim society and meetings with Islamic scholars.

The investigation is revealed in the latest WikiLeaks cables obtained by the Herald on Sunday.

The cables identify TV3 reporter Ali Ikram when relaying information from the New Zealand Muslim community.

The reference came from a 2006 dinner with “active members of the Muslim community”. Ikram’s name is recorded in a “confidential” memo.

Ikram was quoted as saying “many young and educated Muslim New Zealanders are, like their non-Muslim compatriots, leaving for Australia to find jobs”.

Ikram said the record of the dinner matched his memory — although he hadn’t expected the embassy guest, State Department officer Kaweem Koshaan, to report the details back to Washington.

“They probably didn’t have a lot to do down here,” he said. “It does speak of the level of paranoia about the potential threat of Muslim extremism anywhere in the world.”

Most of the cables reflect US concern over Wahhabi teachings creeping into Islam in New Zealand. Wahhabi advocates purging the religion of impurities.

The consular official who attended the Ponsonby mosque recorded his impressions of the clothing, posters, prayers and speech that were heard and seen. “The imam wore traditional Arabic garb, sometimes indicative of Wahhabi leanings.”

A spokesman for the mosque said the visit was not known. “He would have visited as a worshipper. Everyone is welcome.”

The intelligence report also talked about infighting in Canterbury mosques and again worry over possible Wahhabi influence.

It ended with a summary which warned Washington to beware of future extremism, saying “the ingredients are there”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Christmas Eve Explosions Kill 32 People in Nigeria After Two Churches Are Targeted

Explosions in Nigeria’s central region killed 32 people on Christmas Eve and six people died in attacks on two churches in the northeast of Africa’s most populous nation, officials said on Saturday.

On Friday night, a series of bombs were detonated during Christmas Eve celebrations in villages near the central city of Jos, killing at least 32 people while 74 were in a critical condition, the state police commissioner said.

Nigeria’s army chief said the blasts were not part of religious clashes which flare up sporadically as tensions bubble under the surface in a country where the population is split roughly equally between Muslims and Christians.

‘It (Jos explosions) was caused by a series of bomb blasts. That is terrorism, it’s a very unfortunate incident,’ Azubuike Ihejirika said in the southern city of Port Harcourt.

The attacks come at a difficult time for President Goodluck Jonathan, who is in running a controversial campaign ahead of the ruling party’s primaries on January 13.

A ruling party pact says that power within the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) should rotate between the mostly Muslim north and largely Christian south every two terms.

Jonathan is a southerner who inherited office when President Umaru Yar’Adua, a northerner, died during his first term this year and some northern factions in the ruling party are opposed to his candidacy.

Jonathan faces a challenge from former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for the ruling party nomination, and some fear any unrest in Africa’s most populous nation will be exploited by rivals during campaigning.

‘What happened (in Jos) was not religious it was political … the aim of the masterminds is to pit Christians against Muslims and start another round of violence,’ the governor of Plateau state said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Book Review — Holy Ignorance — by Olivier Roy

Every winter Fox News, seeking to stir up anger through the land, uncovers evidence of a war on Christmas. Secular humanists ignorant of religion and hostile to its traditions, someone in the studio will declare, want us to say “Happy Holiday” or give Kwanzaa equal standing. But Christmas, as its name suggests, is about Christ. These enemies of Christianity will stop at nothing to get their way. Not even Santa Claus is sacred to them.

Actually, as the brilliant French social scientist Olivier Roy points out in “Holy Ignorance,” it is those defending Christmas who are not being true to their traditions and teachings. There are no Christmas dinners in the Bible, which is why America’s Puritans, strict adherents of what that venerated text offers, never sat down by the raging fire awaiting St. Nick; indeed, they briefly banned Christmas in Massachusetts.

Yule as we celebrate it today owes more to Charles Dickens than to Thomas Aquinas. Our major solstice holiday is what Roy calls a “cultural construct” rather than a sectarian ceremony, which explains why Muslims buy halal turkeys and Jews transformed Hanukkah into a gift-giving occasion. Mistakenly believing that Christmas is sacred, those who defend it find themselves propping up the profane. The Christ they want in Christmas is a product not of Nazareth but of Madison Avenue.

Over the past few years, a number of theories have been offered about the rise of fundamentalism. Roy proposes the most original — and the most persuasive. Fundamentalism, in his view, is a symptom of, rather than a reaction against, the increasing secularization of society. Whether it takes the form of the Christian right in the United States or Salafist purity in the Muslim world, fundamentalism is not about restoring a more authentic and deeply spiritual religious experience. It is instead a manifestation of holy ignorance, Roy’s biting term meant to characterize the worldview of those who, having lost both their theology and their roots, subscribe to ideas as incoherent as they are ultimately futile. The most important thing to know about those urging the restoration of a lost religious authenticity is that they are sustained by the very forces they denounce.

Two tectonic shifts have produced the gap that fundamentalism fills. One concerns the question that has dominated the sociology of religion for more than a century: Will faith decline as modernity advances? The great thinkers of another era — Karl Marx, Émile Durkheim and Max Weber — believed that in one way or another it would. Today’s leading sociologists point to Jerry Falwell and Osama bin Laden to claim that it will not. Roy stands with yesterday’s giants. It is true, he concedes, that conservative religion is growing. But any talk of a religious revival is “an optical illusion.” Religion, he writes, “is both more visible and at the same time frequently in decline.” It cedes so much to the secular world that it can no longer offer a transcendental alternative to it.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The New Polytheism and Its Tempter Idols

Benedict XVI sounds the alarm. Forgetfulness of the one God clears the way for a world dominated by a plurality of new gods with seductive faces. A voyage among the devotees of modern paganism

ROME, December 9, 2010 — “Polytheism”: this word echoed like thunder, last October, in a speech by Benedict XVI at the synod of the bishops of the Middle East, the very birthplace of the one God made man, Jesus, and of the most powerful forms of monotheism in history, Judaism and Islam.

“Credo in unum Deum” is the mighty chord that gives rise to Christian doctrine. But for Joseph Ratzinger, pope theologian, polytheism is anything but dead. It is the perennial challenge that still rises up today against faith in the one God.

“Let us remember all the great powers of the history of today,” the pope continued at the synod. Anonymous capital, terrorist violence, drugs, the tyranny of public opinion are the modern divinities that enslave man. They must fall. They must be made to fall. The downfall of the gods is the imperative of yesterday, today, and always for believers in the one true God.

But today’s polytheism is not made up only of dark powers. Its many gods also have friendly faces, and the ability to seduce.

It is the “gay science” prophesied by Nietzsche more than a century ago, which offers every single man “the greatest advantage”: that of “setting up his own ideal and deriving from it his law, his joys, and his rights.”

It is the triumph of the individual free will, without the yoke of a tablet of the law anymore, only one for everyone because it is written by just one intractable God.

That admiration for the “Genius of Christianity” which had inflamed Chateaubriand and the Romantics is today giving up ground to an enthusiastic rediscovery of the “Genius of paganism,” the title of a book by the French anthropologist Marc Augé.

In Italy, another anthropologist, Francesco Remotti, is lashing out against “L’ossessione identitaria,” the title of his latest book, and reproaches the pope, in another of his books in letter form, for his stubborn proceeding “against nature,” against a modernity that instead offers the delights of polytheism, so fluid, pluralist, tolerant, liberating.

THE “SPIRIT OF ASSISI”

Of course, the current revival of polytheism is not bringing the cults of Jupiter and Juno, Venus and Mars, back into vogue. But the philosophy of the learned pagans of the Roman empire is again blossoming intact in the reasoning of many modern proponents of “weak thought.” And not only of these. Those who today reread, sixteen centuries later, the dispute between the monotheist Ambrose, the holy patron of Milan, and the polytheist Symmachus, a senator of pagan Rome, are strongly tempted to agree with the latter, when he says: “What does it matter by what path each one seeks, according to his own judgment, the truth? It is not by one road alone that one may reach such a great mystery.”…

English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

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

General


A Wave of Christianophobia is Sweeping the World

This Christmas season, Christians are under assault around the world.

Certainly a focus of the problem is the Middle East, where Islamic extremists consider anyone who holds another faith to be a heretic, often subject to execution. But it’s surprising to learn that Christian groups report heinous persecution on almost every continent. And for them, the nation considered the worst place to live is North Korea.

There, believers must worship in secret, and if caught they are imprisoned, tortured and sometimes killed.

North Korea may be the most brutal of the non-Muslim states, but it is far from alone at this. Bhutan forbids the building of churches. In Uzbekistan, Christians are hated, and authorities cut off their water and electricity trying to drive them away. In Azerbaijan, even after churches register with the government, police shut some of them down. In Belarus, the government forces churches to register, and that takes several years. In China, “unregistered” Christians are beaten and imprisoned.

In a report to the European Parliament last month, the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life said that while Muslims and Jews face significant persecution, “Christians faced some sort of harassment in two-thirds of all countries,” or 133 states.

Why? The faith preaches tolerance and eschews violence, though of course not every Christian lives up to its tenets. But Christianity is the world’s largest religion. Almost one-third of the world’s people identify themselves as Christian. Still, in many places the religion labors under the perception that it is a vehicle of Western imperialism, and its adherents are the wealthy oligarchy of Europe and the United States. It doesn’t help that Christians aggressively proselytize.

However, the truth is that almost 400 million Christians live in Africa, 511 million in Latin America and about 200 million in Asia. Those people certainly aren’t Western imperialists. That’s half the religion’s population, and among them are the world’s poorest people.

While persecution persists around the world, the most brutal examples come from the Islamic world, of course. Christianity was born in the Middle East, and Christians have lived there since the first century — long before Islam was born. But they earn no respect there now. The most visible example is Iraq, where extremists detonated explosives in a church two months ago, killing more than 70 people. Because of that and other attacks, Christians are fleeing, and those who remain are asking for their own dedicated community in the north.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



‘Jihadist’ Issues Christmas Bombing Threat

A “jihadist” in an audiotaped threat said fireworks displays will set off terrorist bombs in countries celebrating Christmas, the SITE monitoring group said.

The recording, titled “The Zero Hour has arrived” and directed to “the unbeliever and Christian countries celebrating Christmas,” lasts one minute, three seconds and bears the voice of a member of the Shumukh al-Islam forum, said the US-based monitor.

The speaker, according to SITE, said that failure to heed warnings to cease bloodshed in Muslim countries would result in attacks. “Your (Christmas) fireworks will act as an alarm for the time of our devices to blow up — devices that we, not Santa Claus, are going to offer to you as gifts, to turn your night into day and your blood into rivers,” he said in a translation provided by SITE. The threat, coming from a single individual on a forum reportedly linked to the Al-Qaeda network, is reminiscent of last year’s failed Christmas bombing of a US airliner by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who wore explosives stitched to his underwear, in a plot attributed to Al-Qaeda

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101224

Financial Crisis
» Italy: Family Savings Steering Clear of State Bonds
 
USA
» Skype Technologies Says it Will Offer Refunds to Customers After Outages
» Unlike Intel Chief, Congress Knew About Britain Terror Plot, Rep. Peter King Says
 
Canada
» Al Qaeda Threatens 100 Egyptian-Canadian Copts Over Conversions to Christianity
 
Europe and the EU
» Christmas: Italian-Made Exports Booming
» EU Challenges Sweden’s Wolf Hunt Policy
» Germany: Bribery Scandal Hits Foreign Ministry
» Italian Restaurants Keep Three-Star Michelin Rating
» Naked Aphrodite on Cyprus Passport Causes Stir
» Switzerland: Mounting Pressure on the Italian Mafia is Driving Illegal Business Into Switzerland, Where Police Say the Battle Against Crime Rings Has Become a Priority.
» The Souring of Turkey’s European Dream
 
North Africa
» Tunisia-USA: Limited Trade, Algeria Main Partner in Maghreb
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Shoah: Yad Vashem, Two Third of Victims Identified So Far
 
Middle East
» Caroline Glick: Slouching Towards Teheran
» Saudi Police Shoot Dead Al Qaeda Suspect Disguised as Woman After He Opened Fire on Troops at Checkpoint
 
South Asia
» Christmas in Pakistan: Christian’s Demonstrations Postponed for Fear of Clashes
» Indonesia: Christmas Decorations Are ‘Excessive’ And ‘Hurt Muslims’ Feelings’
» Pakistani Outposts Struck by Large Taliban Assault
» Ratzinger’s Best Pupils Are in Sri Lanka and Kazakhstan
 
Culture Wars
» Catholic Church Strips US Hospital of Affiliation Over Abortion
» Italy Calls on EU to Withdraw Schoools Diary That Leaves Out Christmas
» Motor Vehicles Denies License to Muslim Woman
» UK: Religion: Respecting the Minority
 
General
» Holocaust Hegemony

Financial Crisis


Italy: Family Savings Steering Clear of State Bonds

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 20 — Italian households continued to avoid government bonds in 2009, most likely due to low interest rates. According to a report by Italy’s central bank, in 2009 households focused on current account deposits and postal savings accounts. The report stated that savings went towards foreign bonds (with more than a percentage-point increase) to the detriment of Italian bonds (-1.8%).(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Skype Technologies Says it Will Offer Refunds to Customers After Outages

Skype Technologies SA, the largest provider of international calls, will offer refunds to paying customers who haven’t been able to use its service because of an outage that lasted more than 30 hours.

About 20 million users, representing 90 percent of the traffic the company would normally expect, are now able to make calls, Chief Executive Officer Tony Bates said today in a blog posting, after an outage yesterday rendered the service unavailable to almost all global users.

Year-end holidays are Skype’s heaviest traffic period, Bates said in an interview this week. The disruption adds to challenges facing Skype as it tries to persuade companies to pay for calling and establish premium services, such as group video conversations, in the run-up to an initial public offering.

“We now know what caused a number of clients to actually crash,” Bates said in a video on the company’s blog. “We’ve been able to mitigate that crash risk and isolate that.”

He didn’t say what caused the crash and said the company had ruled out a malicious attack.

Skype will give pre-pay and pay-as-you-go users 30 minutes of free calling, and active subscribers will get a week’s extra subscription, the company said.

Skype has more than 560 million users. Of those, only 1.4 percent pay for the service, according to a regulatory filing. The Luxembourg-based company started as a way for consumers to chat for free.

What’s Working

Audio and video calls as well as instant-messaging capabilities are now working, the company said. Some features, such as group video calling, are still unavailable.

Rival service OoVoo LLC said it received 100,000 new registrations yesterday, double its previous record for peak usage. The New York-based company attributed the peak to defecting Skype users, Matt Houser, a spokesman for the company, said in an e-mail.

Skype said it will do a full post-mortem of the cause of the outage. It is using servers that normally support offline instant messaging and multiparty video calls to get its main products online, Bates said.

The company accounts for about 12 percent of international calling, according to the Washington-based research firm Telegeography.

EBay Inc., which bought Skype in 2005, sold most of its stake last year for about $2 billion to a group led by Menlo Park, California-based private-equity firm Silver Lake.

[Return to headlines]



Unlike Intel Chief, Congress Knew About Britain Terror Plot, Rep. Peter King Says

New York Rep. Peter King said Thursday that Congress knew for weeks about a police investigation into an al Qaeda-inspired plot in London even though the nation’s top intelligence official was unaware of the arrests this week.

“We’ve been aware of London for weeks,” King told Fox News Radio’s “Kilmeade and Friends.” “We knew that there was a plot in London and we knew that it was being monitored.”

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper was caught flat-footed in an interview this week with ABC News about the arrest of 12 men allegedly involved in the plot to attack targets in Britain.

Clapper, who was interviewed alongside other top national security officials in the administration, was painfully silent for a several seconds after Diane Sawyer asked him directly about the takedown in Britain that day during the course of a discussion about what the U.S. is doing to prevent another attempted terror attack.

Clapper then quietly turned his head and said, “London?” White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan stepped in to explain that the British had informed U.S. officials about the plot that morning.

“Oh,” Clapper said.

In the Fox News interview, King noted that London was among the cities in Europe that U.S. and Western intelligence officials had publicly identified in September as potential targets for al Qaeda and its allies.

“That’s why I was really surprised he said that,” he said. “There are major plots against Europe right now and for 12 people to be arrested in London is a big deal. It’s not like 12 guys going through stop signs.”

           — Hat tip: SF [Return to headlines]

Canada


Al Qaeda Threatens 100 Egyptian-Canadian Copts Over Conversions to Christianity

Two episodes of the very “Christianophobia” described by Benedict XVI in his address to the Curia. A website close to Al Qaeda publishes a list of “dogs in diaspora” responsible for conversions. In Somalia, the Islamists destroy and burn down an “underground” Christian library.

Vancouver (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Canadian newspapers report that more than 100 Arab-Canadian Christians have been put on a list published by website close to Al Qaeda, apparently charged with encouraging conversions from Islam. The website Shumukh-al-Islam, often seen as an Al Qaeda propaganda tool, has created a list with photos, addresses and phone numbers of Coptic Christians, most with dual Egyptian and Canadian nationality, who spoke openly against Islam.

Three web pages, in classical Arabic, entitled “Complete information on Copts” are meant to “identify and call by name all the Copts in the world who hope to defame Islam” and refers to them as “dogs in diaspora”.

In the website forum a member, who goes by the name “Son of a sharp sword,” writes: “We will return to Islam and all the mujahideen will cut off their heads.” One of the people included on the list told reporters: “This is a direct threat to our lives. They are trying to inform one another in the hope that someone can carry out this threat. It could be here, or in Egypt. “ Some of the people only found out they were on the list when the Canadian security services contacted them. The existence of such sites is often criticized even by the defenders of freedom of expression, but some security experts say that in reality they are a great resource for those fighting terrorism.

This episode, and what we report now, testify to the very concrete reality Benedict XVI’s warning contained in his speech to the Roman Curia on December 20 on the growing scale of Christianaphobia in the world, and are linked to Al Qaeda threats launched against Christians in Iraq as “legitimate targets”. Here is the example of an episode that occurred in Somalia. On December 16 militants of Al-Shabaab, the militant Islamic group, destroyed a Christian library in the district of Luuq. After vandalizing the premises, the militants took all of the shop’s material, books, Bibles, audio and video material, to the town centre and set flames to it after midday prayer.

The District Commissioner of Al-Shabaab in Luuq, Sheikh Farhaan Abdi Elmoghe, said the discovery of the library was “a blow to misguided Somali Christians”. The library was hidden in an abandoned farm on the River Juba. It seems that it is normal for persecuted Somali Christians to bury books and religious material, because of intense persecution by Muslims. One of the leaders of the “underground Church” said that the library served as an “underground” school and was one of the largest and best supplied the south of the country. Al-Shabaab has openly said it wants to erase Christianity from Somalia, where last year at least six Christians were killed.

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

Europe and the EU


Christmas: Italian-Made Exports Booming

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 13 — Made in Italy food has seen a 10% increase in this Christmas period, and will be seen on Christmas tables the world over. The most popular items include wines, sparkling wines, grappa and liquors, panettoni (spiced brioche with sultanas), cheeses, salami and cold pork meat, and pasta, headed abroad to the tune of 2.2 billion euros this Christmas.

This is the figure by Coldiretti (Italian national farmers federation), which says that leading the rankings is sparkling wine, which abroad has seen a record increase of 21% in exports.

Among the newest customers of Made in Italy sparkling wine are Russia and Japan. Overall it has been estimated that about 150 million bottles of sparkling wine will be consumed abroad in 2010 out of an overall production of about 340 million.

As concerns the entire wine sector, there was a 9% increase which might even reach 3.5 billion euros at the end of the year as concerns overall 2010 turnover for foreign markets, on which it is the main national agro-food export. Also in high demand are national bread, pastry and biscuit products, starting from the traditional panettone. Excellent results were also seen for Italian cheeses, as well as Italian pasta.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Challenges Sweden’s Wolf Hunt Policy

The European Commission has issued a new challenge to Sweden’s wolf hunt policy, with the EU environment commissioner warning the government against letting the hunt begin before it receives answers to its questions.

Swedish authorities announced on Friday that hunters will be allowed to cull 20 wolves in 2011. Wolf hunting in Sweden resumed this year following a 46-year ban.

The Swedish Environmental Protection Agency said that from January 15th to February 15th, 2011, licensed hunters will be permitted to shoot 20 wolves, down from the quota of 27 animals this year.

The Swedish parliament decided last year to limit the wolf population to 210 animals spread out in 20 packs, with 20 new pups per year, for a period of five years by issuing hunting permits in regions where wolves have recently reproduced.

EU Environment Commissioner Janez Potocnik wrote a letter to Swedish Environment Minister Andreas Carlgren, saying, “Several aspects of the Swedish wolf policy raise serious questions.”

Both the licensed hunting of wolves and the set limit of the number of wolves in the country, as well as plans for the transfer of wolves from other countries, include elements that seem incompatible with EU rules for the conservation of predatory animals, Potocnik stressed.

Potocnik questioned the motive for the licensed hunt, namely that it would increase the local population’s acceptance for the wolf population, but Carlgren reiterated the reason in his response to Potocnik without commenting on the alternative methods available that Potocnik stated in his letter.

Carlgren referred instead to the assessment that European predatory animal experts had previously done on the Swedish hunt. They observed that Sweden has very good control over the number of predatory animals and the hunt for them and that licensed hunting in January this year was justifiable.

If the hunt proceeds, Potocnik said that he would propose the commission formally complain to the government for failing to comply with EU environmental legislation.

The European Commission asked the Swedish government for a response in the summer to a number of questions about the scientific basis for the controversial licensed hunting of wolves. Several environmental groups have complained to the commission about the hunt.

The Swedish Society for Nature Conservation (Naturskyddsföreningen, SSNC) believes that the government should stop the licensed hunt next month, especially in light of the EU Commission’s serious criticisms.

“We consider the hunt incompatible with EU law partly because it hampers the preservation of a vigourous wolf population. They are so seriously inbred and vulnerable, every wolf is important for the animal’s long-term survival,” Chairman Mikael Karlsson told news agency TT.

“Now that the commission is so clear, it would behoove the government to follow suit and not proceed further. The questions raised by the commission in August were serious. There is no scientific support for the limit of 210 wolves. Sweden should not get involved with this hunt,” said Karlsson.

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



Germany: Bribery Scandal Hits Foreign Ministry

German embassy workers in Africa, South America and the former Soviet Union have been “systemically” selling visas to human trafficking rings, according to a report in news weekly Der Spiegel.

The Foreign Ministry and the police are reportedly investigating eight cases on suspicion of trafficking and accepting bribes. Those accused are natives of the respective countries, and are thought to have systematically handed out visas ordered by the traffickers.

The embassy workers allegedly received several hundred euros in cash to overlook false information in the visa applications.

Suspects have been questioned in the embassies by German police and released. The police believe the smuggling rings are being orchestrated from within Germany.

According to Der Spiegel, some of the women brought into Germany by this route were subsequently made to work in Hamburg brothels.

Spokesman for the German state prosecutors Martin Steltner confirmed that an investigation was under way, but would not comment on any details.

A similar scandal broke in 2004 when it was revealed that several thousand illegal visas were granted by the German embassy in Kiev, Ukraine.

At the time, the so-called “Volmer Order” of March 2000 came under particular criticism for its stipulation to embassies: “When in doubt, grant freedom to travel.”

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



Italian Restaurants Keep Three-Star Michelin Rating

Lombardy remains region with highest number of ‘star’ eateries

(ANSA) — Milan, November 24 — Six Italian restaurants have retained their top three-star ratings in the 2011 edition of the Michelin Guide Italy, a ‘bible’ for international gourmets.

The six are the Sorriso di Soriso near Novara; Le Calandre at Sarmeola di Rubano near Padua; Dal Pescatore at Canneto sull’Oglio near Mantua; Florence’s Enoteca Pinchiorri; Da Vittorio, in Brusaporto, near Bergamo; and Heinz Beck’s La Pergola at the Rome Hilton.

The number of Italian restaurants awarded a two-star rating also remained the same, at 37, although this included two exits and two new entries.

The new entries in were Jasmin in Chiusa, near Bolzano; and Bracali, in the seaside Tuscan town of Massa Marittima, in the Grosetto area; while dropping to a one-star rating were L’Olivo in Capri and Arquade in San Pietro in Cariano, near Verona.

The number of eateries with a one-star rating rose from 229 in the 2010 guide to 233, with 32 new entries.

Lombardy was the the region with the greatest number of restaurants boasting Michelin stars, 52, followed by Piedmont which had 37, although it had the highest number of new entries, six.

Bolzano and Cuneo were the provinces with the highest number of establishments with stars, 15, followed by Naples with 14.

The 56th edition of the Italian version of the Michelin Guide was presented here on Wednesday.

Aside from quality restaurants, the ‘red’ guide reviewed hotels, holiday farms and bed & breakfast places, and there was also a rating based on price.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Naked Aphrodite on Cyprus Passport Causes Stir

NICOSIA (AFP) — A picture depicting a naked Aphrodite on the new biometric passports being issued by Cyprus has caused a stir, with diplomats raising concern that it could offend some Islamic nations.

According to Phileleftheros newspaper, diplomats were outraged upon seeing the image, claiming the interior ministry should first have consulted with the foreign ministry to iron out any issues regarding foreign policy.

The ancient goddess is widely accepted as the symbol of the eastern Mediterranean holiday island and is used by its tourism organisation on its “Love Cyprus” advertising campaign abroad.

Interior Minister Neoclis Sylikiotis, whose office is tasked with issuing the passports, dismissed suggestions the new passports would prove offensive abroad.

“There isn’t a problem with the passports. They have already been issued and are already in use by the public,” he told reporters.

According to local legend, Aphrodite rose from the sea off the island’s coast and a naked statue of her can be seen on display at the Cyprus Museum in Nicosia.

The interior ministry’s permanent secretary, Lazaros Savvides, said the passports issued since December 13 have not so far created any problems but pledged to look into the issue after the Christmas holidays.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Mounting Pressure on the Italian Mafia is Driving Illegal Business Into Switzerland, Where Police Say the Battle Against Crime Rings Has Become a Priority.

The latest annual report by the Federal Police Office (Fedpol) was made public on Sunday and stated that action had to be taken before organised crime from Italy could gather a comfortable base.

“The N’Drangheta (Calabrian mafia) is a clear priority in Fedpol work this year,” spokesman Stefan Kunfermann said.

Fedpol reviewed a report last summer that found the N’Dragheta — one of the more violent of the Italian crime gangs — had gone beyond money laundering. Police believe the crime ring has also established interests in construction, property and catering in Switzerland. Kunfermann said the group also uses the country for large-scale drug trafficking and as a hideout for wanted members.

Stephanie Oesch, a Zurich University researcher and author of a book looking at organised crime and the Swiss financial sector, said the groups activities have increased “greatly”.

Oesch estimates the crime ring has filtered between SFr20 billion and SFr30 billion ($21-$31 billion) during the past five years through Swiss investments in catering, real estate, art and luxury goods.

A Swiss-Italian task force was set up between the two countries in 2009 to find ways of working together in the fight. That group will have its first meeting within the next year.

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



The Souring of Turkey’s European Dream

In the first of My Europe, a series in which writers look beyond the financial crisis, Orhan Pamuk laments a growing callousness to migrants and minorities

In the schoolbooks I read as a child in the 1950s and 1960s, Europe was a rosy land of legend. While forging his new republic from the ruins of the Ottoman empire, which had been crushed and fragmented in the first world war, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk did fight against the Greek army, but with the support of his own army he later introduced a slew of social and cultural modernisation reforms that were not anti- but pro-western. It was to legitimise these reforms, which helped to strengthen the new Turkish state’s new elites (and were the subject of continuous debate in Turkey over the next 80 years), that we were called upon to embrace and even imitate a rosy-pink — occidentalist — European dream.

As much as the schoolbooks of my childhood were texts designed to teach us why a line was to be drawn between the state and religion, why it had been necessary to shut down the dervish lodges, or why we’d had to abandon the Arab alphabet for the Latin, they were also overflowing with questions that aimed to unlock the secret of Europe’s great power and success. “Describe the aims and outcomes of the Renaissance,” the middle school history teacher would ask in his exam. “If it turned out we were sitting on as much oil as the Arabs, would we then be as rich and modern as Europeans?” my more naive classmates at lycee would say. In my first year at university, whenever my classmates came across such questions in class, they would fret over why “we never had an enlightenment”.

The 14th century Arab thinker Ibn Khaldun said that declining civilisations kept going by imitating their victors. Because there has never been a time when the Turks were colonised by a world power, “worshipping Europe” or “imitating the west” has never carried the damning, humiliating overtones described by Franz Fanon, VS Naipaul, or Edward Said; to look to Europe has been seen as a historical imperative or even a technical question of adaptation.

But this dream of a rosy-pink Europe, once so powerful that even our most anti-western thinkers and politicians secretly believed in it, has now faded. This may be because Turkey is no longer as poor as it once was. Or it could be because it is no longer a peasant society ruled by its army, but a dynamic nation with a strong civil society. And in recent years there has of course been the slowing down of talks between Turkey and the European Union, with no resolution in sight. Neither in Europe nor in Turkey is there a realistic hope that Turkey will join Europe in the near future. To admit to having lost this hope would be as crushing as to see relations with Europe breaking down entirely, so no one has the heart even to utter the words.

That Turkey and other non-western countries are disenchanted with Europe is something I know from my own travels and conversations. A major cause of the strain in relations between Turkey and the EU was most certainly the alliance forged by a sector of the Turkish army and leading media groups with nationalist political parties, and their successful campaign to sabotage negotiations. The same initiative triggered the prosecutions launched against me and many writers, the shooting of others, and the killing of missionaries and Christian clerics. There are also the emotional responses whose greater significance can best be explained by taking France as an example: over the past century, successive generations of the Turkish elite have faithfully taken France as their model, drawing on its understanding of secularism and following its lead on education, literature and art … so to have France emerge over the past five years as the country most vehemently opposed to the idea of Turkey in Europe has been hugely heartbreaking and disillusioning. It is, however, Europe’s involvement in the war in Iraq that has caused the keenest disappointment in non-western countries and, in Turkey, real anger. The world watched Europe being tricked by Bush into joining this illegitimate and cruel war, while showing immense readiness to be tricked.

When looking at the landscape of Europe from Istanbul or beyond, the first thing one sees is that Europe (like the European Union) is confused about its internal problems. It is clear that the peoples of Europe have a lot less experience than the Americans when it comes to living with those whose religion, skin colour, or cultural identity are different from their own, and that they do not warm to the prospect: this resistance makes Europe’s internal problems all the more intractable. The recent discussions in Germany on integration and multiculturalism are a case in point.

As the economic crisis deepens and spreads, Europe may, by turning in on itself, postpone its struggle to preserve the “bourgeois”, in Flaubert’s sense of the word, but that will not solve the problem. When I look at Istanbul, which becomes a little more complex and cosmopolitan with every passing year, and which now attracts immigrants from all over Asia and Africa, I have no trouble reaching this conclusion: the poor, unemployed and undefended of Asia and Africa who are looking for new places to live and work cannot be kept out of Europe indefinitely. Higher walls, tougher visa restrictions and ships patrolling borders in increasing numbers will only postpone the day of reckoning. Worst of all, anti-immigration politics and prejudices are already destroying the core values that made Europe what it was.

In the Turkish schoolbooks of my childhood there was no discussion of democracy or women’s rights, but on the packets of Gauloises that French intellectuals and artists smoked (or so we thought) were printed the words “liberté, égalité, fraternité” and these were much in circulation. “Fraternité” came to stand for the spirit of solidarity and resistance promoted by movements of the left. But being callous about the sufferings of immigrants and minorities, and castigating the Asians, Africans and Muslims now leading difficult lives in the peripheries of Europe — even holding them solely responsible for their woes — is not “brotherhood”.

One can understand how Europe might suffer anxiety and even panic as it seeks to preserve its great cultural traditions, profit from the riches it covets in the non-western world, and retain the advantages gained over so many centuries of class conflict, colonialism and internecine war. But if it is to protect itself, would it be better for Europe to turn inwards, or should it perhaps remember its core values, which once made it the centre of gravity for all the world’s intellectuals?

[JP note: Orhan Pamuk, pompous, Turkish poster-boy for the European liberal left, with not much to say and saying it badly. It seems incredible that a Turk should be lecturing Europeans about tolerance, but there you have it in the puffed-up, topsey-turvey world of vapid, faux-intellectual posturing.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tunisia-USA: Limited Trade, Algeria Main Partner in Maghreb

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, DECEMBER 23 — The volume of trade between Tunisia and the United States is only 4% of trade with the entire Maghreb. This was announced in a report of the American Department of State, which specifies that trade between Tunisia and the USA totalled 9.61 billion USD in 2009.

The report also points out that Algeria is the main commercial partner in the Maghreb with 71%, followed by Libya (17%) and Morocco (8%). This ranks Algeria on 23rd place on the list of global economic partners of the USA.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Shoah: Yad Vashem, Two Third of Victims Identified So Far

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 21 — The number of Jewish victims of the Nazi regime who have been identified by researchers of the Yad Vashem memorial museum in Jerusalem has risen to four million, on an estimated total of six million victims. The announcement was made today by the president of Yad Vashem, Avner Shalev, who specified that in the past decade one and a half million people have been identified in the huge task of searching and digging for traces of the victims. “The Germans not only tried to exterminate the Jews, but to wipe out any memory” writes Shalev in a statement. He specifies that the priority of the institution he leads — the most important institution to keep the memory of the Shoah alive — is to “find the name and identity of each victim”.

Of the four million people who were identified so far, the memory of 2.2 million of them has been restored thanks to friends or relatives who survived the Shoah. Information on the rest was obtained thanks to the documentary work of historians. Shalev concludes that “we will continue our work of giving a name and an identity, as much as possible, to all six million Jews who were murdered by the Nazis and their accomplices”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Caroline Glick: Slouching Towards Teheran

Two weeks ago, Iran scored a massive victory. Jordan, the West’s most stable and loyal ally in the Arab world began slouching towards the Iranian Gomorrah.

On December 12, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Chief of Staff Esfandiar Rahim-Mashaei met with Jordanian King Abdullah II in Amman and extended a formal invitation from Ahmadinejad for him to pay a state visit to Iran. Abdullah accepted.

According to Iran’s ISNA news agency, Mashei said that Abdullah’s visit will begin a new page in bilateral relations and that, “the two countries hold massive potential to work together.” Mashei added, “If Islamic states stand united, no country will be threatened.”

For his part, Abdullah reportedly said that his country recognizes Iran’s nuclear rights and supports its access to peaceful nuclear technology…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Saudi Police Shoot Dead Al Qaeda Suspect Disguised as Woman After He Opened Fire on Troops at Checkpoint

Saudi police have shot and killed a man dressed as a woman after he opened fire at the troops at a checkpoint southwest of the capital, Riyadh.

The kingdom’s Saudi Press Agency carried a police statement saying the shooter was traveling with another man in a vehicle in the Wadi al-Dawasir area on Friday.

It says the man, believed to be an Al Qaeda militant, stepped out of the car and started shooting at security officials who had asked for ID papers.

The police returned fire, killing the man. His companion was arrested.

The police said the case was under investigation.

Mansour al-Turki, the ministry’s security spokesman, said: ‘We have a strong suspicion it is Al Qaeda, but we are still trying to identify the dead man and questioning the detained suspect.’

Saudi security forces have stepped up their campaign against Al Qaeda after the Islamic militant groups’s Yemeni and Saudi wings merged in 2009 into a regional organisation, which claimed responsibility for the failed bombing of a U.S.-bound passenger plane last Christmas.

In November, Saudi Arabia said it had captured 149 al Qaeda militants over several months, who were raising money and recruiting members to carry out attacks in the kingdom, the world’s top oil exporter.

A wide counter-terrorism drive halted a violent Al Qaeda campaign in the Gulf Arab country which lasted from 2003 to 2006.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Christmas in Pakistan: Christian’s Demonstrations Postponed for Fear of Clashes

Proposal of bishops and representatives of the Protestant Churches. The possible postponement of events, however, does not stop the calls and proposals for an amendment of the blasphemy law. Catholics and Protestants are preparing for Christmas. Masses and processions planned despite the constant threats of Islamic parties.

Lahore (AsiaNews) — Respect for the Christmas and Islamic New Year has urged Pakistan’s Catholics and Protestants to ask that protest marches against the blasphemy law due to be held on December.24 and 31 be postponed. This amid fears of clashes and violence by Islamic parties, which has organized a general strike to oppose any amendments to the law on the same day. Meanwhile the Catholics in the parishes of the country are preparing to celebrate Christmas. This, despite the constant threats and the risk of attacks against Christians caused by the case of Asia Bibi.

The proposal to postpone the events emerged during the forum titled “Christmas and the state of Christians in Pakistan” recently held in Lahore, by Catholic bishops and representatives of the Protestant community.

Samuel Azariah, president of the Protestant Church of Pakistan said that the Christian community has always expressed its respect for the month of Muharram, the first month of Islamic calendar and this Christmas celebrations started on December 16. Azaria expressed concern over planned rallies for December 24 and 31, highlighting that the risk of clashes should be avoided at a time of joy for all.

The possible postponement of events, however, does not stop the calls and proposals for an amendment of the blasphemy law. The bishops and pastors have drawn up a revision of the law providing for the condemnation of the accusers , should the accused be proven innocent. Bishop Andrew Francis of Multan and head of the Commission for Dialogue and Ecumenism affirmed that “this Christmas comes at a time when the debate over the anti-blasphemy law is causing serious problems for the Christian community”. The prelate stressed that in these years the 180 Christians accused of blasphemy have been found not guilty by the courts.

Meanwhile, despite the increase in threats launched by Islamic extremists, Christians in Pakistan are preparing to celebrate Christmas. With its large Muslim majority, the birth of Jesus is not officially celebrated in Pakistan. However, December 25 coincides with the birthday of MA Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan. Christmas celebrations are tolerated and in many towns and villages the night before the Christians organize processions in the streets decorated for the feast.

Fr. Morris Jalal pastor of the church of St. Francis Xavier, tells AsiaNews: “This illustrates the challenges to which the Christian community is called the. We deal with many cases of persecution and intolerance in our parish because of the blasphemy law. “

Fr Jalal’s parish of serves approximately 7 thousand families, but this Christmas people will fill the Church like every year, regardless of the threats and fear of attacks. According to the priest between 10 thousand and 15 thousand people are expected. “Our church — he says — can hold up to 1,500 people and we organize the celebrations in the outdoor sports arena.” He stresses that these numbers increases the risk of attacks, but security will be handled discreetly by a few people, who will prevent people to see armed men during their midnight mass. “We are convinced — he continues — that the police can not protect us and there will be only five or six policemen on guard, we should be the ones to provide security arming our men. But I can not imagine a Christmas mass surrounded by armed youths. “

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



Indonesia: Christmas Decorations Are ‘Excessive’ And ‘Hurt Muslims’ Feelings’

Jakarta, 23 Dec. (AKI) — The top Islamic body from the world’s most populous Muslim country complained about over-the-top Christmas decorations in Indonesian malls and other places where the public gathers.

Decorations for Christmas have been assembled in an “excessive and provocative way”, said Muhyidin Junaedi, one of the chairmen of the Indonesia Ulema Council (MUI), in a news report. “It should be done in a proportional manner as Muslims are the majority here, otherwise it will hurt their feelings.”

More than 85 percent of Indonesia’s approximately 250 million people are Muslim, while less than 10 percent are Protestant and Catholic.

Christmas, known locally as Hari Natal, is celebrated as a public holiday in Indonesia.

We received complaints from a number of malls’ employees who are forced to wear Santa Claus costumes which are against their faith. Such things should not have happened,’ Junaedi said in the report.

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



Pakistani Outposts Struck by Large Taliban Assault

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A Taliban group forced into a remote border area by Pakistani military operations struck back Friday with a large and highly coordinated attack against the government’s paramilitary forces, Pakistani officials said.

A senior security official said about 150 militants initiated the simultaneous attacks on five security outposts near the Afghan border, killing 11 members of Pakistan’s Frontier Corps and wounding 9. The militants fought hand-to-hand battles with the Pakistani forces at two of the outposts in Mohmand Agency and assaulted the three others with machine guns and rockets, officials said.

The militants may have been trying to forestall new attacks by the military, which has swept them from other nearby tribal areas into a relatively small area of Mohmand Agency and threatened a new offensive.

“Frankly, we didn’t expect an attack of this scale and magnitude,” said the senior security official, who added that the Pakistani forces had received a warning of an impending assault.

As violence has flared in Mohmand in recent months, most of the attacks against government forces have been smaller scale ambushes of patrols or remote assaults using improvised bombs planted along roads.

The senior security official, who asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the media, said that 24 militants were killed in the hours of clashes, although only 8 militants’ bodies were shown to the local news media.

“Our assessment is based on militants’ intercepts and chatter,” the official said.

The United States has directed most of its drone attacks in Pakistan against the Haqqani network of the Afghan Taliban, one of the most lethal groups attacking NATO and allied forces in Afghanistan, as well as that group’s local Pakistani allies.

Pakistan, meanwhile, has been focusing its military operations against groups like the one in Mohmand, which has been attacking Pakistani forces and increasingly singling out civilians allied with the government.

A government official said that Taliban fighters in the area had now been driven into a small mountainous area of Mohmand that adjoins the Bajaur tribal area in Pakistan and Kunar Province in eastern Afghanistan…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Ratzinger’s Best Pupils Are in Sri Lanka and Kazakhstan

They are the bishops Ranjith and Schneider. They follow the pope’s example in the liturgical camp more and better than many of their colleagues in Italy and Europe. One revealing test is the manner of giving communion at Mass

ROME, October 14, 2010 — In Sri Lanka, the bishops and priests dress all in white, as can be seen in the unusual photograph above: with the entire clergy of the diocese of Colombo, the capital, diligently listening to its archbishop, Malcolm Ranjith, who is likely to be made a cardinal at the next concistory.

In his diocese, Archbishop Ranjith has proclaimed a special year of the Eucharist. And to prepare for it, he gathered all of his priests for three days of intensive study in Colombo, where he brought in two outstanding speakers from Rome: Cardinal Antonio Cañizares Llovera, prefect of the Vatican congregation for divine worship, and Fr. Uwe Michael Lang, a member of the same congregation and an adviser for the office of pontifical liturgical celebrations.

Lang, German by birth and an Oratorian, was raised in Great Britain in the school of the great Henry Newman, who was beatified by Benedict XVI last September 19 in Birmingham. He is the author of one of the books that have provoked the most discussion in recent years, in the liturgical field: “Rivolti al Signore,” in which he maintains that the correct orientation in liturgical prayer is toward Christ, for both the priests and the faithful. The book opens with a preface by Joseph Ratzinger, written shortly before his election as pope.

Archbishop Ranjith, who before returning to Sri Lanka was secretary of the Vatican congregation for divine worship, was and is an enthusiastic admirer and promoter of the thesis of Lang’s book, as well as having the trust of Benedict XVI. Just like Cardinal Cañizares Llovera, not for nothing called “the Ratzinger of Spain” in his country, who was called to Rome by the pope to guide the Church in liturgical matters, a central objective of this pontificate.

Not only that. In order to offer more insight to his priests during the three days of study, Archbishop Ranjith brought in from Germany a Catholic writer of the first rank, Martin Mosebach, also the author of a book that has raised a great deal of discussion: “Eresia dell’informe. La liturgia romana e il suo nemico.” And he asked him to speak precisely on the Church’s disarray in the liturgical field.

All of this for what ultimate aim? Ranjith explained this in a pastoral letter to the diocese: to rekindle faith in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, and to teach how to express this faith in appropriate liturgical signs…

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

Culture Wars


Catholic Church Strips US Hospital of Affiliation Over Abortion

THE HEAD of the Catholic Church in Phoenix has stripped Arizona’s largest hospital of its Catholic affiliation after he ruled that a decision to save the life of a mother by terminating her 11-week pregnancy was morally wrong.

Bishop Thomas Olmsted announced on Tuesday that St Joseph’s hospital can no longer be considered to be Catholic. The ruling breaks a relationship that stretches back to the hospital’s founding by Catholic nuns 115 years ago.

He has also excommunicated the member of the hospital’s ethics committee, which permitted the abortion to go ahead.

The decision brings to a head a dispute that has been building for several months over the termination, performed in November 2009, at St Joseph’s hospital and medical centre.

The case concerned an unidentified woman in her 20s who had a history of abnormally high blood pressure that was under control before she became pregnant. But doctors were concerned on learning of the pregnancy about the extra burden that would be placed on her heart, and they monitored her closely.

Tests showed that in the early stages of pregnancy her condition deteriorated rapidly and that before long her pulmonary hypertension — which can impair the working of the heart and lungs — had begun to seriously threaten her life. Doctors informed her that the risk of death was close to 100 per cent if she continued with the pregnancy.

Consultations were then held with the patient, her family, her doctors and the hospital’s ethics team, and the decision to go ahead with an abortion taken in order to save the mother’s life.

The hospital’s president, Linda Hunt, said following the bishop’s severing of relations that the operation had been “consistent with our values of dignity and justice. If we are presented with a situation in which a pregnancy threatens a woman’s life, our first priority is to save both patients. If that is not possible we will always save the life we can save, and that is what we did in this case.”

Bishop Olmsted, however, drew on the advice of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops’ doctrinal committee, which distinguishes between direct abortions that are never justifiable and indirect terminations that happen incidentally as a result of life-saving medical procedures that can be allowed on narrowly-defined grounds.

In this case, the operation was deemed to be a direct abortion because the pregnancy was ended to ease the mother’s separate health problem.

“The baby was healthy and there was no problem with the pregnancy; rather, the mother had a disease that needed to be treated. But instead of treating the disease, St Joseph’s decided that the healthy, 11-week-old baby should be directly killed.

“This is contrary to the teaching of the church,” the bishop said.

St Joseph’s has 697 beds and 5,000 staff and this year admitted 40,000 in-patients. It is world-renowned for its work on Parkinson’s disease and neurosurgery, and is regularly voted among the top 10 hospitals in the US.

Ms Hunt said that the hospital was “deeply saddened” by the church’s decision but that “we will be steadfast in fulfilling our mission”. In a statement, St Joseph’s said it would perform the same treatment again were the life of a mother in danger.

It is not known how the church hierarchy found out about the termination, as the hospital abides by a strict privacy policy.

The split will not affect the hospital’s income as the church does not fund it.

The only visible change that will be evident immediately is that the Blessed Sacrament will be removed from the hospital’s chapel and Mass will no longer be held there.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Italy Calls on EU to Withdraw Schoools Diary That Leaves Out Christmas

Foreign minister labels omission an ‘indecency’ and demands the withdrawal of 3 million copies already distributed

Italy has demanded that the European Commission recall millions of diaries that are being distributed to schoolchildren throughout the EU because they do not mention Christmas but they do give the dates of other religions’ festivals, such as Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting, and Sikh, Hindu and Chinese feast days. Silvio Berlusconi’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini, called the omission “an indecency”. In a message on his Facebook page, he said: “In addition to offending all the world’s Christians, it contradicts the fundamental principle of the freedom and dignity of all religious denominations, which is a basis of the European Union.”

A Commission spokeswoman said it had “realised the absence of some important European religious holidays, in particular Christmas”. She added: “The Commission understands the sensitivity of the issue and regrets this incident. This oversight will be rectified in future editions of the diary.” But she gave no indication that Brussels would accede to Frattini’s demand to recall the diaries, which, according to the Italian daily Corriere della Sera, was contained in a letter to the commission’s president, Jose Manuel Barroso. The newspaper said Poland, another country with a large Catholic population, had also protested to Brussels about the omission.

Some 3 million copies of the latest edition of the Europe Diary have been sent to schools. The commission’s spokeswoman said its main purpose was “inform young Europeans as consumers and citizens on issues like rights, choices as consumers [and] climate change”. It was “an educational tool, not a calendar of events”, and the reference to religious events “only appears in the footnotes, together with references to other special days in relation to European culture and history”. The commission began sending out the diaries seven years ago. Christmas or no Christmas, it will be reluctant to recall and pulp the latest edition: the spokeswoman said it had cost €5.5m (£4.6m).

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Motor Vehicles Denies License to Muslim Woman

ST. THOMAS — A national advocacy group for Islamic-Americans is questioning the constitutionality of a V.I. Bureau of Motor Vehicles policy requiring Muslim women to remove their headscarves for their drivers license photos.

The Council on Islamic-American Relations, was contacted by St. Thomas resident Nailah Jamil, who wears a hijab every day. It covers her hair, ears and neck.

Jamil’s old drivers license had a photo of her taken before she began wearing the hijab, so to ensure that her public appearance matched her photo identification, Jamil went to the bureau to update her license.

She brought all the required documents, stood in line, paid for the new license, and went in to have her picture taken.

It wasn’t until that point in the process that anyone at the Bureau of Motor Vehicles said anything about the headscarf she was wearing.

The staff asked her to remove it.

“My only two options were to remove it or go down to the local mosque and get a notarized letter from the imam,” Jamil said.

“I was so shocked and dumbfounded,” she said. “I wasn’t able to get my license renewed unless I did this.”

She told the Bureau of Motor Vehicles employees it was discrimination and was told to return the next day to speak to a supervisor.

Jamil said she later spoke to Myrna George, assistant director of the department, about the matter.

“She told me not to call it discrimination. I said, ‘Well, what is it?’“ Jamil said.

George said she told Jamil it was one of the bureau’s rules.

“I told her it’s up to her what she wants to call it, but I have to follow the policy,” George told The Daily News.

Jamil said George told her it was a bureau policy that was adopted after the agency separated from the V.I. Police Department.

Bureau of Motor Vehicles Director Jerris Browne told The Daily News that the policy has been in the agency’s internal standard operating procedures since the bureau was a part of the V.I. Police Department.

Jamil asked to see a copy of the policy but said no one could produce a printed copy for her.

“When I asked for a copy, they told me it was nowhere in writing,” Jamil said.

Browne said he did not speak with Jamil and did not know why a copy of the policy was not given to her.

The Daily News requested a copy of the policy last week but did not receive one until Tuesday.

The policy does not require a notarized affidavit, which Jamil said the bureau staff expressly told her she needed.

Browne said that he cannot comment on what she was told, but that according to the policy, a notarized affidavit is not required; only a letter from a religious leader is required.

Jamil is refusing to get a notarized affidavit on principle and said the added expense and time for her to get the affidavit — when others do not have to — is discrimination based on her religion.

“I think it’s insulting, I really think it’s insulting,” she said. “Would you have to prove that you’re Christian? Would you have to prove that you’re of Jewish faith?”

The Council on Islamic-American Relations legal counsel Nadhira Al-Khalili sent a letter to Browne on Dec. 1, saying the bureau’s policy runs “contrary to all federal, state and local government photography guidelines, which provide for religious exemptions.”

“The headscarf worn by Muslim women traditionally covers the hair, ears and neck. The frontal view of the face is sufficient to identify a person in any type of picture identification. In fact, any attempt made to alter a person’s picture from their normal public appearance may cause them to be harassed and misidentified,” the letter said.

Forcing Muslim women to remove their head coverings would be a direct violation of their religious rights, which are protected under the U.S. Constitution, Al-Khalili said.

“Indeed, the State Department allows for a religious headscarf in passport photographs and visa requirements, as do all other Department of Motor Vehicles offices across the country,” Al-Khalili said.

According to the U.S. State Department’s website, a religious uniform may be worn in a passport photo if it is worn daily.

Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on Islamic-American Relations, said he is not aware of any other government agency that requires a notarized affidavit from a religious leader before allowing the hijab in a photograph.

“Someone’s personal declaration of personal faith should be sufficient,” Hooper said.

Browne said the Bureau of Motor Vehicles policy is not discriminatory because it applies to anyone who comes in for a driver’s license with their hair covered. He said the Bureau of Motor Vehicles staff requires Rastafarians who wear their dreadlocks wrapped to take their hair down and remove the wrap for their driver’s license photos.

“It’s not just for Arabs, you know, it’s for anyone who have their hair tied up,” Browne said.

He said Jamil still can have her photo taken with the headscarf, but she must get the required document first.

Daniel Mach, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief, said several U.S. Supreme Court rulings have found that such requirements are not necessary.

“The Supreme Court has stated on many occasions that one need not appeal to outside sources to confirm the sincerity of one’s faith,” Mach said.

For example, in a 1990 case, Employment Division v. Smith, the country’s highest court said it is not the court’s job to verify or judge a person’s faith or religious conviction.

“It is not within the judicial ken to question the centrality of particular beliefs or practices to a faith, or the validity of particular litigants’ interpretations of those creeds,” the Supreme Court opinion states. “Repeatedly and in many different contexts, we have warned that courts must not presume to determine the place of a particular belief in a religion or the plausibility of a religious claim.”

The ACLU has not yet gotten involved in Jamil’s case, but Mach said the Bureau of Motor Vehicles policy “is a concern, to suggest that someone must violate their faith simply to get a drivers license.”

Browne said he is forwarding the council’s letter to V.I. Attorney General Vincent Frazer for an opinion on the bureau’s policy. He also is drafting a response to the council’s letter, he said.

Hooper said he hopes an agreement can be reached.

“I think a clarification is in order on the policy,” Hooper said. “If it’s only used to apply to Muslim women that want to wear a headscarf, that would be a problem to us.”

He said the council wants to work with the V.I. government to facilitate a smooth transition to a policy that does not discriminate.

“Let’s just make it easier for people to go through that procedure,” he said. “Who’s going to judge what’s in somebody’s heart in any case?”No pictures (photographs) are taken at the Bureau of Motor Vehicles with head coverings. In order to take such pictures, written exception is accepted for religious purposes only. Applicant must provide written request on official letterhead of religious institution to the Bureau of Motor Vehicles in order for this exception to be considered and/or granted. License pictures are not taken with exposed shoulders or spaghetti strapped clothing.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Religion: Respecting the Minority

Every year, researchers from the British Social Attitudes survey ask a representative sample of British people whether they regard themselves as belonging to any particular religion and, if so, to which one? When the survey first asked these questions in 1985, 63% of the respondents answered that they were Christians, compared with 34% who said they had no religion (the rest belonged to non-Christian religions).

Today, a quarter of a century on, there has been a steady and remarkable turnaround. In the latest 2010 BSA report, published earlier this month, only 42% said they were Christians while 51% now say they have no religion. Admittedly, some other surveys — including the last census — have produced different findings on these issues, usually to the advantage of the religious option. There is also a margin of error in all such exercises. All the same, and particularly since the trends in opinion over time seem well set, it is hard not to feel that this latest finding marks a cultural watershed.

This Christmas, for perhaps the first time ever, Britain is a majority non-religious nation. Most of us have probably seen this moment coming, but it is a substantial event nonetheless. It is undoubtedly a development that would have astonished our ancestors who built a Britain on the basis that we were and would remain a predominantly Protestant people. The victory of secularism would have flabbergasted them almost as much as the pope appearing on the BBC with his Thought for the Day.

The change ought certainly to inspire some national reflection, though there is no need for national breast-beating. After all, in most eyes, the BSA survey finding simply underscores things that have already become obvious. Today, our three political parties are led by two open atheists, and a prime minister who admits his faith comes and goes, a development impossible to imagine in other parts of a world, in which the loss of religion is not a uniform trend. The Britain of 50 years ago, in which religion was a far larger part of the social fabric and the national way of life, is a country we have lost.

What is more striking about the survey is how quickly the change has come — just a generation. It is not that long since everything shut on Sundays, since a majority went regularly to church of some sort, since all schoolchildren knew and sang hymns and studied the Bible even if they did not believe in it, and since the idea that public figures could be anything other than observantly Christian would have seemed unthinkable. It would be hard to say, by most yardsticks, that those were better times. They were certainly different ones. The direction of change is likely to continue. We must all get used to it.

None of this is to dismiss the religious or to disparage its institutions, let alone to imply that Christmas is unimportant. For all its secular and commercial excess, Christmas remains a surprisingly serious season, accentuated this year by the bleak weather. But it is to say that sensitive adaptation to the predominantly non-religious era is required on all sides. In many respects, Britain is handling that task quite well. Our national evolution into a less religious society is not without its skids and bumps. If anything, though, it is being managed with greater dignity than our parallel evolution into a less politicised one.

It is no more the place of a newspaper to impose a religious test on its readers than it was right for the British state to impose such tests on its office-holders in the past. In some sense, the protection of respect becomes more important with Christianity’s decline. When Anglicanism held unchallenged sway, after all, it was important to assert the rights of those who disagreed with it, whether as Catholics, nonconformists, non-Christians or as atheists. Today, as an era of non-religious ascendancy begins in Britain, the importance of tolerance towards the faiths is not diminishing but increasing.

[JP note: Gibberish.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Holocaust Hegemony

. . . and its moral pitfalls.

By Sam Schulman

Last month, the Canadian journalist Richard Klagsbrun drew attention to a newly submitted Master’s thesis at the University of Toronto’s ed school: “The Victimhood of the Powerful: White Jews, Zionism and the Racism of Hegemonic Holocaust Education.” Proud author Jennifer Peto told a reporter for the Canadian Jewish News that Canada’s Jews push the Holocaust narrative because only “a victimized Jewish identity can produce certain effects that are beneficial to the organized Jewish community and the Israeli nation-state.”

Of course there is nothing novel about Peto’s view that Jews exploit the Holocaust, as can be seen in a casual rifle through past issues of the London Review of Books or the writings of left-wing scholars like Norman Finkelstein. The beauty of Peto’s formulation is that it can be used without alteration both by Holocaust-affirmers (like Peto) and Holocaust-deniers: The Jewish Lobby has been deploying Holocaust history (whether faked or real matters not) only to obscure the Gestapo-style tactics used to oppress Palestinians. But the real genius of Peto’s attack on Canadian Holocaust-educators is that it can produce the same effects as Holocaust-denial. The many admirers of the immediate object of her study — a long-established Holocaust-education tour of concentration camp sites in Europe — were hurt, shocked, and enraged.

Peto and her comrades in the anti-Zionist Israel-Apartheid movement don’t really care whether Holocaust education is disinterested or not. Their aims are bolder: the bloody dissolution of the state of Israel, among all the countries of the world. Distracted by Peto’s cruelty, the outraged defenders of the March of Remembrance and Hope pleaded (accurately) that their tour teaches “universal lessons of tolerance and empathy.” But they neglected to refute the underlying claim of the anti-Zionist movement: that Israel as a state deserves to be annihilated and its citizens dispersed; that Jewish citizens of Western democracies are bad Jews and disloyal citizens (of America, or Canada, or Sweden) if they believe Israel ought to exist; and that they are good Jews and good citizens only as long as they regard Israel as malign and unconnected to themselves (I cannot claim credit for the elegant terms “good Jew” and “bad Jew” — I borrow them from Professor John Mearsheimer).

The sad truth is that a real “hegemon” needs followers — and, measured by its effects, Holocaust education has none. Jennifer Peto is dead wrong: Far from being the creation of sinister Jews who wanted to be regarded as victims rather than “white,” Holocaust education was to be a gift from the Jewish community to the world at large. European Jewry was destroyed, but its legacy would be a redemptive technique that was intended to prevent future genocides of others. Kofi Annan described the ideal of Holocaust education perfectly last year in an op-ed: “a vital mechanism for teaching students to value democracy and human rights, and encouraging them to oppose racism and promote tolerance in their own societies.” The former U.N. secretary-general confesses that he thought Holocaust education should have helped “to prevent future acts of genocide,” but it has not: The op-ed murmurs the words Cambodia, the Congo, Bosnia, Rwanda, Sri Lanka, and Sudan. Annan proposes to look into “better teacher training.”

The idea of Holocaust education really took off in 1993 with the opening of the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington. The notion is simple, and there is something ineffably ‘90s about the enterprise. Vice President Al Gore — an iconic ‘90s figure — explained how it was to work in a speech on the first anniversary of the museum’s opening: “In order to prevent such an atrocity from ever happening again, those who care must tell the story.” And that would be it. Give me a child, the Holocaust education movement said to the world, and after passing through my exhibits and taking one of my courses, I will give you back a woman like Samantha Power or a man like Warren Christopher or even Kofi Annan — a warrior against future genocides, or at least a person immunized forever against racism and the desire to murder thousands of civilians with a stroke of the pen.

The aim was lofty, and like so many ideas that germinated after the end of the Cold War, it seemed attractive because it didn’t demand much effort or expense. In Britain, Tony Blair’s government enthusiastically instituted a Holocaust Memorial Day in 2001. Remembering the Holocaust as a nation would, he said, “reaffirm the triumph of good” over evil. Home Secretary Jack Straw was confident that remembering the Holocaust suffered by the Jews would benefit all: “The universal lessons of the Holocaust make this commemoration day relevant to everyone in our society. We all have a shared responsibility to fight against discrimination and to help foster a truly multicultural Britain.” Starting in the ‘90s, many European nations (France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and a dozen others) unhampered by common-law traditions of free speech began to do their bit on the punitive side, initiating laws that forbade Holocaust-denial.

Holocaust remembrance and education is one of those ideas which really has been tried. If students learn any history at all, it is the history of the Holocaust. Genocide Studies has become an academic specialty and a fundraising bonanza, with professional organizations and prizes. Great books have been written and beautiful museums have been built — all in the conviction that they will prevent the production of future mass murderers and their willing executioners. Of course, people are only human and thus have produced versions of Holocaust study that are vulgar, distorted, oversimplified, inhumane, and unintentionally comic and undignified. But even shallow and trashy expressions of “Holocaust awareness” are not lacking in genuine piety and concern, and share the belief that they are engaged in a virtuous struggle against hate.

The Jews and the state of Israel were not much of a concern for the movement’s founders. It did not occur to anyone that anti-Semitism would reemerge, except among a few Holocaust-deniers. And as for Israel, its future was to be secured by the Oslo peace process, which was put on track by the same president who opened the U.S. Holocaust Museum in the same year of 1993, and shared some of the easy confidence of that decade.

The theory of Holocaust education, I think all except Jennifer Peto will agree, has been one of the great failures of our time. But it’s important to know how it has failed — and even more, to understand that our sentimental attachment to Holocaust memorialization can fail us with greater consequence in the future, as can our sentimental horror at those villains who deny the reality of the Holocaust. What happened as we learned about the Holocaust? Generally, nothing at all. Those politicians who speechified at the Holocaust Museum in the ‘90s looked the other way, just as their predecessors in the 1930s did, as mass murders continued to take place. On the anti-Semitism front, the Maginot line of Holocaust education, human nature has not only refused to improve, but seems to have gotten worse. In one European country after another, observers — non-Jewish observers — remark levels of anti-Semitism unprecedented since 1945, despite Europe’s generous application of the Holocaust-memorial carrots and Holocaust-denial sticks. Jewish populations in Sweden are leaving entire cities; the retired chief of Holland’s major conservative party last month advised Jews who are “identifiably Jewish” to leave the country, because the Dutch state cannot protect them from anti-Semitic violence. It’s not Holocaust-deniers who commit attacks on individual Jews in Dutch cities; far from it. The Amsterdammers who jostle and taunt Rabbi Raphael Evers on streetcars are well informed, shouting “Joden aan het gas“ — Jews to the gas chambers.

Holocaust education may have done more than fail. It might also have produced an unintended, but measurable effect that is even worse. One thinks of the little girl who objected to being taught the Ten Commandments in Sunday School: “They don’t tell me what I should do and they just give me ideas.” The current generation of university students — Holocaust-educated from the nursery on — have been given ideas. And on campuses around the world, not just in Protestant Europe, it is fair to say that the more the current student generation have been taught about the evil of the Holocaust, the more Israel seems to them to resemble Nazi Germany rather than itself. Even if we resist the false suggestion that Israel is conducting a genocide of Palestinians, our Holocaust-instruction has left us all with an equally false notion: that Israel was created by Europeans in the Middle East in order to make amends to European Jews for a European Holocaust.

The falseness of this idea is not merely a matter of historical interest; it is false in a brilliantly focused way. Because in fact, quite apart from the unbroken continuity of Jewish life in Palestine since antiquity, and the recurring affirmation of the connection of the Diaspora to the land of Israel, the creation of Israel was an event that coincided with the creation of most of the modern states of the Middle East and Eastern Europe. The Jewish state in Palestine was created by those who fought and won the First World War, not the Second; and its raw material was the same as the raw material of the majority of the members of the EU and the Arab League: the broken territories of the great colonial powers, Germany, Russia, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire. The beneficiaries of this impulse were to create new states for Arabs and Arabic speakers throughout the Ottoman empire, for South Slavs, Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Lithuanians, Jews, Armenians, Kurds, Estonians, Latvians, Ukrainians. Israel’s origin, then, is postcolonial, not imperialist. And those concerned with Israel’s survival should properly be concerned with the survival as free democracies of other postcolonial states on the periphery of tyranny elsewhere, such as Lebanon, Georgia, Ukraine, and even Lithuania and Poland…

[Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101223

Financial Crisis
» EU: Budget Wars Continue
» Fresh Humiliation for Euro Zone as China Says it Will Bail Out Debt-Ridden Nations
» Has the Financial Collapse of Europe Now Become Inevitable?
» Italy: JPMorgan: Italy Not Sucked in by Debt Crisis
» Municipal Bond Market Crash 2011: Are Dozens of State and Local Governments About to Default on Their Debts?
» Spain: Moody’s Maintains Negative Outlook for Spanish Banks
 
USA
» 1776: Victory or Death
» Arsenal Gets Man 12 Years
» Bolton: Oval Office Antics Creating World Instability
» Growing Threat of Domestic Terror
» MSNBC’s Ed Schultz Protects Terror Networks
» Obama ‘Snookered’ By Russia in New Arms Treaty
» Steven Spielberg Advising Nancy Pelosi on Rebranding Democrats
» U.S. Approves Business With Blacklisted Nations
» Video: General: Muslim ‘Moderates’ Plot Undoing of America
» Will Jewish Community Leaders Stand Up?
 
Europe and the EU
» Arrogant Judiciary is Undermining British Society
» Hungary Gags Media and Throws Its EU Presidency Into Doubt
» Ireland: Council Warns of Legal Action to Remove Families From Site
» Italy: Parcel Bomb Attacks Strike at Embassies in Rome
» Italy: Slide in Berlusconi’s Approval Rating Levels Out
» Italy Blasts EU’s Response to Christian Persecutions
» Italy: Parcel Bomb Attacks Hit Rome Embassies
» Italy: ‘Anarchists’ Launch Bomb Attacks on Two Rome Embassies
» Man Fined for Insulting French Flag
» Portugal: Scandal Splatters Barroso
» Scottish Socialist Party Leader Tommy Sheridan Found Guilty of Perjury
» The Jihad of the British Left
» The Meaning of That Joint Article
» The Spanish Ham Lawsuit and Other Muslim Problems Hitting Iberia
» UK: Chairman Mao and the Coalition’s Lunatic Fixation With Change
» UK: Meet Chaser: The Incredible Border Collie Who Has Learned the Names for 1022 Toys
» UK: Muslim ‘Poppy Burners’ Deny Offending Public Order After Armistice Day Protest
» UK: Muslim Extremists in Poppy Trial Slur
» UK: The Wind Turbine Lunacy of a Generator That Won’t Even Work in the Cold Snap
» UK: Ten More Deaths Linked to Flu in a Week as Cases Accelerate
» UK: Who Are You? Wife of 22 Years Pleads With Husband to Reveal His True Identity — But He Refuses
» UK: Where Did Labour’s £1bn Foreign Aid Go? There Are No Proper Records, Says Scathing Report
» Why Anti-Semitism is Growing in Germany
 
North Africa
» Egypt’s Coptic Christians Struggle Against Institutionalised Prejudice
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Anti-Arab Attacks in Jerusalem, 10 Arrests
» Christmas in Bethlehem: The Cross Banished From Souvenirs Shops
» PNA: EU Commission Approves 1st Package of 100 Mln in Aid
» Support for Israel’s Settlements From Europe’s Right
» Temple Mount Arrest of Zealot, Press
 
Middle East
» Christian Exodus From Iraq Gathers Pace
» Girls’ Schools Face the Heat for Competing in ‘Illegal’ Sports Event
» Lebanon: Jihadis Fleeing to Europe
 
Russia
» Russia and India Agree to US$ 35 Billion Contract for 300 Fighter Jets
» Russia Not About to Nix Nuclear Arsenal
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: The Pedophilia Capital of Asia
» Indonesia: Christians Are Top Victims of Intolerance in West Java
» Malaysia Court Rules Child Marriage ‘Illegal’
» Pakistan: ‘Butcher of Swat’ Was Striking Ceasefire Deal When He Was Killed by US Drone
 
Far East
» China: Vatican Criticism is “Imprudent” And “Dangerous”
 
Australia — Pacific
» Australian Muslims Found Guilty of Terror Plot
» Three Guilty, Two Walk Free Over Terror Attack Plan
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Sudan: Bashir: Damn Ethnic Diversity… Let’s Continue Flogging
 
Immigration
» Refugee Fight for Uzbek Group in Kazakhstan
» U.S. Congressman Declares: Borders Will be ‘Irrelevant’
 
Culture Wars
» Vets Protest Plan Opening Military to Homosexuals
 
General
» Climate Change Extremism is Doing Its Job
» U.N. Protections for Islam Losing Ground

Financial Crisis


EU: Budget Wars Continue

“Rich countries are going to freeze the EU budget in 2 years’ time,” headlines Polish daily Dziennik Gazeta Prawna. On December 18 France, Germany, the Netherlands and Finland, following the United Kingdom’s lead, sent a letter to EU Commission president José Manuel Barroso demanding that, as of 2014, EU budgets be increased by no more than the level of inflation. As French daily La Croix explains, London, Paris and Berlin have agreed that “structural funds, rather than the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), should be adjusted” in future budgets. “The structural funds,” the paper continues, “represent nearly 56% of EU expenses (53.3 bn euros) and are the most significant expense in European budgets”.

The use of the funds is contested, the French paper notes because “they are used more and more often to shore up the economies of Eastern European countries”. Dziennik Gazeta Prawna writes for its part that France has an interest in protecting the CAP, of which it is the primary beneficiary. While Poland, which benefits greatly from the structural funds, is threatened. Quoting MEP Jacek Saryusz-Wolski, the Polish daily explains that Poland “can count on the support of all the Central European countries. But it should also seek the support of “veteran” countries in particular Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece”.

The EU Commission could also be an ally, Dziennik Gazeta Prawna suggests. But for Spanish daily El Pais, “the real budgetary battle won’t begin before June 2011 when the Commission will present its first draft budget for the 2014-2020 period”. This will be a difficult battle, warns Dziennik Gazeta Prawna because the main contributors to the EU budget are not “thinking of ways to narrow the gap between the ‘new’ and the ‘old’ Europe, but are just trying to find ways to survive”.

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



Fresh Humiliation for Euro Zone as China Says it Will Bail Out Debt-Ridden Nations

China has said it is willing to bail out debt-ridden countries in the euro zone using its $2.7trillion overseas investment fund.

In a fresh humiliation for Europe, Foreign Ministry spokesman Jiang Yu said it was one of the most important areas for China’s foreign exchange investments.

The country has already approached struggling European countries with financial aid, including offering to buy Greece’s debt in October and promising to buy $4billion of Portuguese government debt.

‘To have any discernible effect China will have to buy a lot more than 5billion euros if they expect to have any impact on the negative sentiment surrounding Europe,’ said Michael Hewson, currency analyst at CMC Markets.

China’s astonishing economic growth has put it on track to overtake America as the world’s economic powerhouse within two years, a recent report claimed.

But experts believed still be some years before America’s leadership role is really challenged — largely because Beijing has given no indication it is ready to take on the responsibility of shepherding the world’ economy.

This foray into the future of the euro could be a signal from Beijing that it is ready to change that perception.

The euro rose temporarily on the news of China’s support — but was sinking again this morning to a three-week low against the dollar.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Has the Financial Collapse of Europe Now Become Inevitable?

What in the world is happening over in Europe? Well, it is actually quite simple. We are witnessing the slow motion collapse of the euro and of the European financial system. At this point, many analysts are convinced that a full-blown financial implosion in Europe has become inevitable. Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Italy, France and Belgium are all drowning in an ocean of unsustainable debt. Meanwhile, Germany and the few other “healthy” members of the EU continue to try to keep all of the balls in the air by bailing everyone out. But can Germany keep bailing the rest of the EU out indefinitely? Are the German people going to continue to be willing to hand out gigantic sacks of cash to fix the problems of other EU nations? The Irish were just bailed out, but their problems are far from over. There are rumors that Greece will soon need another bailout. Spain, Portugal, Italy and France have all entered crisis territory. At the same time, there are a whole host of nations in eastern Europe that are also on the verge of financial collapse. So is there any hope that a major sovereign debt crisis can be averted at this point?

One would like to think that there is always hope, but each month things just seem to keep getting worse. Confidence in European government debt continues to plummet. The yield on 10-year Irish bonds is up to 8.97%. The yield on 10-year Greek bonds is up to an astounding 12.01%. The cost of insuring French debt hit a new record high on December 20th.

Bond ratings all over Europe are being slashed or are being threatened with being slashed.

[…]

Well, many are speculating that the EU could actually break up over this whole thing, but another possibility is that we could eventually see much greater integration.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: JPMorgan: Italy Not Sucked in by Debt Crisis

(ANSAmed) — ROME, 20 DEC. — Italy has not been sucked into the crisis that is besieging other Euroland countries and is contributing more than most to economic recovery. So stated JPMorgan’s president and ceo James Dimon, in an interview to the Spanish daily El Economista, quoted by Bloomberg. Dimon added that “The EU is going through a difficult time, it’s a growth crisis, and it’s holding up”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Municipal Bond Market Crash 2011: Are Dozens of State and Local Governments About to Default on Their Debts?

In the United States, it is not just the federal government that has a horrific debt problem. Today, state and local governments across America are collectively deeper in debt than they ever have been before. In fact, state and local government debt is now sitting at an all-time high of 22 percent of U.S. GDP. Once upon a time, municipal bonds (used to fund such things as roads, sewer systems and government buildings) were viewed as incredibly safe investments. They were considered to have virtually no risk. But now all of that has changed. Many analysts are now openly speaking of the possibility of a municipal bond market crash in 2011. The truth is that dozens upon dozens of city and county governments are teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Even the debt of some of our biggest state governments, such as Illinois and California, is essentially considered to be “junk” at this point. There are literally hundreds of governmental financial implosions happening in slow motion from coast to coast, and up to this point not a lot of people in the mainstream media have been talking about it.

Fortunately, a recent report on 60 Minutes has brought these issues to light. If you have not seen it yet, do yourself a favor and click on the video below and spend a few minutes watching it. It is absolutely stunning.

In the piece, one of the people that 60 Minutes interviewed was Meredith Whitney — one of the most respected financial analysts in the United States. According to Whitney, the municipal bond crisis that we are facing is a massive threat to our financial system…

“It has tentacles as wide as anything I’ve seen. I think next to housing this is the single most important issue in the United States and certainly the largest threat to the U.S. economy.”

State and local governments across the United States are facing a complete and total financial nightmare. The 60 Minutes report posted below does a pretty good job of describing the problem but it doesn’t even pretend to come up with any solutions.

[…]

Let’s take a closer look at some of the state and local governments that are in some of the biggest trouble…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Spain: Moody’s Maintains Negative Outlook for Spanish Banks

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, DECEMBER 13 — The risk assessment agency Moody’s has maintained its negative outlook for the Spanish banking system and estimates that it will have to deal with losses of up to 176 billion euros, due to endowments and reserves, compared with the 88 billion recognised by the financial institutes.

In the “Overview of the Spanish Banking System” report released today and cited by the Europa Press agency, Moody’s underscored the difficulty of access to financing and lasting pressure on capitalisation, which is why it predicts that Spanish banks will have to come up with 17 billion euros to get over the minimum levels required as proof of its solvency. The agency recognised the good health enjoyed by the Spanish banking system compared with that of other countries, since Spanish credit institutes do not need bailout plans, but justifies its negative outlook with the crisis seen in the economy and the constant deterioration of asset quality as well as the Spanish government’s fiscal austerity plan.

According to the report, Spanish banks will have to deal with a capital deficit of about 17 billion euros, since “revenue is unlikely to compensate for capital needs in all cases”, which “will oblige many institutes to request capital through foreign sources”. Moody’s predicts that banks will have to request aid from the Fund for Orderly Bank Restructuring (FROB), supplied with 99 billion euros, which “will enable the institutes to strengthen capital above the levels used in the stress tests of the agency itself”.

In September Moody’s lowered its rating for Spanish debt from AAA, highest level of solvency, to AA1, with a “stable outlook”, and reduced also the rating for the Fund for Orderly Bank Restructuring.(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


1776: Victory or Death

He really had no choice, as the fragile fire of American liberty was close to being extinguished.

“[Future generations] you will never know how much it has cost my generation to preserve your freedom. I hope you will make good use of it.” — John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) Sixth President of the United States of America

“The [Revolutionary] war was a longer, far more arduous, and more painful struggle than later generations would understand or sufficiently appreciate.”— David McCullough “1776”

“There is but one straight course, and that is to seek truth and pursue it steadily.”—George Washington (1732-1799) 1st President of the United States of America

The frigid scene by the Delaware river was illuminated by flickering camp-fires, a few lanterns, and a scattering of storm-tossed torch-light.

George Washington sat on his horse, with his back turned to the wind and sleet. It was 3:00 a.m. on the morning after Christmas, 1776. He and his ragged band of soldiers had just crossed the Delaware river into New Jersey from Pennsylvania. They were gathering for an assault on German mercenaries— the Hessians—hired by Great Britain to help stamp out the revolt in their American colonies. The Hessians were stationed about ten snow-covered miles away, in Trenton, New Jersey.

The crossing of the Delaware had been more difficult than anticipated, and Washington and his force were now three hours behind schedule. They were one tine of a planned three pronged attack on Trenton, and Washington knew that his force would no longer be able to meet up with the other two forces on time. He had to decide, and quickly, whether or not to go ahead with the attack.

Unknown to them, if they pushed ahead, Washington and his men would be facing the Hessians alone. The other American commanders had called off their attacks, due to the extremely bad weather.

The Nor’easter that blew in late Christmas Day, had increased in fury until it was perilous, simply to stand outside for any length of time. Freezing to death was a very real possibility, and indeed two colonial soldiers died from the cold that night. How many suffered from frost-bite will never be known.

[…]

Washington’s attack on Trenton was much more than a clever jab at the enemy. It was a last ditch—do or die—attempt to save the revolution from extinction. As Washington put it to his aide Joseph Reed, “…necessity, dire necessity…must justify an attempt.”

How had the young republic come to such a sorry state? The year had started out so well.

[…]

On Christmas Day, Washington had his soldiers assembled, and had Thomas Paine’s new tract “The Crisis” read to them. Paine had accompanied the soldiers along the march south, and knew firsthand of the hardships they had endured. He was all too aware of the precarious state of the young republic— a “crisis” indeed.

The first words of Paine’s pamphlet echo down to us through the years. “These are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered…”

[…]

George Washington was a profoundly religious, even spiritual man. He was a man with a deep sense of duty, honor, and integrity. He felt honor-bound to lead “we the people” in the fight against an indifferent, arrogant, and tyrannical government. He never trusted government; he once said, “Government is…a dangerous servant and a fearful master.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Arsenal Gets Man 12 Years

The arsenal of semi-automatic weapons was for recreation only, a Franklin Township man told a U.S. district judge in Columbus yesterday.

And the pipe bombs? Abdullah M. Muslim said he’d removed them from his neighborhood streets and kept them so others couldn’t use them.

Judge Michael H. Watson didn’t buy those arguments, calling the collection of weapons “extremely dangerous” to the community. He sent Muslim, 38, to prison for 12 years.

Muslim was charged with illegal possession of firearms and bombs, lying in a passport application and aggravated identity theft. He pleaded guilty in 2009 and 2010 to all the charges and could have been sentenced to 42 years in prison.

Watson did not label Muslim a terrorist, even though he admitted traveling before his arrest to areas of Pakistan where the Taliban operate and trying to get a fake passport to return there. Investigators wouldn’t comment on whether Muslim has been involved with terrorists.

No evidence tied Muslim to terrorists, said his attorney, Joe Edwards. But he pointed out that Muslim has a history of mental-health issues.

Muslim said he has schizophrenia.

He came to the attention of the Violent Crime Impact Team, led by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, when Franklin Township police were called to his house at 1851 Eastfield Dr. in November 2008.

His wife, Aisha, had shot herself in the foot while cleaning an AK-47 semiautomatic rifle, Watson said.

Officers from the task force went to the house in southern Franklin County with a search warrant and found 12 weapons, two flak vests and 200 rounds of ammunition, according to court records. Already convicted of felonious assault in 1994 and of mailing threatening communications in 1999, Muslim could not possess a firearm without court permission.

He surrendered his passport and was released on his own recognizance after being charged with firearm and bomb possession. Then, in an attempt to return to Pakistan, he schemed to obtain a new identity, court records say.

Using what Watson said were skills he learned during other prison stints, Muslim posed as an associate of the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry seeking mentally handicapped people who needed grants for assistance. Muslim used the fake grant applications to collect personal information on 10 people.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Bolton: Oval Office Antics Creating World Instability

Europeans ‘should realize’ if threat arises, ‘the president will be otherwise occupied’

President Obama’s equivocation on matters of national interest and security — such as his lukewarm response to WikiLeaks release of classified documents — are creating instability around the globe and might be encouraging U.S. enemies to push their own agendas, including violence, according to former Ambassador John Bolton.

In a series of recent interviews, including with WND, Bolton said he has a high level of concern that “America’s adversaries will take the measure of our equivocation on world events and question whether or not we are willing to protect our allies.”

“The weak pace and scope in challenging our adversaries will incentivize them to increasing bad acts,” he warned.

Consequently, according to Bolton, America’s allies also might be in the crosshairs.

“The president,” Bolton elaborated in a report in the London Guardian, “unlike the long line of his predecessors since Franklin Roosevelt, simply does not put national security at the center of his political priorities.

[…]

He said Obama is focusing on what he wants: to remake the U.S. economy into something heavily influenced by socialism and doesn’t directly address “threats” to America.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Growing Threat of Domestic Terror

With the holidays here, President Obama’s top counterterrorism adviser tried to reassure the public today it’s safe to travel. John Brennan said law enforcement and intelligence agencies are doing all they can to prevent a terror attack.

But the threat of terror does not come only from overseas. More and more often, it is starting right here. CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric presents Homegrown Terrorism “In Focus.”

“It’s the day after Thanksgiving in Portland, Ore., you have upwards of 10,000 people packed into the city’s main square — you have families. You have little kids. People are singing Christmas carols. What they don’t know is that someone is actually planning to blow the event up,” CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy said. “His goal is to either kill or injure every single person there.”

A covert FBI sting operation may have foiled the plot to bomb downtown Portland. But the fallout from last month’s attempt reveals an emerging terrorist threat — homegrown in the U.S.

“This is a 19-year-old American teenager,” Tracy said. “And at some point, he basically became radicalized enough to want to blow up tens of thousands of people in what was essentially his hometown.”

Terror in the U.S.

Since the attacks of September 11th, 58 Americans and foreigners living here legally have been implicated in plots against the U.S. They have tried to carry out 11 acts this year alone.

“Individuals prepared to carry out terrorist acts are in this country,” Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said on Dec. 6, 2010.

The Americanization of al Qaeda

“Al Qaeda today is more sophisticated than what the general American thinks,” CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian said. “They think about al Qaeda in Afghanistan with turbans and AK47’s on their shoulders.”

Nothing has spread al Qaeda’s reach like the Internet, with its vast network of websites targeting disaffected Muslims. What was once taught at a training camp can now be learned online.

“It’s very hard to find someone working in Kansas or Missouri self-radicalizing,” CBS News investigative producer Pat Milton said.

“It wasn’t that long ago that when there was a the terrorist attack, we were talking about something hatched by someone in a cave overseas,” CBS News senior investigative producer Keith Summa said. “Now, we’re talking about people from Connecticut.”

While earlier plots relied on sleeper cells, American terrorists are increasingly acting as lone wolves, who can easily blend in.

“You talk to counterterrorism people, and the one thing they fear most is terrorists with what they call the ‘golden passport’ — a U.S. passport,” CBS News Homeland Security producer Andy Triay said. “Someone who can travel freely.”

A perfect example is Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad.

“What makes it difficult in tracking Shahzad is he was just an average guy with a family in Connecticut,” CBS News chief investigative producer Len Tepper said. “What makes it more difficult for a guy like him is — he is free to go around looking for targets.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



MSNBC’s Ed Schultz Protects Terror Networks

MSNBC’s Ed Schultz, who called communist Van Jones a “great patriot” during the “One Nation Working Together” rally, has now decided it is his job to protect Islamic terrorists from being investigated by Rep. Peter King, the incoming chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. The ink was barely dry on a King op-ed calling for scrutiny into those networks when Schultz featured Muslim Democratic Rep Keith Ellison on his show, complaining in advance that the probe would be a “witch hunt.”

The choice of guests was no accident. Reporter Kevin Diaz of the Minneapolis Star Tribune notes that Ellison’s Minneapolis, Minnesota district “has been fertile recruitment ground for Al-Shabab insurgents in Somalia” who are under the influence of al Qaeda. So the witches apparently do exist.

The Investigative Project on Terrorism found that Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress who was just elected co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, has been financially supported by members of the Muslim Brotherhood, who favor imposition of Islamic law on society.

[…]

One of those federal officials, Philip Mudd, associate executive assistant director of the National Security Branch of the FBI, said, “In Minneapolis, we believe there has been an active and deliberate attempt to recruit individuals—all of whom are young men, some only in their late teens—to travel to Somalia to fight or train on behalf of al-Shabaab.”

The hearings resulted in a report, “Violent Islamist Extremism, the Internet, and the Home Grown Terrorist Threat.”

A report into the Minneapolis problem by the cable channel HDNet described it as “a chilling threat to national security that has sparked one of the largest anti-terror investigations since 9/11.” It quoted FBI Special Agent Timothy Gossfeld as saying, “We have a principal, potential threat to national security right here on U.S. soil, actually, even within the state of Minnesota. So our director has already acknowledged the potential for individuals trained by al-Shabaab, under the influence of al-Qaeda, potentially being used to target the United States.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama ‘Snookered’ By Russia in New Arms Treaty

‘They got virtually everything they wanted but gave up nothing of importance to us’

The lame-duck Senate voted 71-26 today to ratify President Obama’s strategic arms reduction treaty with the Russians, which numerous Reagan and Bush administration defense experts say will put America at a strategic disadvantage.

The Obama administration is “intent on putting the United States out of the nuclear weapons business,” said Frank Gaffney, president of the Center for Security Policy and a former acting assistant secretary of defense for security policy.

Gaffney accused Obama of following a policy of “radical denuclearization.”

“Ours is the only country they can denuclearize,” Gaffney lamented.

The so-called New START treaty limits each side to 1,550 strategic nuclear weapons but fails to address the massive 10-1 Russian advantage in tactical nuclear weapons. Disputes over interpretation of the treaty may allow the Russians to expand their nuclear advantage even further.

“The Russians have already said they think they can have 2,200 warheads, far more than the 1,550 they’re supposed to have,” said Gaffney.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Steven Spielberg Advising Nancy Pelosi on Rebranding Democrats

Midway through Philip Rucker and Paul Kane’s story about Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s transition to minority leader comes an interesting bit of news. The California Democrat, vilified by Republicans in the last election, has turned to director Steven Spielberg for help rebranding House Democrats.

Lawmakers say she is consulting marketing experts about building a stronger brand. The most prominent of her new whisperers is Steven Spielberg, the Hollywood director whose films have been works of branding genius. Lawmakers said Spielberg has not reported to Pelosi with a recommendation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S. Approves Business With Blacklisted Nations

A little-known office of the Treasury Department has permitted American companies to do billions of dollars in business with Iran and other countries blacklisted as state sponsors of terrorism.

[Return to headlines]



Video: General: Muslim ‘Moderates’ Plot Undoing of America

Praises daring investigation exposing ‘terrorists with neckties’ in D.C.

Recently, retired Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin, former U.S. deputy undersecretary of defense for intelligence, made an impassioned plea for Americans to learn about the inner workings of stealth jihadists by reading “Muslim Mafia.”

“There’s a recent book that came out called ‘Muslim Mafia,’“ said Boykin at a major Christian conference. “Have any of you read this? Have any of you ever seen it? I encourage you to get this book — ‘Muslim Mafia.’ … This book will scare you. This book will open your eyes. This book will shake you. What this book says is frightening.”

Watch Gen. Boykin describe “Muslim Mafia” below: …

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Will Jewish Community Leaders Stand Up?

Multiculturalism has utterly failed. . . .For years we’ve been deceiving ourselves.” Recent pronouncement of German Chancellor Merkel. “Radical Islam is a clear and present danger to America.” Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich on July 29, 2010 at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC.

These statements by German Chancellor Merkel and Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich serve as dire warnings to Westerners about the threat that we face in the terror war, yet many of our national and community leaders and clergy refuse to absorb the message, thereby representing the troubling and pathological phenomenon of denial in our society. Our leadership fails to understand that our gestures of kindness and accommodation are interpreted as signs of weakness by the Islamic world. Peace cannot be created with forces who do not share our common values. And it is vital to stress: we are not fighting with Muslims; we are fighting with Islamic ideology. Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan stated it accurately when he said, “there is no such thing as moderate Islam vs. radical Islam, there is only Islam.” If there are moderates, they remain largely irrelevant because they either remain silent or they do not have influential positions in leadership.

When the Imam of the Islamic Society of Boston Mosque preached picking up the sword and fighting the infidel to rule our nation, Charles Jacobs, a prominent Jewish community leader, exposed the problems associated with the backers of the Mosque. Several of them have been convicted of fraud. Yet, in support of the Mosque, Rabbi Eric Gurvis and 70 other rabbis from Massachusetts blamed Jacobs for his comments rather than allow the truth to be known.

New York Rabbi Joy Levitt of Manhattan JCC and Rabbi Michael Friedland of South Bend, Indiana are major supporters of the mosque in New York. They ignore the fact that the planned mosque is actually part of Ground Zero. The building was condemned due to major damage caused by the fuselage of one of the terrorist planes. They also ignore that during Islamic domination, mosques were purposely built over the ruins of destroyed churches and Synagogues as a symbol of victory — like the mosque in Cordoba, Spain, the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul and the al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Arrogant Judiciary is Undermining British Society

BRITAIN is no longer a properly functioning democracy. The governance of our country is increasingly in the hands of a judicial elite that is beholden to Brussels and its own Left-wing bias.

Puffed up with power, these courtroom zealots appear to have nothing but contempt for justice, the national interest or the will of the British people.

And in the Human Rights Act they have the perfect instrument for pushing through their own agenda.

One recent legal case graphically symbolises the destructive influence of our politically correct judges. Ignoring common decency, a court decided last week that the British Government cannot deport a failed Iraqi Kurdish asylum seeker, Aso Mohammed Ibrahim, who killed a 12-year-old girl, Amy Houston, in a brutal hit-and-run accident in 2003…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Hungary Gags Media and Throws Its EU Presidency Into Doubt

The European Union has been thrown into turmoil after Hungary approved a Communist-style media gag just weeks before it assumes the rotating presidency of the 27-nation bloc.

It has left the EU in the unusual position of threatening to blackball the country that is set to inherit the presidency on January 1 for six months.

On Tuesday, Hungary’s parliament — led by Prime Minister Viktor Orban — approved a contentious new law that will expand the state’s power to monitor and penalize private media.

There will be fines of 25 million forints for newspapers and 10 million forints for websites that breach vague new rules on ‘balance’ and ‘human dignity’.

In extreme cases, media outlets could be shut down in a move that will be seen as a serious backwards step for a nation that moved out of Communism two decades ago.

By doing so, Hungary will breach a series of rules to which it agreed when it joined the EU, with freedom of expression and media pluralsim enshrined in Article II of the Charter Of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.

The move has drawn howls of protests from a variety of quarters and an investigation by the European Commission has been launched.

EU heavyweight Germany is leading the outcry with a spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s saying her office was paying ‘close attention’ to the matter.

German deputy foreign minister Werner Hoyer, a prominent EU lawmaker, said the European commission must not rule out sanctions against Hungary.

Hoyer also said that Germany welcomes the investigation by the commission on whether the law violates the EU’s legal standards.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Council Warns of Legal Action to Remove Families From Site

TRAVELLERS HAVE occupied a vacant site in north Dublin that Dublin City Council needs to include in the Government’s land aggregation scheme to stop mounting loan payments.

The council is anxious to off-load three plots in the Darndale/Donaghmede area for which it has already paid out more than €8.5 million in interest. However it will be unable to transfer one of the sites due to its recent occupation by a group of about 15 Traveller families.

Under the scheme, which has been set up to cut the escalating property loan debts of local authorities, housing loans are paid off by the Department of the Environment and the land is transferred to the recently established Housing and Sustainable Communities Agency, which will determine the future use of the land in consultation with the National Asset Management Agency.

In 2008, the Travellers had moved on to council-owned lands at Oscar Traynor Road, in north Dublin. The council sought a High Court injunction to remove them from the site more than two years ago. The injunction was granted and was due to come into effect about three months ago.

However just days before the implementation of the court order, the Travellers left the site and occupied other council-owned land at nearby Newtown Court, off Belcamp Lane, which the council intends to transfer to the State housing agency.

An inspection of the site by the council in October found that a new entrance to the land had been created and large amounts of hard-core stone had been used to create makeshift roads and parking spots for caravans. Lighting and toilets were installed but it was not apparent how water was being sourced, the council said.

A senior council official said there was no option but to again begin legal proceedings against the Travellers to try to move them off the site.

However this process is likely to take a considerable length of time and in the meantime, the council will have to keep paying interest on the land which it cannot transfer to the agency.

He said the families have been made a number of offers of accommodation by the council but these have all been rejected or ignored.

Under the terms of the land aggregation scheme, the council must have vacant possession of a site before it can seek transfer to the agency.

The Travellers have not occupied all of the lands due to be transferred and it is likely that the Department of the Environment will pay off the loans of the unencumbered sites.

However the council said that due to the impediment the illegal occupation was causing, it was seeking to have the case listed with the High Court as “a matter of urgency”.

The State’s local authorities have a combined housing loan debt of about €650 million. Most local authorities have applied to offload some or all of their unwanted land to the housing agency.

Travellers’ View ‘They’ve Tried to Put Us in Hostels, B&Bs . . . That’s Not Suitable

The extended Gavin family who moved on to the Newtown Court lands almost three months ago said the council has not offered them a suitable place to live.

“They offered us a place in St Dominick’s that isn’t fit for human habitation, for one thing, and it’s not safe for us there,” Martin Gavin a spokesman for the family said.

The Gavin family has been involved in a dispute with a family already living at St Dominick’s Park, a halting site about a kilometre from Newtown Court, which is in an extremely rundown state, and they have agreed not to go back to the site, Mr Gavin said.

“They also offered us a place in Dunsink Lane where there are also people we’ve had problems with in the past.

“They’ve tried to put us in hostels, B&Bs, all housing that’s not suitable for Traveller families.”

Mr Gavin concedes that the conditions are Newtown Court site are not appropriate either, particularly given the presence of children at the site.

“There is no proper water system here, we’re using porta-loos we’ve got in ourselves, a generator for electricity. There’s no proper surface on the ground, so especially when it rains the place is a mess.”

However, he said it was preferable to the alternatives offered by the council, and the families do not intend to move on in the current circumstances.

“Until the council can sort us out with proper accommodation for our family and unless we don’t plan on moving, at least here, there is a bit of peace.”

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Italy: Parcel Bomb Attacks Strike at Embassies in Rome

ROME — Diplomatic missions in Rome were hit by a coordinated assault of parcel bombs on Thursday, officials and news agencies reported, seriously injuring at least one person and injecting Europe with a new atmosphere of anxiety about possible terrorist plots ahead of the Christmas holiday. Police were conducting checks at all embassies in the capital, The Associated Press reported.

The first attack, a parcel bomb at the Swiss Embassy, exploded at midday. Shortly after, a second parcel bomb exploded at the Chilean Embassy here, wounding an employee, Reuters reported, and a suspicious package was reported at the Ukrainian Embassy in Rome.

It was not immediately clear who had sent the packages or why the embassies had been chosen as targets. The Swiss embassy said that no one had claimed responsibility for the bomb there.

The attacks rattled a city already on edge after violent student protests last week and ongoing security alerts across Europe this month. The Swiss Embassy said in a statement that a package containing a hidden explosive device detonated around noon when an embassy employee opened it, causing injuries to both of his hands. Those injuries appeared serious, said a spokesman for the Carabinieri, Italy’s paramilitary police. The employee, a 53-year-old Swiss national, was taken to a local hospital.

Similarly, a package exploded at the Chilean embassies when an employee opened it there, Reuters reported. A spokesman for the police could not immediately be reached for comment. Shortly after, news agencies reported that a suspicious package had been found at the Ukranian Embassy.

After the first explosion, Foreign Minister Franco Frattini of Italy quickly condemned what he called a “deplorable act of violence” against the Swiss Embassy and wished the employee a speedy recovery. Counterterrorism officials have opened up an investigation, Italy’s ANSA news agency reported.

After the explosion at the Swiss embassy, bomb disposal experts checked the building, located in the leafy Rome neighborhood of Parioli, but no one was evacuated, Reuters reported. “The ambassador is still on site,” Maurizio Mezzavilla, a police spokesman, told reporters at the scene…

[Return to headlines]



Italy: Slide in Berlusconi’s Approval Rating Levels Out

Poll finds center-right maintains marginal lead among voters

(ANSA) — Rome, December 21 — After steadily declining for months, Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi saw his approval rating among Italian voters hold at 35%, its lowest since he took office in May 2008, according to a monthly survey by the IPR research group released on Tuesday.

Berlusconi’s disapproval rating for the month was also steady at 59%, its highest since May 2008.

While the premier managed to keep his approval rating from falling further, the same was not true for his center-right government which saw its approval rating drop three percentage points in one month to sink to its lowest to date: 24%.

Although the government’s disapproval rating remained steady at its peak of 67%, voters who had no opinion or neither approved nor disapproved of the executive climbed three points to 9%.

The government last week narrowly survived a confidence vote in parliament.

The approval rating for individual government ministers saw Labor Minister Maurizio Sacconi once again on top with 61%, the same as last month, but he was joined by Justice Minister Angelino Alfano who rose a percentage point.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni was third, slipping a point to 59%, while three minister had approval ratings of 50%: Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti, Reform Minister Umberto Bossi and Government Program Minister Gianfranco Rotondi.

Italy’s recently appointed Industry Minister Paolo Romani had the lowest approval rating, 20%, while the minister for relations with parliament, Elio Vito, and Regional Affairs Minister Raffaele Fitto remained at 23%, where they were joined by Culture Minister Sandro Bondi and Tourism Minister Maria Vittoria Brambilla, who both fell two points in one month.

The IPR survey was commissioned by the left-leaning La Repubblica daily and taken between December 15 and 17 on a cross-section of 1,000 resident Italian voters.

IPR also took a poll on voter intention which found that the governing coalition of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party and Bossi’s Northern League remained ahead of any center-left coalition, even if it allied with the breakaway center-right group headed by House Speaker Gianfranco Fini and the opposition centrist UDC party, the so-called ‘third pole’.

Were elections to be held today, a center-left coalition would capture 39.5% of the vote, the current government coalition 42.5% and the ‘third pole’ 13.5%.

However, were the center left to ally with the ‘third pole’ they would get only 39%, while the center right would get 43%.

IPR’s voter intention poll was taken between December 18 and 19 on a cross section of 1,000 Italian voters.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Blasts EU’s Response to Christian Persecutions

Frattini also hits out at EC for ‘forgetting’ Christmas

(ANSA) — Rome, December 22 — Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini blasted the European Union on Wednesday for not doing more to combat Christian persecutions in Iraq and other Middle Eastern Countries.

Frattini said United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is also worried about the plight of Middle Eastern Christians, who are leaving the region in increasing numbers, especially from Iraq, where they have been the victims of a series of bomb attacks this year.

“We are worried and so are the United States and other big nations,” Frattini said on Italian television, having spoken to Clinton on the telephone Tuesday to exchange Christmas greetings.

“Frankly, it is a little sad that Europe isn’t reacting on this issue as it should”.

Italy is set to present a resolution to the United Nations on religious freedom which aims to stop this persecution and it has the backing of the EU, while several non-EU countries have expressed “great interest”.

Last week Pope Benedict XVI said Christians were the religious group that suffered most persecution around the world.

The foreign minister also expressed indignation Wednesday at the European Commission for forgetting to highlight Christmas in a diary for 2011 released by the European Union’s executive.

The diary marks Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Jewish and Chinese festivities, but the festivals of the continent’s biggest religion, including Christmas, were left out.

“Publishing three million copies of a diary with European taxpayers’ money with the all the festivals of all the religious except for December 25 is indecent,” Frattini said on Italian television.

“The European Commission has apologized, but it’s too easy for some bureaucrat to admit a mistake. I want to know who it was and I want the dairies withdrawn”. Frattini also confirmed Wednesday that Italy will start its gradual withdrawal from Afghanistan in the new year, hopefully in spring.

Italy and the other members of the NATO-led ISAF mission are aiming to hand back security control to the Afghan authorities in phases ahead of a total withdrawal of combat forces in 2014.

“Spring 2011 is an opportune moment for the start of the withdrawal, but obviously we’ll do this in coordination with the NATO command,” he said in an interview with the Affaritaliani.it.

“(United States President Barack) Obama has spoken of spring 2011. “In the first half of next year we’ll start the withdrawal, area-by-area, region-by-region, although we’ve said that we won’t say which to avoid giving useful information to the terrorists and the Taliban”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Parcel Bomb Attacks Hit Rome Embassies

BOMBS exploded last night at the Chilean and Swiss embassies in Rome, injuring two people, as authorities feared a new spate of parcel bomb attacks.

A parcel bomb delivered to the Swiss embassy in Rome exploded in the hands of a mail worker who opened the package, seriously injuring the man in what Italy’s foreign minister termed “a deplorable act”.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

The Rome prosecutor’s office has opened an investigation on suspicion of “an attack with terrorist aims,” the Italian news agency ANSA reported.

Reports said the injured man is a 53-year-old Swiss national and he faced the amputation of one or both his hands..

           — Hat tip: LL [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘Anarchists’ Launch Bomb Attacks on Two Rome Embassies

The first explosion, which occurred at midday (11amGMT) seriously injured a caretaker at the Swiss embassy.

The second, which occurred at around 3pm (2pm GMT), was at the Chilean embassy, also injuring one person.

The Rome prosecutor’s office has opened an investigation on suspicion of “an attack with terrorist aims,” ANSA news agency reported One of the investigators said that one of the main lines of inquiry was on “anarchist circles of the eco-terrorist movement.” Another possibility mentioned by investigators is that “the attack was organised by insurgent anarchist groups.”

The parcel bomb delivered to the Swiss embassy in Rome exploded in the hands of a mail worker who opened the package. “A device hidden inside a package exploded in the embassy. at midday (1100 GMT),” the Swiss embassy said in a statement. “The postal worker’s hands were injured and he was immediately taken to hospital,” it added.

The embassy said there had been no claim of responsibility. The injured man is a 53-year-old Swiss national and he risks the amputation of one or both his hands but his life is not in danger. A suspect package has found at the Ukrainian embassy in Rome, proved contain no dangerous items.

Italy’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini, branded the attack “a deplorable act”.

“We express full solidarity with the Swiss ambassador and all diplomatic staff, targeted by a deplorable act of violence that merits the firmest condemnation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Man Fined for Insulting French Flag

A court in the south of France has fined an Algerian man 750 euros (£637; $984) for insulting the national flag — the first penalty under a new decree.

Abderrahmane Saidi, 26, was at a local government office on Tuesday when he grabbed a flag and snapped the pole in two during a row with a clerk.

A July decree made insulting the tricolour an offence punishable by a fine of up to 1,500 euros.

The rule was triggered by a photo of a man wiping his bottom with the flag.

Saidi was sentenced by a court in Nice. It also gave him a four-month suspended prison sentence and ordered him to attend citizenship classes.

Frustrated by a bureaucratic delay, he not only attacked the flag but also threw the broken pole at the clerk’s window, AFP news agency reports. Two police officers then restrained him, but he tried to punch them.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Portugal: Scandal Splatters Barroso

“The European Commission, presided over by José Manuel Barroso, must decide if it wants to launch an investigation against the former [Portuguese] government of its president,” notes the Portuguese daily, i. Barroso, who was the Portuguese prime minister from 2002 to 2004, is the target of an inquiry request filed December 20 by the Socialist member of the European Parliament, Ana Gomes, the paper explains. Gomez is alleging corruption, fraud, violation of internal market regulations and misuse of public funds concerning Portugal’s purchase of two submarines from the German Submarine Consortium in 2004. She is asking for the Commission to cancel the contract despite the fact that, according to the terms of the contract, the Portuguese state gave up the right to sue in case of a dispute.

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



Scottish Socialist Party Leader Tommy Sheridan Found Guilty of Perjury

Former Scottish Socialist Party leader Tommy Sheridan was facing years in jail after he was convicted today of lying during his defamation case against the News of the World.

The firebrand politician was found guilty after being awarded £200,000 following his successful 2006 action during which the newspaper claimed he was an adulterer who visited swingers’ clubs.

But in his 12-week trial, the court heard from a succession of high-ranking members of the SSP who said Sheridan had confessed to attending such a club in Manchester on two occasions.

It took a jury of 12 women and two men just six and a half hours to convict the politician at the High Court in Glasgow.

[…]

He was found to have lied about statements he made during a meeting on November 9, 2004, an alleged trip to a sex club in Manchester and about having sexual relationships with Anvar Khan and Katrine Trolle.

[…]

Following the majority verdict, Advocate Depute Alex Prentice gave a short biography of Sheridan’s political career, mentioning previous convictions for breach of the peace.

Sheridan told the jury himself how he had spent time in jail after his protest against the Poll Tax and nuclear weapons.

Lord Bracadale requested background reports and said any submissions by Sheridan could be made at the sentencing hearing next month.

The judge told Sheridan: ‘You have been convicted of the serious offence of perjury and must return to court expecting to begin a prison sentence.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Jihad of the British Left

A new and authoritative report by Ehud Rosen has just been published by the Jerusalem Institute for Public Affairs, which maps the forces behind the campaign of demonisation and delegitimisation of Israel and shows how the UK has become the global hub of such bigotry.

But the UK has also become the global hub, outside the Arab and Muslim world itself, of Muslim radicalisation. The two phenomena are, of course, symbiotically connected. And what Rosen shows is how the radicalisation of British Muslims — an issue of the greatest possible concern in Britain — is not just the result of extremist Muslim preachers and the like. It has also been actively pushed by the far left.

It has often been remarked upon with surprise that in Britain, the supposedly ‘antifascist’ left marches shoulder to shoulder against Israel and America with the most obscurantist Islamist fanatics who believe in extinguishing the freedom — and sometimes even the lives — of women, gays and apostates in the Muslim world, let alone unbelievers anywhere else.

The conclusion has accordingly been drawn that this unholy alliance is based on a shared aim of toppling western society and the destruction of Israel. A series of conferences between 2002 and 2007 brought together the Socialist Workers’ Party, the Stop the War Coalition and the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign, along with delegates from British trade unions and what turned into the Respect-Unity Coalition, and Islamists from Hamas, Hizballah, the Muslim Brotherhood, and other radical jihadi organizations. The agenda was to organise worldwide boycotts, demonstrations and campaigns against Israel and America.

But as if all this wasn’t enough, what has not been paid sufficient attention is the way in which the British far-left also sought to radicalise British Muslims to the jihad through its close association with the Muslim Brotherhood — part of whose strategy for western domination is to radicalise home-grown Muslims to the cause — through the Brothers’ UK front in the Muslim Association of Britain. Rosen writes:

…politicizing the Muslims in Britain is perceived as one of the SWP’s major achievements in the last few decades. As explained by Arun Kundnani, editor of the Race& Class journal: ‘The role of the anti-war movement and the coalitions it fostered between Islamists and the Left have obviously been central to this [politicization] dynamic and given a wide range of Muslim groups a level of confidence to speak out on issues such as civil rights and foreign policy, despite the fear of being associated with terrorism.’

… In reality, as already discussed, the MAB also played a major role in forming the political alliance with the British left, mostly manifested by the younger generation of its Brotherhood activists. Rajib al-Basil, an Egyptian journalist and blogger, explained that the MAB has two main political goals: to guide the Islamic awakening in Britain, and to raise the political awareness of the Muslims in Britain and make them more involved in the political process.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Meaning of That Joint Article

Recently, The New York Times published a joint article penned by four foreign ministers, William Hague of Great Britain, Franco Frattini of Italy, Carl Bildt of Sweden and Alexander Stubb of Finland, which supported the full membership of Turkey in the European Union. In this joint article, the four foreign ministers describe the meaning of European integration as strengthening the rule of law, common European values and standards all over the continent. In this context, they say that blocking new chapters in order to stop the negotiations between Ankara and Brussels is against these principles.

There are so many reasons for this support: the mission of European integration is still incomplete; recent economic crisis and serious economic problems of some member countries almost stopped the integration process. Recently, Turkey became a new growth engine of the region, it is a bridge between East and West, fulfilling various duties such as security, trade and being an energy corridor. Turkey is, as they say, in a class of its own.

The problem is that governments in some other key countries like France and Germany do not want to approve those reasons, even if they believe that four foreign ministers are telling the truth. Furthermore, with this attitude they are also strengthening the negative public opinion in their countries about Turkey’s full membership.

Some Turks get angry when they listen to Mrs. Merkel and Mr. Sarkozy and their intentions about Turkey’s place in the western hemisphere. It is not of course rational to get angry at what they say. They are politicians and obviously they try to please their constituencies. It means that the percentage of European people who dislike Turks is more important than what these two leaders say.

The reaction of the Turkish people to such negative attitude and their complaints about a lack of understanding in some European countries are well known: If it is proper to repeat, the majority of the Turks believe that Europeans have left Turkey alone in its fight against terrorism; and in some cases they defended terrorist activities in Turkey and applauded those who were responsible for those activities. When positive views or news about Turkey is published or broadcast by a European media outlet, during almost the same day or night some sad event that happened decades before is televised too, as if to try to offset a potential positive impression about the Turks. Xenophobia is becoming stronger in every part of Europe and the ratio of the people supporting political parties on the extreme right is increasing.

As a matter of fact Turkey is really in a class of its own. Maybe this is the reason why Europeans cannot grasp the characteristics of this country. And many of them repeat the same question: Can this mainly Muslim country be a model democracy for its region and can it reach Western standards of human rights and democracy in the foreseeable future? It means that Turkey’s positive assets that were repeated in that joint letter seem not enough to convince the leaders of some countries and some part of the people in those countries that after some new reforms, there will be no barrier in front of Turkey’s full membership.

In that letter, four ministers delivered important messages to both sides. Indicating the importance of Turkey for the completion of European integration, they also noted the necessity of new reforms to shape a political and social environment in Turkey in accord with European values and standards.

To comprehend Turkey’s importance is their job, to justify that importance is ours.

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



The Spanish Ham Lawsuit and Other Muslim Problems Hitting Iberia

A high school teacher in southern Spain is being sued for child abuse by the parents of a Muslim student who claims that the teacher “defamed Islam” by talking about Spanish ham in class. The case is one of a growing list of recent controversies that illustrate the increasing assertiveness of Muslims in Spain at a time when Spaniards are slowly waking up to the integration challenges posed by uncontrolled immigration from Muslim countries.

Although Spanish legal scholars are divided over whether the lawsuit has real merit, nearly everyone agrees that the case has potentially major implications for free speech in Spain. They also agree that the constant threat of lawsuits will force Spanish school teachers to carefully consider their choice of words in the future.

The latest dust-up occurred at the Instituto Menéndez Tolosa, a secondary school in the town of La Línea de la Concepción in the southern region of Andalusia, where José Reyes Fernández, a geography teacher, was giving a lecture about the different types of climates in Spain. During the class, Reyes mentioned that the climate in Andalusia offers the perfect temperature conditions for curing Spanish ham (Jamón Ibérico), a world-famous delicacy.

At this point, a Muslim student in the class interrupted Reyes and, according to local newspaper reports, argued that any talk of pork products is offensive to his religion. Reyes responded by saying that he was only giving an example and that he does not take into consideration different religious beliefs when teaching geography.

The Muslim student informed his parents, who then proceeded to file a lawsuit against Reyes, accusing him of “abuse with xenophobic motivations.” Article 525 of the Spanish Penal Code makes it a crime to “offend the feelings of the members of a religious confession.”

The Spanish ham controversy follows several other recent imbroglios involving Spain’s Muslim community, which now numbers around 1.5 million (compared to only 100,000 in 1990), and exposes the growing uncertainty in Spain over how to deal with Muslim mass immigration.

In September 2010, for example, a discotheque in southern Spain was forced to change its name and architectural design after Islamists threatened to initiate “a great war between Spain and the people of Islam” if it did not. La Meca was a popular discotheque in the southern Spanish resort town of Águilas (Murcia) in the 1980s and 1990s. After being closed for more than a decade, the club reopened in August 2010 under new management, but using the original name, La Meca. The mega-nightclub, which has been visited by more than 100,000 patrons since its reopening, features a large turquoise-colored mosque-style dome, a minaret-like tower, as well as traditional Arabic architecture common in southern Spain.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Chairman Mao and the Coalition’s Lunatic Fixation With Change

According to Vince Cable, the disgraced Business Secretary, we are governed by Maoists. During his newspaper sting he confided to two winsome female reporters that ‘there is a kind of Maoist revolution happening in a lot of areas’ across government.

Presumably Mr Cable is not completely serious. Mao Zedong was responsible in various purges for killing up to 70 million people.

[…]

There is nonetheless more than a grain of truth in what he says. The Tory-led Coalition sees itself in revolutionary terms. Steve Hilton, who is David Cameron’s political guru, is supposed to have declared: ‘Everything must be changed by 2015. Everything.’ An odd thing, perhaps, for an alleged Conservative to have said.

Then there is Nick Boles, the staunchly Cameroon Tory MP for Grantham, who at a conference last week said that David Cameron and Nick Clegg want their ‘people power’ revolution to unleash ‘chaotic’ effects across the community. That sounds like Mao Zedong on a wild night.

During the election campaign Nick Clegg often said that he plans to ‘change Britain for good’, a call to arms he repeated at the Lib Dem party conference in September. I don’t know about you, but there is quite a lot about Britain which I like, and I am by no means sure that Mr Clegg’s transformed version would be preferable.

There is a good deal of this Maoist-type talk. And if you look at the Coalition’s proposals in various areas, there is a lot of frenetic activity of which Mao, as the creator of ‘permanent revolution’, would have warmly approved.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Meet Chaser: The Incredible Border Collie Who Has Learned the Names for 1022 Toys

Dog owners like to think that their pets understand what they’re being told.

Indeed, some owners will talk to their dogs at great length while the animal gazes back at them with what is probably a mixture of affection and bewilderment.

However, there is one dog who appears to understand a great deal of what is being said.

Border collie Chaser has, according to psychologists Alliston Reid and John Pilley, managed to learn more than 1,000 words.

Their findings could mean that all those conversations with our pets aren’t entirely wasted.

Professor Reid and Dr Pilley worked intensively with six-year-old Chaser for three years to see how large a vocabulary she could command.

[…]

‘We worked with Chaser for four to five hours each day testing her on the words over and over again and were able to establish that she could remember and distinguish between them all. We’re not saying this means dogs can learn language in the same way children do, but it does show they are capable of learning many more words than might have been thought.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim ‘Poppy Burners’ Deny Offending Public Order After Armistice Day Protest

Two men accused of burning poppies on the anniversary of Armistice Day each denied a public order offence today.

Mohammad Haque, 30, and Emdadur Choudhury, 26, were arrested during a demonstration by Islamist group Muslims Against Crusades.

The group held a noisy and confrontational demonstration in Kensington, west London, on November 11.

Haque, of Bethnal Green, east London and Choudhury, of Spitalfields, east London, stood in the dock during the short hearing at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court to confirm their respective names, ages and addresses.

The pair, who both had beards and wore traditional black Muslim robes under their coats, each pleaded not guilty to one count under section five of the Public Order Act.

It is alleged that on November 11 at Kensington Gore both employed threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour within hearing or sight of persons who could be alarmed or distressed by this.

Outlining the charge, Prosecutor Malachy Pakenham said: ‘It is a matter of so-called protest. They burned poppies on Armistice Day, it is as straightforward as that.

‘Our case is that they did cause alarm and distress to the persons that witnessed this.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Extremists in Poppy Trial Slur

MUSLIM extremists triggered chaos in court yesterday as two men were accused of torching a giant Armistice Day poppy. Twenty fanatics in the public gallery refused to stand for District Judge Quentin Purdy and rowed with staff.

The defiant protesters belonged to the group Muslims Against the Crusades.

Mohammad Haque, 30, and Emdadur Choudhury, 26 — also said to be members — allegedly chanted “British soldiers die in hell”, before burning the poppy in Kensington, West London, on November 11.

The pair, from East London, denied insulting behaviour at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court and were bailed for trial.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: The Wind Turbine Lunacy of a Generator That Won’t Even Work in the Cold Snap

Imported from Denmark, the 42ft blade, 11 kilowatt turbine sits on the brow of a hill, 200ft above sea level, dominating views in every direction. It cost thousands to buy and erect — meaning that it will take years to recoup the money through savings on the Joneses’ electricity bill.

[…]

In this intensely cold weather — just when electricity demands are at their highest — you might think the turbine might be doing its bit to fulfil demand. But its blades are motionless because, say the Coles, there often isn’t any wind at all in these parts.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Ten More Deaths Linked to Flu in a Week as Cases Accelerate

The H1N1 swine flu strain is responsible for the majority of the deaths as cases of influenza continue to rise.

It is feared cases of flu and deaths are accelerating as the flu season takes hold.

The number of people seeing their GP with flu symptoms has increased six fold in the last three weeks.

H1N1 is the predominant strain circulating this winter and is following a similar pattern as during the pandemic when it struck young age groups hardest and caused some severe illness.

Officials do not believe there will be another significant wave of flu as seen during the pandemic but it was expected that H1N1 would become a circulating seasonal flu for this winter and in coming years.

The latest figures released by the Department of Health showed that just over 300 people were in intensive care with flu, accounting for one in ten of all critical care beds in England.

However overall, flu levels remained within normal ranges for this time of year and claims that the NHS was under undue pressure have been denied.

Vaccine uptake remains low with less than half of those under the age of 65 who are pregnant or who have long-term illnesses having had the jab. Uptake is higher among the over 65s and around two thirds have so far been vaccinated.

The Health Protection Agency has been informed of ten deaths over the past week in people suffering from flu.

Out of the total of 27 deaths, 24 have been connected to H1N1 and three to influenza B. Nine of the deaths were in children under the age of 18. Almost half the deaths were in people with long-term illness who are in so-called risk groups, eligible for the vaccine. Of the 27 deaths, it is known that 21 had not received the jab, one had and it is not known if the remainder had been vaccinated.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Who Are You? Wife of 22 Years Pleads With Husband to Reveal His True Identity — But He Refuses

A father stole the name of another man and used it for 22 years, not even revealing the truth to his wife and child.

The real Mr Akintola moved to the United States in 1979 and had no idea someone had been using his identity in the UK.

It was only in September this year when the thief applied for a passport renewal and officials double checked his credentials that the lie was uncovered.

The man — still insisting on using the name Akintola — was jailed for two years after admitting a string of fraud offences at Southwark Crown Court.

[…]

Although the false Mr Akintola’s true identity is not known, it is thought he is originally from Nigeria, and he is likely to be deported back there on his release.

Usha Shergill, prosecuting, said the defendant, who claims to be 50-years-old, stole Mr Akintola’s identity some time after he emigrated in 1979.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Where Did Labour’s £1bn Foreign Aid Go? There Are No Proper Records, Says Scathing Report

Labour spent £1billion of taxpayers’ money on foreign aid to African and Asian schools without even monitoring whether it provided value, a damning report has found.

The Department for International Development failed to measure if the huge cash investment has made any difference to school attendance rates in the poorest nations.

DFID had even decided that the risk of money going astray was ‘manageable’ despite widespread fraud being detected in one educational programme in Kenya.

MPs on the influential Public Accounts Committee have now given the department a year to reform.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why Anti-Semitism is Growing in Germany

BERLIN — A group of Muslim teenagers in Hanover attack an Israeli dance troupe, reportedly yelling “Juden raus” as they hurl stones at them.

German leftists march in Berlin with Muslims to protest the 2008-2009 Gaza military conflict. “Death to the Jews!” the marchers chant.

At a soccer game between teams from the St. Pauli section of Hamburg and the city of Chemnitz in eastern Germany, the Chemnitz fans shout “Sieg heil” and wave imitation Nazi flags. “We’re going to build a subway from St. Pauli to Auschwitz,” some chant — not because the St. Pauli team is Jewish, but simply as a way of expressing contempt through casual use of Holocaust imagery.

This is happening in a country that has confronted its Nazi past, where Holocaust education has long been mandatory and such expressions of anti-Semitism are illegal. Holocaust denial is a crime in Germany.

But generational and demographic changes are converging in Germany today, and there is a shift afoot in the zeitgeist. While Germany continues to contend with vestiges of traditional anti-Semitism, a new and more deeply embedded strain has emerged related to Israel. Polls show that this strain is distinguishable from mere opposition to Israeli policies, or even from anti-Zionism. In a 2010 report by the University of Beilefeld’s Institute for Interdisciplinary Research on Conflict and Violence, institute researchers, who conduct an annual poll on anti-Semitism, found an increase linked specifically to Israel. Among their findings:

More than 57% agreed that Israel is waging “a war of annihilation” against the Palestinians (up from 51% in 2009).

In 2008 — the most recent year the question was asked — more than 40% agreed that “what Israel is doing to the Palestinians is basically no different from what the Nazis did with the Jews during the Third Reich.”

More than 38% of Germans polled agreed that “considering the politics of Israel it is easy to see why one would have something against Jews” (up from 34% in 2009).

Yet at the same time, 67.5% in the 2010 poll agreed with the statement, “I like it that increasingly more Jews live in Germany.”

“As a psychologist, I think that this reflects ambivalent attitudes,” wrote Beate Küpper, one of the researchers who produced the report, in an e-mail to the Forward. “Germans are happy if there are some Jews in their country as this gives us release. It shows off that we are tolerant…. However, the strong blaming of Israel common in Germany (because we like peace and go for the weaker…) is full of anti-Semitic stereotypes [and] associations.”

She summarized: “When it comes to anti-Semitism I strongly believe that the old myths are still around, even though they are usually not awakened in their traditional forms today… [It’s] definitely less than some 60 years ago, but it is still around.”

Mirko Niehoff, a 31-year-old social worker who works with Muslim youth, sees aspects of these trends in his daily work. “We realized we were dealing with a new anti-Semitism with roots in the Middle East conflict,” he said.

Muslim and classic right-wing anti-Semitism are combining with left-wing demonization of Israel to produce a toxic mix, despite Germany’s postwar efforts to ensure that future generations continue to learn the lessons of the Holocaust. This new strain renders old ways of combating anti-Semitism less effective. According to some observers, in Germany the Holocaust narrative is no longer the powerful antidote it once was.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt’s Coptic Christians Struggle Against Institutionalised Prejudice

Christmas is coming in Giza, but the neighbourhood is far from festive. The road to St Mary’s, the half-built church in the neighbourhood of Al-Talbiyya, is strewn with giant clumps of concrete — all torn from the four-lane highway that towers above.

It was from this highway late last month that security forces launched a barrage of tear gas, live ammunition and handheld rocks upon thousands of Coptic Christians demonstrating below.

“Imagine how it feels to be standing in your own country with your own people, as the agents of your own government begin hurling bullets at you and your children,” recalls Ayed Gad, a pharmacy worker.

The clashes, triggered when local authorities halted construction at St Mary’s, left two young Copts dead. A priest described the government’s actions as barbaric. “The police acted as if they were Israel and we were Hamas,” Father Mina Zarif told a local newspaper.

It’s been a hard year for Egypt’s estimated 8 million Copts, the largest Christian community in the Middle East. It began with a drive-by massacre of churchgoers leaving midnight mass; it has ended with the deadly violence in Al-Talbiyya, along with election results that leave Copts with less than 1% representation in parliament.

In between there has been a bitter row over the alleged kidnapping of a priest’s wife who wanted to convert to Islam, accusations by Muslim clerics that Christian places of worship are being used to stockpile weapons, and a high-profile spat between the Coptic pope and the Egyptian government over the church’s right to regulate “personal status” issues among its members.

“Sectarian polarisation of Christians and Muslims stretches back over the centuries, but the problem of sectarian violence is a modern phenomenon,” says Hossam Baghat, director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights and a prominent human rights activist. “This year we’ve seen Muslim protesters shouting anti-Christian slogans after the Friday sermon, which is a very new and worrying development.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Anti-Arab Attacks in Jerusalem, 10 Arrests

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 21 — Ten young Israelis, many of them under the age of 18, have been arrested by police as part of an investigation into repeated attacks on Arabs in the centre of Jerusalem, particularly at night. This is according to the nationalist Jewish organization, Honenu.

The youths told police that they had decided to carry out the attacks in order to discourage Arab men from “courting Jewish girls”. To do this, three Jewish girls were used as “bait”.

Honenu says that the girls have also been arrested.

The police operation is part of efforts to tackle activity by far-right groups who are targeting the presence of Arabs in Jewish areas of Jerusalem. In these areas over the last few months, signs have appeared with the words “Jewis women are not available to everyone”.

It is not yet known if those arrested are also suspects in the murder of a tramp attacked at night a few months ago by a group of thugs in the centre of Jerusalem. The man’s attackers probably believed him to be Palestinian as he was wearing a kefiyah, (a typical Palestinian garment). The man was later revealed to have been a Jew.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Christmas in Bethlehem: The Cross Banished From Souvenirs Shops

For fear of Islamic fundamentalism, textile workshops in Hebron and Jerusalem, produce and sell T-shirts and other items depicting the Church of the Nativity without the cross. Discrimination and economic crisis are forcing Christians to flee from the Palestinian territories and Israel. The risk is to see a future without Christians in the Holy Land. Interview with Samir Qumsieh, director of the Catholic television station Al-Mahed Nativity TV in Bethlehem.

Bethlehem (AsiaNews) — This Christmas in Bethlehem, the cross has been banned from souvenirs for tourists and pilgrims in the Holy Land. Some textile workshops in Jerusalem and Hebron have begun to print and sell T-shirts depicting the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem without the cross. Because of the growth of Islamic fundamentalism in the Palestinian territories, the cross was also removed from t-shirts of football teams. Interviewed by AsiaNews, Samir Qumsieh, journalist and director of the Catholic television station Al-Mahed Nativity TV in Bethlehem, said: “I want to launch a campaign to urge people not to buy these products — he says — because the removal of the cross is an intimidation against Christians, it is like saying that Jesus was never crucified. “

Like every year, thousands including authorities, faithful and tourists from all over the world crowd, the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem for midnight mass on the night of 24 December. It will be celebrated by the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem and will be attended by the highest offices of the Palestinian Authority.

Qumsieh says that the population is living these days with joy, but the situation for Christians is still dramatic. According to the journalist, the dialogue of recent years between Muslims, Christians and Jews has not changed the situation.

“In the Holy Land — said Qumsieh — the emigration of Christians is growing, even if the authorities refuse to give precise numbers. Every day there are people who flee to other countries. As Christians, we live in a constant feeling of fear and uncertainty, and if you live in constant tension and pessimism you can not plan anything.

According to the journalist, “people leave because there is no work and movement is restricted under Israeli control.” Other factors are the internal problems of Palestine, such as the clash between Hamas and Fatah, which has repercussions on the economic situation. Qumsieh points out that from 2002 to 2010 the Christian population of Bethlehem has dropped from over 18 thousand to 11 thousand people. In Gaza, after Hamas came to power in 2006, Christians have fallen by about 3,200 units, from 5 thousand to less than 1800 in 2010. Only 15,400 Christians (2% of the population) live in Jerusalem, as reported in a study by the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies. They are 50% less than the 31 thousand registered residents in 1948, when Christians accounted for 20% of the population of the city.

The reporter says that if this exodus continues there will be no more Catholics in the Holy Land and that one day the Church of the Nativity could be turned into a museum. “If there are no more Christians in the Holy Land — he says — then there will no longer be Christians anywhere.”

Meanwhile, on the occasion of the celebrations for Christmas, the Israeli military has ordered troops deployed in the occupied Palestinian territories to facilitate the passage of Christian pilgrims at checkpoints. The military has also distributed a brochure explaining the importance of Christmas for Christians and is urging soldiers to avoid unnecessary discussions and obstacles at the borders with the West Bank. (Sc)

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



PNA: EU Commission Approves 1st Package of 100 Mln in Aid

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 22 — The European Commission has approved an initial financial package worth 100 million for the Occupied Palestinian Territory under the 2011 budget.

EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the European Commission Catherine Ashton stated: “This decision is a sign of the strong political and financial commitment of the European Union to the Palestinian Authority and to Prime Minister Fayyad’s leadership in building a democratic and viable Palestinian state.

Palestinian statehood is critical for any peaceful, workable and lasting solution to the conflict”. In announcing the package Commissioner for Enlargement and Neighbourhood policy tefan Fle said: “By today’s decision the Commission wants to give a signal to the Palestinian people that they can count on our continued support in 2011 as in the past.

Our support will be channelled through PEGASE. The Union trusts that Member States and other donors will continue supporting the Palestinian people through this mechanism.” Today’s decision, by which the EU fulfils by far the pledges made at the Paris Donors’ Conference in December 2007, will help the Palestinian Authority to continue providing essential public services across all the occupied Palestinian territory. Of today’s announced package, 60 million will be channelled through the EU’s assistance mechanism for the Occupied Palestinian Territory, PEGASE1, which was launched in February 2008. These funds will help the PA to cover wages and pensions for essential civilian workers (particularly medical and teaching staff).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Support for Israel’s Settlements From Europe’s Right

Excerpt: Outside Israel, most of the world’s governments oppose the settlement construction, but in recent weeks the settlers have found solid support from what might seem an unlikely source: the far-right of the European political spectrum.

Geert Wilders, whose anti-immigrant party supports the government of the Netherlands, said in a speech this month in Tel Aviv, “Jews need to settle Judea and Samaria,” using the ancient Hebrew name for the West Bank. He added, “Without Judea and Samaria, Israel cannot protect Jerusalem.”

Mr. Wilders told Reuters, “Our culture is based on Christianity, Judaism and humanism and [the Israelis] are fighting our fight.” He added, “If Jerusalem falls, Amsterdam and New York will be next.”

During his trip to Israel, Mr. Wilders also met with Israel’s most prominent settler, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, as Radio Netherlands reported…

           — Hat tip: LL [Return to headlines]



Temple Mount Arrest of Zealot, Press

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 22 — A few days ago at the end of a manhunt Shin Bet, the Israeli secret services, arrested a Jewish zealot who seemed to be preparing an attack on Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, one of the holiest places in Islam.

Reports were in Maariv, which said that after a preliminary inquiry the young man had been taken to a psychiatric hospital since he gave the impression of not being psychologically stable.

It is not known whether he had been carrying weapons or explosives. The newspaper added that Shin Bet had previously stepped up security measures at the entrance to the Temple Mount to promptly intercept the young man, whose intentions they had received information on through intelligence. Maariv noted that aiding his arrest had been teachers of a rabbinic school located not far from Temple Mount, concerned as they were about his behaviour. The possibility of an attack on Temple Mount has frequently been conjured up by the heads of Shin Bet as one of the greatest dangers to stability in the region.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Christian Exodus From Iraq Gathers Pace

Their cathedrals stand silent and their neighbourhoods are rapidly emptying. Now Iraq’s Christians face two further unthinkable realities: that Christmas this year is all but cancelled, and that few among them will stay around to celebrate future holy days.

It has been the worst of years for the country’s Christians, with thousands fleeing in the past month and more leaving the country during 2010 than at any time since the invasion nearly eight years ago. Christian leaders say there have been few more defining years in their 2,000-year history in central Arabia.

The latest exodus follows a massacre led by al-Qaida at a Chaldean Catholic church in central Baghdad on 31 October, which left about 60 people dead, almost 100 maimed and an already apprehensive community terrified. Since then, the terror group has targeted Christians in their homes, including family members of those who survived the attack.

In Baghdad, as well as the northern cities of Mosul and Kirkuk, Christmas services have been cancelled for fear of further violence. Church leaders said they would not put up Christmas decorations or celebrate midnight mass. They told families not to decorate their homes, for fear of attack after al-Qaida reiterated its threat to target Christians earlier this week.

“Now more than 80% of Christians are not going to the churches,” said the head of Iraq’s Christian Endowment group, Abdullah al-Noufali. “There is no more sunday school, no school for teaching Christianity. Yesterday we had a discussion about what we would do for Christmas. We took a decision just to do one mass. In years before we had many masses.”

Noufali’s church was closed and barricaded in 2005 when violence was consuming Baghdad. Many others had stayed open since then. Until now. In the wake of the attack on the Our Lady of Salvation church, at least 10 churches are believed to have been closed. At others, congregations are down to a handful.

Iraq’s Christian population has halved since the ousting of Saddam Hussein. But in the past two months, the rate of departure has soared. The United Nations High Commission for Refugees is reporting high numbers of registrations by Christians in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon. And in Iraq’s Kurdish north, the number of refugees is overwhelming.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Girls’ Schools Face the Heat for Competing in ‘Illegal’ Sports Event

JEDDAH: The Ministry of Education has launched an investigation into a girls-only sports competition that was held illegally without its prior-permission and in which a number of girls’ schools in Jeddah took part.

“I was surprised to receive a letter from the Ministry of Education questioning me about the competition and the reason why it was held in the first place. I also received a huge number of letters and telephone calls from conservative Saudi men and sheikhs who said that I should’ve known better and advised me not to hold such competitions in the future because it’s not lady-like,” said Farida Farsi, chairman of the board of directors at Al-Hamra Schools.

The investigation has been launched after 200 schoolgirls from six high schools in Jeddah competed in a sports competition at Effat University’s sports facilities on Dec. 8. The competition, dubbed a first-of-its-kind event by its organizers, saw girls competing in basketball, badminton, athletics and swimming.

However, conservative elements within society have begun harassing the schools that participated in the competition, describing their actions as similar to those of non-Muslims and that the organizers would go to hell for making schoolgirls think about sports.

“After the competition, I received more than 60 messages from anonymous people demanding I stop girls from taking part in sports, and that this is a boys-only activity and not for girls,” said Sameera Al-Harakan, administrator at Al-Ferdous Schools.

“They also threatened to report us to the Ministry of Education for taking photos of the girls and giving them to newspapers. Later on, the ministry sent over people to question us. They said that it’s against the rules to let girls compete in sporting events and then publish their pictures in newspapers, even if they are fully covered,” she added.

“I believe this is ridiculous because young girls need to invest their time and energy in something good like sports. Sporting activities are like food for the body and soul, and known to be the number one anti-depression medication for people,” said Lina Almaeena, cofounder and director of the Jeddah United Sports Company and captain of the Jeddah United basketball team.

“What other substitute does the ministry have for young girls? Are they fine with them smoking and hanging out in shopping centers and cafe’s in their free time? I believe sporting activities are the best alternatives and a good source for schoolgirls to spend their free time,” she added.

Ahmed Al-Zahrani, director of the Girls Education Department in Jeddah, said the schools that participated in the competition have broken Ministry of Education rules and will be investigated. He added that the ministry will hold meetings and then decide what to do.

“We don’t have any regulations that say that it’s okay for girl schools to hold sports classes or training. This tournament was held by these schools, something that has now led us to know about their illegal activities,” he said.

“They should have requested a meeting with the Ministry of Education, but they went behind our backs and held the competition without us knowing,” he added.

Commenting on the students’ pictures published in the media, he said, “It’s an issue of personal freedom and we don’t want to get into these small details. As long as their legal guardians are fine with that, we have no objections.”

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Jihadis Fleeing to Europe

French newspaper Le Figaro says that around twenty Jihadis (FR) infiltrated Greece, Germany and France.

The new threat comes from a group of about 50 dangerous Jihadis caught between the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon and the Lebanese army.

Most are Palestinian refugees, others are Syrian, Saudi, Yemeni and North Africans who came to the Palestinian camps in Lebanon, where the army does not venture. Mostly from the al-Qaeda inspired Fatah al-Islam, they found refuge in Ain al-Hilweh, after the Lebanese army evicted them from Nahr al-Barid in 2007.

The army can’t touch all those ‘wanted’ Jihadis. Some went undergrounds, others have impressive security forces. Some chose European exile.

Palestinian Colonel Mahmoud Issa, in charge of security in Ain al-Hilweh, told Le Figaro that in the past year, about twenty of them fled to Greece and Bulgaria, and that some of them continued into Germany, France and Belgium. Issa says they have their names and try to keep track of them, in coordination with the local authorities, but it’s not easy as they sometimes change their identity and appearance.

The French security services confirm this new Jihadist flow to Europe. Le Figaro saw classified documents mentioning three names: Imad Karoum, Youssef Kayed and Ahmad Sidawi. [Ed: Karoum is the leader of Jund al-Sham, Kayed was recently deported to Lebanon]

They traveled through Syria and Turkey and from there entered Greece and Bulgaria illegally and without passports. There they bought fake ID for a few hundred dollars. Some were arrested in Sofia, others deported by the Greeks and Bulgarians. “But not all,” regrets Colonel Issa…

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Russia


Russia and India Agree to US$ 35 Billion Contract for 300 Fighter Jets

Moscow and New Delhi plan to develop and build fifth generation fighter planes. Russian President Medvedev is in India to renew old ties. He backs India’s aspiration for a permanent seat at the United Nations Security Council. The two partners plan to double trade over the next five years.

New Delhi (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Russia will supply India with fighter jets, missiles and nuclear reactors. The announcement was made yesterday during Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s visit to India. At the same time, “The Russian Federation supports India as a deserving and strong candidate for a permanent seat in an expanded UN Security Council,” a joint Russian-Indian statement said.

The declaration follows similar ones by the United States and France. The United Kingdom also does not appear to oppose India’s permanent seat. Only China has not clearly come down one way or the other. In fact, whilst New Delhi and Beijing have seen their relations improve recently, they remain traditional rivals.

China is also not very keen to see Japan get a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.

In his recent visit to India, Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao said that China “understands and supports India’s aspiration to play a greater role in the United Nations, including in the Security Council,” but did not go so far as to endorse a permanent seat for New Delhi.

Russia is one of India’s closest political and economic partners since Soviet times. For decades, it was New Delhi’s main weapons supplier, even though the Indians have recently sought to diversify their suppliers and inched closer to the United States.

Russian-Indian trade hit the US$ 10 billion mark this year, but the two countries plan to double that by 2015.

They will also work together to develop and build 250-300 fifth generation fighter aircraft over ten years in a contract estimated at US$ 35 billion.

Russia successfully tested a prototype of its fifth-generation PAK FA stealth fighter in January, beating out its US and European competitors.

On the nuclear front, Moscow will provide New Delhi another two civilian nuclear energy reactors in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

Energy-hungry India is one of the world’s biggest nuclear power markets, with plans to expand its capacity nearly 15-fold to 63,000 megawatts by 2032.

The Russian president, who headed a delegation that included about 100 business leaders, yesterday met Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Sing and the ruling Congress party president Sonia Gandhi.

Today he is in Mumbai, India’s financial capital, and will visit some Bollywood studios.

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



Russia Not About to Nix Nuclear Arsenal

General warns not a single missile or launcher that is serviceable will be destroyed

A Russian general has warned that START treaty or not, his nation will not destroy a single missile or launcher before its service life is over, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

The warning from Lt. Gen. Alexander Burutin, the first deputy chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, came in a statement to the Russian Ria Novosti news service that the Russian armed forces will test-launch up to 12 ballistic missiles a year over the next decade.

He said, “We currently carry out 10-12 ballistic missile launches a year and we will maintain this level in the foreseeable future.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: The Pedophilia Capital of Asia

According to Reuters, there is a lot of homosexuality going on in Afghanistan, but those engaging in it don’t think of themselves as gay, so that makes it okay since Islam officially disapproves of the gay and lesbian lifestyle.

“They regard themselves as non-gay because they don’t “love” the sex object so Allah is happy. These are the men who avoid their wives as unclean. Apparently there is very little love of any kind in Afghanistan, which explains a lot,” according to Reuters.

“Having a boy has become a custom for us,” Ena Yatullah, a 42-year-old in Baghlan province, told a Reuters reporter. “Whoever wants to show off should have a boy.” [. . .]

Sociologists and anthropologists say the problem results from a perverse interpretation of Islamic law. Women are simply unapproachable. Afghans cannot talk to an unrelated woman until after proposing marriage. Before then, they can’t even look at a woman, except perhaps her feet. Otherwise she is covered, head to ankle, according to columnist Joel Brinkley, a professor of journalism at Stanford University, and a former Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspondent for the New York Times.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Christians Are Top Victims of Intolerance in West Java

(AKI/Jakarta Post) — An organisation run by Indonesian Muslim organisation Nahdlatul Ulama said that West Java tops reports of religious intolerance. Christians top the list of victims.

“From 81 cases reported on [religious] intolerance, 49 cases, or 61 percent, took place in this province,” Moderate Muslim Society (MMS) chairman Zuhairi Misrawi said at the Tolerance and Intolerance Report 2010.

According to MMS data, cases of intolerance in West Java this year increased more than four times to 49 incidents, up from 11 in 2009.

Most cases occurred in the areas of Bekasi, Bogor, Garut and Kuningan.

“All of the victims of intolerance in Bekasi are Christians,” Zuhairi said.

Christians were barred from performing masses, their houses of worship were sealed and some Batak Christian Protestant Church members were attacked, he added. The Batak Christian Protestant Church is the largest Protestant denomination in Indonesia.

Christians were also the victims in seven of the 10 incidents of intolerance documented in Bogor.

“In Garut and Kuningan the victims of intolerance were members of Ahmadiyah,” Zuhairi said.

Zuhairi attributed mounting intolerance to inaction of local authorities in West Java.

“There are also increasing numbers of groups acting violently in West Java. They need to be brought to dialogue to understand diversity,” Zuhairi said.

Zuhairi called on the government to take stern actions toward the perpetrators of violence.

“Otherwise people will suspect that the government has deliberately protected extremist groups,” he said.

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



Malaysia Court Rules Child Marriage ‘Illegal’

The marriage of an 11-year-old Muslim girl to a 41-year-old man has been ruled illegal in Malaysia.

An Islamic court judge found the father of the child had had no intention of marrying her off, and that there were elements of threat and force involved.

Muslim girls in Malaysia under the age of 16 are allowed to get married with the permission of the Islamic court.

The case prompted women’s rights groups to call on the government to increase the minimum age of marriage to 18.

The 41-year-old Muslim man took the 11-year-old girl as his fourth wife in February.

The judge ruled that the union was illegal, not because of the age of the child, but because the couple did not follow Islamic law.

One organisation, Sisters in Islam, says child marriages continue in Malaysia because of a belief that Muslim girls can be married off once they reach puberty.

Earlier this month, a 14-year-old girl married a 23-year-old teacher in a public ceremony in Kuala Lumpur.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: ‘Butcher of Swat’ Was Striking Ceasefire Deal When He Was Killed by US Drone

Islamabad, 22 Dec. (AKI) — By Syed Saleem Shahzad — Notorious as the “Butcher of Swat” in the Pakistani military circles for his merciless nature, Al-Qaeda commander Bin Yameen (also known as Ibn-e-Amin) was ready to strike a ceasefire deal with the Pakistani security forces to divert fighting to neighbouring Afghanistan when he was killed last week in an attack by US drone aircraft.

Yameen, the chief of operations in northwest Pakistan’s Awat Valley and the chief of the Tora Bora Brigade, one of the six brigades in Al-Qaeda’s Shadow Army called a meeting of other insurgent commanders but his movement was tracked by American intelligence.

His aim was to broaden operations in the Khyber district as well as in the Afghan province of Nangarhar to close down the NATO supply route.

Bin Yameen’s death has indicated a strange dimension in the South Asian war on terror theatre where American drones have successfully eliminated the big number of the vertical command of Al-Qaeda and its affiliated group leaders, but has developed a new situation in which thousands of freshly trained men have split in to small cliques, after the killings of their commanders. This is the most little known aspect behind the much boasted American drone strike successes in the AfPak war theatre.

A recently trained group of the surviving total 400 Swat militants under Bin Yameen in the Khyber Agency are likely to face the similar fate. They are oblivious of their commanders intention to strike a ceasefire deal with Pakistan, which would have diversified strategies in the region making it difficult to figure out by the international intelligence cartel operating in the region.

The development has occurred when Pakistan reluctantly agreed to the military operations in the North Waziristan. So far it is only for a limited surgical strike in the town of Mir Ali , which is bastion of the third and downwards level of Al-Qaeda and affiliated groups.

This trend of the disappearance of the vertical command structure among the militants, deepened in 2010, and the emergence of the little known horizontal commands has become so significant throughout the region it appears that it could create an identical situation of 2007 and 2008 when the Pakistani army conducted military operations in Lal Masjid Islamabad and Swat areas at the simultaneously while scattered groups unleashed opened fronts all across the country. Amid this process, former Pakistani premier Benazir Bhutto was assassinated and Pakistani security forces suffered a record number of attacks. However, this time militants are gathered all around the border regions and there is a threat that chaos shall spread throughout Pakistan and into Iran and Afghanistan .

The killing of Yameen closed a chapter of one of the leading Al-Qaeda strategist in the region who emerged as one of the Taliban commanders of the Swat Valley, but in fact he was the real leader behind the whole strategy during 2008 and 2009 when he formed a separate command. Along with several Arab and Uzbek fighters he pitched the guerrilla battles against the Pakistani army. Yameen’s brigade mercilessly suppressed any dissent whether it was secular Awami National Party leaders, Sufi guide (Pir) or national army personnel. He established a reign of terror in the whole Swat Valley.

After a successful military operation by the Pakistan Army when it evacuated the whole local population and targeted militants, Yameen retreated to Afghan valley of Nuristan where he stoked fighting efforts. Afghan intelligence was sniffing around the whole province of Nuristan for a newly arrived tall man who wore 12 number size shoes. Wherever he went in Nurista battle flared up.

Bin Yameen was a rebel and defiant but still Pakistani security forces communicated with him before he was killed in drone strike. This was one of the several communication channels which security forces opened with the militants allowing for a relatively calm during the month of Muharram. The talks were close to arriving at a ceasefire deal when Yameen was killed.

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

Far East


China: Vatican Criticism is “Imprudent” And “Dangerous”

(AKI) — The People’s Republic of China on Wednesday responded to recent Vatican criticism of the country’s state-sponsored Catholic church by calling comments by the world’s smallest sovereign state “imprudent” and “dangerous.”

“The Vatican’s behaviour is very imprudent and ungrounded,” a spokesman for China’s State Administration for Religious Affairs said, adding that critical comments from Rome constitute an “attack on religious freedom in China”.

The Vatican last week said attendance earlier this month to the state-sponsored Eighth Assembly of Chinese Catholic Representatives by bishops was “imposed” on bishops, priests, religious and lay faithful.

During the assembly, Chinese bishops elected Bishop Fang Xingyao as the new chairman for the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association, which controls the state-backed church, as well as a new leader of the council of Chinese bishops.

“The Vatican’s position is well-known. It works to promote political ideas under the pretext of religious belief, which is very dangerous and will seriously harm the healthy development of Chinese Catholicism in China,” the spokesman said.

An estimated one-third of China’s 12 million Catholics belong to a church that has stayed loyal to the Vatican throughout decades of repression under China’s Communist Party.

Increasing numbers of clergy in the state-controlled faith have sought Rome’s blessing since the easing of restrictions on religion in the 1980s.

The Vatican has also clashed out against China for the ordination last month of a priest in the northern Chinese city of Chengde, which it had not approved.

The Vatican and China have not had formal diplomatic ties since 1951, when the Holy See recognised the Nationalist Chinese regime that was in exile in Taiwan as the legitimate government of China.

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

Australia — Pacific


Australian Muslims Found Guilty of Terror Plot

Wissam Mahmoud Fattal, 34, Saney Edow Aweys, 27, and Nayef El Sayed, 26 — all Australian citizens of Somali or Lebanese origin — were convicted in the Victorian Supreme Court of conspiring to plot a suicide attack on the Holdsworthy base, and could face life in prison. Two other men, Abdirahman Mohamud Ahmed, 26, and Yacqub Khayre, 23, were found not guilty of the same charge.

As jurors left the court following the verdict, Fattal said: “Islam is truth religion. Thank you very much.”

During the three month trial, the court heard that the men had planned to shoot as many people as possible during the attack as revenge for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Prosecutors said Aweys had described Australians as “infidels” and said the 2009 Black Saturday bush fires, which killed 173 people, were punishment from Allah.

In one encounter with an undercover officer, Fattall said: “If I find way to kill the army, I swear to Allah the great I’m going to do it.” RELATED ARTICLES

Indian doctor reaches $1m settlement with Australian government over wrongful detention 22 Dec 2010

The group, which met at a mosque in Melbourne, identified the army base as a “soft target” and sought approval for the attack from Somali sheikhs on a visit to the African country.

The five men were arrested in pre-dawn raids in Melbourne in 2009 following an undercover operation involving 400 police officers. Officials said the men were motivated by a belief that Islam was under attack from the west, and planned to keep on shooting until they were killed.

During the trial, prosecutors said the men were upset about Australia’s involvement in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Australia became a staunch US ally in the war on terrorism after Sept. 11. The men were accused of having ties to al-Shabab, Somalia’s powerful al-Qaeda-linked militia group, claims Melbourne’s Somali community strongly denied.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Three Guilty, Two Walk Free Over Terror Attack Plan

THREE worshippers from inner-city mosques were confirmed as Melbourne’s second Islamic terror cell yesterday when a Supreme Court jury convicted them of conspiring to plan a terrorist attack.

Two other men, including one who warned that an attack in Australia would be “a catastrophe”, were found not guilty.

Their target was the Holsworthy army barracks in Sydney’s south-west. Their aim was to enter the barracks armed with military-style weapons and kill up to 500 personnel before they themselves were killed or exhausted their ammunition.

But there was no evidence that the three who were found guilty — Wissam Mahmoud Fattal, 34, Saney Edow Aweys, 27, of Carlton, and Nayef El Sayed, 26, of Glenroy — had obtained weapons when they were arrested on August 4, 2009.

Federal police monitored their conversations in Somali, Arabic and English for almost a year as they sought a fatwa, or religious ruling, on the permissibility under Islam of attacking the military in Australia. Ultimately a Somali sheikh suggested it would do more harm than good for Australian Muslims.

The convictions end a 15-week trial and come after the jury of eight men and four women deliberated for more than 47 hours, including sitting through last weekend.

The verdicts drew no immediate reaction from the men. But Fattal, who appeared to be praying before the verdicts were delivered, called out to the jurors as they were dismissed: “I respect you. Islam is a true religion. Thank you very much.”

Found not guilty were Abdirahman Ahmed, 26, of Preston, and Yacqub Khayre, 23, of Meadow Heights. Both were repeatedly embraced and slapped on the back by the guilty men before they left the dock.

Federal Attorney-General Robert McClelland said the investigation into the group was an example of police and intelligence community co-operation to combat the threat of terrorism. Agencies involved included the federal, Victorian and New South Wales police, the NSW Crime Commission and ASIO.

The court heard that the group’s motivation was anger at the earlier, and what they regarded as wrongful, jailing of a group of seven Muslim men on terrorism charges. Those convictions resulted in sentences ranging from four to 15 years’ jail. The men convicted yesterday were also angry at the deployment of Australian troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Fattal was observed travelling to Holsworthy station to assess the likelihood of carrying out the attack. In what prosecutors said was a coded conversation, he was detected telling El Sayed that “the job is easy”.

Fattal was in prison during the final four months of the investigation, when he was on remand for an unrelated assault in Preston. During this period, Aweys repeatedly telephoned religious figures in Somalia for a ruling on the permissibility of military action in Australia. Aweys told one of his contacts that “there were issues about these men having an intention to conduct operations here … one of them came up with this story, to do something here”. To another he said the group hoped to enter the barracks armed with weapons capable of firing 60 rounds, to kill as many troops as possible.

“We are present in their midst, the infidels, their forces ae cast in the lands of Islam, and are causing great damage in the upper front,” Aweys told Somali Sheikh Abdirahman. “They are casted from Afghanistan to Iraq. They are augmented infidels, and these ones aren’t any better than the English.”

Aweys, a father of four who was born in Somalia and arrived in Australia as a teenager, said the group was also angry about the jailing of friends who were convicted on terrorism charges. “They were caught on matters similar to these ones,” he said.

Prosecutor Nick Robinson, SC, argued that Aweys’s remarks welcoming the Black Saturday bushfires as divine retribution for the jailing of the earlier group showed his antipathy to Australia. “Straight away, after the conviction, one day later fires broke out in the country and all were happy … we say Allah bring the fitna [trouble] … Allah bring the calamity,” Aweys said.

Ahmed’s lawyer, John O’Sullivan, agreed that his client asked Aweys to seek a fatwa, but said Ahmed did so only hoping to put an end to the planning. Ahmed was recorded telling Aweys he was fearful that if they were told to enter the barracks it would be a catastrophe.

George Georgiou, for Khayre, said his client’s trip to Somalia, beginning in April 2009, was on his own volition. There was no evidence he spoke to any other of the accused except Aweys. Mr Georgiou said that the fatwa Khayre was seeking was to do with fraud and obtaining money to support Islamists in Somalia.

Fattal, Aweys and El Sayed will be sentenced next year. A pre-sentencing mention hearing is set for January 24.

           — Hat tip: Salome [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Sudan: Bashir: Damn Ethnic Diversity… Let’s Continue Flogging

Like thousands of Sudanese in Sudan and abroad I was puzzled and shocked to hear that president Bashir’s government will adopt Islamic Sharia laws and an Islamic constitution.

New laws will come into force as soon as the south of the country splits off in a referendum scheduled to be held on the 9th of January, the president said.

“If South Sudan secedes, we will change the constitution and there will be no more use of deceptive and sneaky terms such as cultural and ethnic diversity in Sudan,” President Omar Hassan al-Bashir told supporters at a rally in the eastern city of Gedaref on Sunday.

Even more embarrassing was the president’s reaction to the widely discussed Youtube video that shows the cruel public flogging of a Sudanese woman. The video led to a massive condemnation of the practice. But the Sudanese president insisted that the woman was punished according to Islamic Sharia which includes flogging, amputation and the death penalty. He advised all those who felt bad and ashamed watching the flogging video to perform the rituals of repentance to renew their being a Muslim. The president gave his own judiciary and police service a slap in the face, scolding them publicly for their earlier decision to investigate the flogging incident.

Soreness

President Bashir said with a noticeable tone of soreness that the separation of the South is the not the end of the world and that there are enough oil and agricultural resources in the North.

Three weeks before the Southern part of the country secedes, because the Khartoum government persistently refused to relinquish Sharia laws, the President is threatening to impose Sharia in the North while it has actually been implemented there since 1983. That is indeed puzzling. Appalling is also the President’s ridiculing and denial of the ethnic, cultural and religious diversity in Northern Sudan.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Refugee Fight for Uzbek Group in Kazakhstan

A group of women in headscarves listen attentively to a judge in a cramped room in Almaty’s district court.

In the absence of the men whose fate is being decided in a series of trials, their wives and mothers are attending the hearings.

Judge Dauren Tleubayev reads out his ruling in the case of one of the men, Uktam Rakhmatov.

The migration department’s decision is upheld — he is denied refugee status.

Mr Rakhmatov is one of 29 Uzbek asylum seekers in Kazakhstan facing extradition back to his homeland.

The men were detained in a series of raids on refugees’ houses in Almaty in early June and have been in the custody of the Kazakh authorities ever since.

All of them are devout Muslims and claim to have experienced religious persecution in Uzbekistan.

But the Kazakh authorities say the detainees have failed to prove they are victims and instead claim there is strong evidence they belong to a banned religious organisation.

Uzbekistan — an authoritarian state which has banned numerous religious and political groups — has been accused of using the threat of Islamic militancy to justify repression.

It has charged the men with “religious extremism” and wants their extradition.

Some were granted refugee status by the UNHCR. But in early 2010 a new law came into effect in Kazakhstan transferring the right to determine refugee status to the government.

A special state commission was set up to examine each case, including the ones already determined by the UNHCR. All of the men bar one were refused refugee status. The UNHCR then withdrew refugee status from 17 of the men.

So far appeal cases of nearly half of the group have been heard and all have been rejected.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



U.S. Congressman Declares: Borders Will be ‘Irrelevant’

Stunning statement from same lawmaker sworn in with hand on Quran, not Bible

A so-called spiritual conference at which Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., called for the U.S. border to become an “irrelevancy” was led by a slew of extremists, including a Marxist who reportedly compared the tea-party movement to Hitler.

Conference speakers include radicals with deep ties to President Obama.

Yesterday, TheBlaze.com, founded by Fox News host Glenn Beck, posted a video from a conference led by the Network of Spiritual Progressives, or NSP, in which Ellison, the first Muslim member of Congress, declared to about 400 attendees that “God willing,” the U.S. border will become irrelevant.

Stated Ellison: “No security policy position can be premised on military might. …The way it works is we are a country guided by ideals of equity, generosity and engagement in our relations with other nations and those philosophical ideals create safe borders … and, God willing, one day the border will become an irrelevancy.”

Ellison continued, “And you know, the fact is, it’s time for us to answer a critical question, and that is how are we going to shape a progressive foreign policy agenda that provides a platform for the U.S. government in the 21st century.”

WND has learned the conference was led by a slew of extremists who have had close relationships with Obama.

One of the main speakers was avowed Marxist Michael Lerner, editor of the pro-Palestinian Tikkun Magazine. Lerner been accused of using the magazine to justify Palestinian terror and has written articles in which he suggested the 9/11 attacks were a response to U.S. policies.

According to an account of the conference by Baltimore Sun columnist Marta Mossburg, who attended the two-day event, Lerner compared tea party activists to Hitler at least five times.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Vets Protest Plan Opening Military to Homosexuals

Officer requests command relief over scheduled ‘behavior modifications’

A lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army has confirmed to WND that he is asking to be relieved of the command of his squadron because of the new policy. And former combat personnel are telling WND that they are continuing to keep the pressure on Congress to reverse itself.

“I have already requested through my chain of command that I be relieved of command of my squadron prior to new policy implementation on grounds that my personal beliefs don’t permit me to force the coming ‘behavior modifications’ training and other inevitable policies on my soldiers,” the officer, whose name has been withheld, wrote to WND.

The statement highlights the question of whether soldiers themselves are ready to go along with the controversial social experiment imposed by Congress, or whether they’ll carefully withdraw from command positions and troop ranks, pack their bags and leave the military.

[…]

A wide range of combat veterans say the law simply substitutes political correctness for military readiness, and that already is harming U.S. national security and morale.

“This further increases the political correctness syndrome within the military,” said Brian McDowell, a former U.S. Air Force intelligence analyst who was deployed to Afghanistan in 2008 and is now a chief investment officer with FBR Wealth Management Group.

“Loss of attention equals mission failure.”

McDowell, who earned 18 awards and medals in the military and graduated from a number of leadership and command programs, warned soldiers need to concentrate on “weapons cleaning, physical fitness, strategy, tactics, potential threat responses, and operational multipliers, to name a few. Anything that takes attention away from these things increases the chance of not succeeding.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Climate Change Extremism is Doing Its Job

“Stephen Dorling, of the University of East Anglia’s school of environmental sciences, said it was not surprising the cold period raised questions over climate change — but the snowy weather should not be used as evidence against it.”

When scrambling to explain all the cold weather people only expose their ignorance of climate science. They also, fortunately, produce statements that, even those who don’t understand the science, see as illogical. Notice Dorling says “climate change” as he tries to suggest the current cold is just an anomaly in an overall warming trend. Others point to storms and flooding as further evidence of changes due to warming.

The latest one is the rainfall and flooding in California. “It never rains in California, but girl don’t they warn ya, it pours, man it pours” were the words of the 1970s hit song that remind us, it’s the normal pattern. It’s so regular that in the first September class of a climate course,the I predicted California would have heavy rain in November/December with mudslides. When they occurred I brought the headlines to the class. By then they understood enough to grasp the basic weather mechanisms involved. Hot dry summers result in brush fires that expose the soil to the heavy rains that occur when the cold air pushes in from the north.

Another predictable pattern is that environmentalists and those involved in climate science corruption will present natural events as unnatural. They’ll claim the events support predictions of increased disasters due to warming. Tolstoi explained the problem for these people. “I know that most men, including those at ease with problems of the greatest complexity, can seldom accept even the simplest and most obvious truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit the falsity of conclusions which they delighted in explaining to colleagues, which they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabric of their lives.” Eventually their intellectual blindness is overcome by events and they become extremists defending the indefensible.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.N. Protections for Islam Losing Ground

Support plunges in move to stifle speech to benefit Muslims

The Islamic-led Defamation of Religions proposal in the United Nations has been approved one more time, but by the lowest margin yet and opponents say they will keep picking at the plan until it dies.

The idea, introduced on behalf of the 57-member Organization of the Islamic Conference, “is nothing more than an effort to achieve special protections for Islam — a move to stifle religious speech,” according to an analysis by Jay Sekulow of the American Center for Law and Justice.

WND reported a year ago when support for the plan fell a step. Now, Sekulow noted opposition to the Islamic plan, which has been “approved” in some form in the U.N. every year since 1999, continues to rise.

The most recent vote, this week, had 67 nations voting against the plan, with 79 supporting it, and 40 nations voting “present.”

The 67 “no” votes is an all-time high, the ACLJ said, and the 12-vote margin is the closest it’s ever been.

“This continued momentum is very good news, and a clear sign that our education efforts are paying off. We continue to meet with more and more delegations at the U.N. and provide them with the facts on why this resolution is a dangerous threat to religious freedom,” the ACLJ reported.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101222

Financial Crisis
» Citigroup Fears Fresh Wave of Sovereign Defaults and Bank Failures in Eurozone
» Greece: Tough Christmas for Athens Shopkeepers
» Italy: Workers Pessimistic About Pension Plan
» Record £10bn Drop in UK Exports Blamed on ‘Banker Bashing’
» UK GDP Growth Revised Down, Fears for Austerity Britain
 
USA
» ATF to Require Dealers to Report Bulk Semiautomatic Rifle Sales
» Confronting the Truth About Homegrown Radical Islamic Terrorists
» Deal for 9/11 Health Bill Reached in Senate
» Senate Passes Arms Control Treaty With Russia, 71-26
» Terrorizing Our Own
» Top US Intelligence Chief ‘Unaware of British Terror Threat’
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Corsica is Bloodiest Region in Europe, Press
» Germany Grows Tired of Leading Europe on Climate Change
» Germany & France Block Bulgaria & Romania From Visa-Free Travel Zone
» Islamic Terrorist Organization Recruits Norwegian Somali Youths
» Italy: All 23 Arrested During Rome Riot Out of Jail
» Italy: Berlusconi’s Daughter Upset by Sex Scandals
» Muslim Fundamentalist Group Launched in the Netherlands
» Stockholm Bombing: We Need Action Not Just Words to Prevent it Happening Again
» Sweden: Shopkeeper Whose Store Cameras Provided the Vital Footage of Stockholm Jihad Bomber Told to “Remove Cameras”
» Swedish Community Demands Protection
» The Rise of North Yemeni Islamism in Birmingham, U.K.
» Top Terrorist’s Wife Tells German Court: I Raised the Funds
» UK: Abu Hamza’s Daughter-in-Law Arrested ‘Trying to Smuggle Sim Card Into Belmarsh Prison Under Her Burka’
» UK: Benefits Christmas: Single Mother Eloise Spends £3,000 to Give Her Four Children Everything They Want for Christmas. And Guess What? You’re Paying for it.
» UK: Christmas Gifts Could be Illegal Under Bribery Act, Says Pwc
» UK: Gang Who Battered Pedestrian With Crowbar in Brutal Road Rage Attack Jailed for Nearly 20 Years
» UK: Met Police Officers Suffered ‘Worst Violence in 30 Years’ During Student Riots
» UK: Men Accused of Burning Poppies Deny Charge
» UK: Police Slammed for Failing to Spot a Car Containing Dead Body for Three Days
» UK: School Caretaker Harassed After Islamists Hack EDL
» Vatican: Pope Calls for Church to Reflect on What Led to ‘Unimaginable’ Abuse
» Wales: ‘Christmas Bomb Plotters Were Radicalised in Jail’
» WikiLeaks: USA ‘Pressured’ Italy on Calipari Case
» World’s Cartoonists Thrash Dutch Anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders
 
Balkans
» Montenegro: GDP 41% of EU Average
 
Mediterranean Union
» Syria: 30 Million Euros From France for Infrastructures
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Press: Network Spying for Israel Uncovered
» Fatwa by Egyptian Wahabi Group to Kill Elbaradei, Anhri
» Libya: Appeal by Milan Academic, Berber Scholars Seized
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Christmas Trees ‘Provocative: ‘ Nazareth Suburb’s Mayor
 
Middle East
» Christians Senselessly Tormented by Extremists in Muslim World
» From Lebanon: Egypt, Syria and Israel With Love
» Iraq: Around “1,100” Christian Families Have Fled to Kurdish North
» Syrian Leader Says EU Must Accept Turkey
» Turkish Man Goes on Trial for Plot to Kill Rabbis
 
South Asia
» Afghan Sex Practices Concern U.S., British Forces
» Afghan Taliban Leadership Splintered by Intense US Military Campaign
» WikiLeaks: Bangladeshi ‘Death Squad’ Trained by British Government
 
Australia — Pacific
» WikiLeaks Cables: US Intervened in Michael Moore NZ Screening
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Ghana: Imam Predicts Doom in 2011
 
Latin America
» Luis Fleischman: A Closer Look at Brazil’s Foreign Policy
 
Immigration
» New Census Data Reveal Immigration is Fueling Runaway U.S. Population Growth
» Switzerland: Ex-Illegal Immigrant Shares Her Story
 
Culture Wars
» UK: ‘Christmas is Evil’: Muslim Group Launches Poster Campaign Against Festive Period
» UK: Christian NHS Worker Could be Sacked for Handing Out Books on Risks of Abortion
 
General
» Objective Islam, Subjective Islam
» OIC Chief Affirms Need for Strong Islamic Media

Financial Crisis


Citigroup Fears Fresh Wave of Sovereign Defaults and Bank Failures in Eurozone

Professor Willem Buiter, the bank’s chief economist and a former UK rate-setter, said the eurozone is paralysed by a “game of chicken” between the European Central Bank and EMU governments in charge of fiscal policy. Both sides are trying to shift responsibility onto the other for shoring up Southern Europe and Ireland, raising the risk of widening contagion. “The market is not going to wait until March for the EU authorities to get their act together. We could have several sovereign states and banks going under. They are being far too casual.” he said. “This is a combined sovereign and banking crisis and that is a poisonous cocktail. The policy response has been woefully inadequate. There is a very small pot of money for a very big crisis,” said Dr Buiter. Dr Buiter described the EU’s rescue fund as an “insolvency machine” because it charges punitive rates of 6pc, preventing high-debt countries from clawing their way out of their trap. “I don’t know why they bothered to create it,” he said. Mark Schofield, Citigroup’s global head of interest rate strategy, said Portugal will need an EU rescue soon and that it is “highly likely that Spain will go the same way”. This risks over-powering the €440bn bail-out fund.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Greece: Tough Christmas for Athens Shopkeepers

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, DECEMBER 14 — The worst Christmas period of the last decade is what is being forecast for Athens shopkeepers, in particular for those whose shops are in the centre of the capital. So said Antonis Makris of Greece’s Association of the retail sales businesses to the online newspaper real.gr. Since the beginning of the year, retail sales have presented a reduction of 15-17%. This is a percentage that, according to Makris, will be significantly increased if the centre of the capital is not freed from the continual protest demonstrations. In addition, according to the National Trade Confederation, during the Christmas holidays this year, sales will record a contraction of 3 billion euros, caused by the reduction in consumers’ incomes, the increase in the number of unemployed people and direct taxes during the last quarter of 2010.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Workers Pessimistic About Pension Plan

Rome, 20 Dec. (AKI) — Italian’s public pensions may fall short of supporting retirees’ lifestyles as supplementary plans fail to attract investors and government expenditure cuts reduced public funds, Italy’s central bank said on its website.

Young workers may not be able to sustain the same standard of living, according to the Bank of Italy report.

The study, a survey of 8,000 Italian families, is conducted every two years.

In 2008, Italian workers said they expected their future public pension to be on average about 64 percent of their last salary and only 20 percent of them were participating in complementary plans, the study shows.

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



Record £10bn Drop in UK Exports Blamed on ‘Banker Bashing’

Official figures show the biggest ever drop in UK exports of financial services — down by £10bn or one fifth in a year — according to a leading economist who blames banker bashing critics in Government and the media. Cynics may well ask if the economist is worried about his own end of year bonus. But Tim Congdon, founder of the respected think tank International Monetary Research, has based his analysis on Central Statistical Office figures which are difficult to question. They show that between the peak in the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2008 and Q2 2010, quarterly exports of the UK’s financial services fell from almost £15bn to less than £10bn. Exports in the year to Q1 2010 were more than £10b lower than in the previous year, a figure equal to about 0.75 per cent of Britain’s gross domestic product (GDP), a measure of economic output. Mr Congdon points out: “Given that Asian centres have had a great 2010, the official data suggest that the UK’s international financial services industry is being badly hit by officialdom’s assault. “The UK’s bankers are about to negotiate with their government about how much they can pay their executives and staff. Numerous press reports have appeared that the LibDems are putting pressure on the Conservatives to be ‘tough on the City’. “Who were those naive fools who thought that, under an allegedly Conservative government, market forces would be allowed to determine the pay of City bankers as well as that of Wayne Rooney and Ashley Cole?”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK GDP Growth Revised Down, Fears for Austerity Britain

The Office for National Statistics said UK GDP grew 0.7pc between July and September, down from the 0.8pc previously estimated. Year-on-year, growth was revised down to 2.7pc from 2.8pc. Economists had expected growth to be unrevised at 0.8pc on the quarter and 2.8pc on the year. The ONS blamed the revision on weaker outturns for production industries, construction and business services and finance. Growth in the second quarter was also revised down to 1.1pc from the 1.2pc previously reported following data which showed a surge in construction was not as strong as initially thought. Vicky Redwood of Capital Economics: “The raft of UK data do little to improve the prospects for the economy next year … The upshot is that a continued strong recovery seems far from assured — we expect GDP growth of just 1.5pc next year.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


ATF to Require Dealers to Report Bulk Semiautomatic Rifle Sales

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) on Friday requested emergency permission to require that gun dealers report to them bulk sales of the high-powered semiautomatic rifles favored by drug cartels — all part of the Administration’s effort to combat the flow of guns to Mexico.

It is a plan that had languished for months at the Justice Department because of concerns over what the National Rifle Association (NRA) might think. The Washington Post reports now that it was held up by the White House in the spring — around the same time that President Barack Obama promised Mexican President Felipe Calderon he’d work to prevent gunrunning south of the border.

The effort, sources told the newspaper, was shelved by Rahm Emanuel, then-White House chief of staff. The plan “was perceived as too volatile just before midterm elections,” the Post reported. But the plan made it into the Federal Register last week after ATF Deputy Director Kenneth Melson asked DOJ to try again.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Confronting the Truth About Homegrown Radical Islamic Terrorists

New York Republican Congressman Peter King, the incoming chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, is being criticized by the usual suspects on the Left for his plan to hold congressional hearings on the radicalization of some in the U.S. Muslim community. Alan Colmes, appearing on The O’Reilly Factor last night, typified the Left’s kneejerk reaction when he accused King of bigotry for singling out radical Muslims. Bill O’Reilly also played a clip in which Congressman Keith Ellison, a Muslim, joined the politically correct chorus against Congressional hearings on homegrown Islamic terrorism:

Congressman King has said a number of things that are disturbing. I think that he should demonstrate that he is not on a witch-hunt to just get the Muslim community.

But Congressman King refuses to ignore the obvious — the global Islamic jihadist war that is sucking in radicalized Muslim-Americans. This organized terrorist threat, fueled by radical Islamic ideology, is far greater than isolated instances of individual nutcases motivated by their own personal demons such as Timothy McVeigh or the fellow who flew a plane into an IRS building.

Bill O’Reilly had it right when he said during his “Talking Points” segment last night:

Individual terrorism is far different from Islamic jihad as Mr. Ellison and CAIR well know. The Muslim jihad worldwide has killed tens of thousands of people… Islamic theocracies like Iran are threatening the world.

So to say that Muslim terrorism inside the USA should not be scrutinized because a few non-Muslims have engaged in terrorism is insane. In the past two years, 24 Muslim terror plots have been exposed in this country.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Deal for 9/11 Health Bill Reached in Senate

A deal has been reached in the Senate to approve a bill that covers the cost of medical care for rescue workers and other individuals who became sick after breathing in toxic fumes, dust and smoke at the site of the 2001 attacks on the the World Trade Center.

The action was a dramatic turn of events for a bill that stalled in the upper chamber. Only 12 days ago, Senate Republicans blocked the bill from coming to the floor for a vote after raising concerns about its $7.4 billion cost.

But Republicans eventually backed down after facing a barrage of criticism — not just from Democrats but also from traditional Republican allies, including former New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and conservative news outlets like Fox News.

[Return to headlines]



Senate Passes Arms Control Treaty With Russia, 71-26

The Senate gave final approval on Wednesday to a new arms control treaty with Russia, scaling back leftover cold war nuclear arsenals and capping a surprisingly successful lame-duck session for President Obama just weeks after his party’s electoral debacle.

The 71 to 26 vote sends the treaty, known as New Start, to the president for his signature, and cements what is probably the most tangible foreign policy achievement of Mr. Obama’s two years in office. Thirteen Republicans joined a unanimous Democratic caucus to vote in favor, exceeding the two-thirds majority required by the Constitution.

The ratification vote was the third bipartisan victory for the president in the waning days of the session, while Democrats still control both houses of Congress.

[Return to headlines]



Terrorizing Our Own

Airline travelers flying the unfriendly skies are presented with two options, that are actually only a single option, to have themselves and their children degraded in public in order to spare Muslim feelings. That we have a ban on profiling travelers, but no ban on molesting or humiliating them, tells us everything we need to know about why we have the current system that we do.

In a war we terrorize the enemy. In a siege we terrorize our own. And we have been terrorizing our own for a long time now. In 1999, we dropped thousands of tons of explosives on Yugoslavia, bombing trains, fuel depots, homes, bridges and people. We did that in order to give the Muslim drug dealing terrorists of the KLA their own state. Today that state is a gateway for drug trafficking and sex slaves into Europe, and a training ground for terrorists.

Since 1991, we have been bribing, intimidating and pressuring Israel to give the Muslim-Marxist terrorists of the PLO their own state. Flip open any newspaper and you can find articles and editorials dripping with outrage because after 18 years of terrorism, the terrorists still haven’t gotten their own state.

Now we’re terrorizing ordinary Americans for being critical of Islam. Drop a bible in the toilet, and you’ve created art. Drop a Koran in the toilet, and you’ve committed a hate crime. What’s the difference? Muslim privilege. Offending Jews or Christians results in strongly worded letters. Offending Muslims results in murder. And to avoid murder, we privilege Muslims. We give them special rights. We ban criticism of their ideology. We refuse to publish cartoons that will touch off their homicidal urges.

But we go beyond that still.

We molest 3 year olds in airports, because we can’t possibly screen Muslim terrorists. No, we must spread the abuse and humiliation to ordinary Americans, so that the people who are trying to kill us never feel bad about it.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Top US Intelligence Chief ‘Unaware of British Terror Threat’

James Clapper, President Barack Obama’s Director of National Intelligence, was taking part in a joint interview with Diane Sawyer on ABC News on Tuesday, along with John Brennan, White House anti-terrorism chief, and Janet Napolitano, Director of Homeland Security. “First of all, London,” Sawyer asked. “How serious is it? Any implication that it was coming here?” Mr Clapper, a retired lieutenant general in the United States Air Force, was silent for several seconds and then quietly turned his head to his colleagues, asking them: “London?” Mr Brennan stepped in to explain that the British had informed American officials about the plot, revealed publicly several hours earlier. “Oh,” Mr Clapper said. Attempting to retrieve the situation, Mr Brennan said to Sawyer: “You referenced London but you didn’t talk about the arrests.” The Obama administration said on Tuesday night that Sawyer’s question was “ambiguous” and that Mr Clapper’s knowledge of worldwide threats was “profound and multidimensional”. By Wednesday morning, however, the White House admitted Mr Clapper had not been briefed about the arrests. Mr Brennan said: “I’m glad that Jim Clapper is not sitting in front of the TV 24 hours a day and monitoring what’s coming out of the media. What he is doing is focusing on those intelligence issues the president expects him to focus on.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


France: Corsica is Bloodiest Region in Europe, Press

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, DECEMBER 15 — “Corsica is the bloodiest region in Europe” is the title of a long article published today in the French daily newspaper Le Parisien, according to which the French island “is the region of European where the most murders take place. More than in Sicily, the cradle of the mafia, considered to be the continent’s most violent region.” In 15 years, explains Le Parisien, 558 murders have been recorded, on an island of 220,000 inhabitants. Today members of parliament from the ‘Ile de Beaute’, as the French call it, are meeting to try to find a solution against large-scale crime. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Germany Grows Tired of Leading Europe on Climate Change

For the Cancun climate change agreement to be effective, the European Union would have to further cut greenhouse gas emissions. Germany, though, no longer wants to be the model EU pupil and is asking others in the club to step up.

The atmosphere was jovial and party-like in Cancun, Mexico as the United Nations Climate Change Conference came to an end. Attendees from around the world clapped rhythmically and the host, Mexican Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa, was glorified as a “goddess.” Everyone was relieved that the meeting did not end in failure as the climate summit in Copenhagen had.

Now, though, the European Union faces several tough decisions — and German Chancellor Angela Merkel is at the center of the wrangling. She no longer wants to play the role that the other 26 EU member states have come to expect of her — Germany doesn’t want to be Europe’s leader on climate protection anymore.

Germany is the only country in the EU to have committed to reducing its CO2 emissions by 40 percent by 2020, relative to 1990 levels. Other countries in the club are appreciative of Berlin’s pledge — but none have followed the example. As a block, the EU has committed to reducing its emissions by just 20 percent, a target which includes Germany’s ambitious reduction goals.

Vague Targets

The climate summit in Cancun, however, upped the pressure on the EU to raise the common target from 20 to 30 percent. According to the Cancun agreement, only those countries which are signatories to the Kyoto Protocol must commit to emissions reduction targets — to be reached by 2020. The European Union and other Kyoto countries vowed to follow the lead of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which has called for reductions of between 25 percent and 40 percent below 1990 levels. The US and China, which are not subject to the Kyoto commitments, escaped with vague targets. Kyoto Protocol signatories such as Japan, Canada, Australia and Russia have indicated that they will not intensify their CO2 reduction targets.

Economist Reimund Schwarze of the government-funded Climate Service Center in Hamburg feels that the EU has an obligation, if only from a computational standpoint: “Under the Cancun package, 30 percent is set for the EU, and perhaps it will even have to be substantially higher.” Given the Cancun agreement, environment organizations believe that a solo effort of the part of the EU may even be the only way to reduce global CO2 emissions. They are calling on European leaders to increase the EU target in the spring…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany & France Block Bulgaria & Romania From Visa-Free Travel Zone

Germany and France have voiced their concerns to the European Commission over letting Bulgaria and Romania to join Europe’s visa-free travel zone.

Both countries feel that it is too soon for them to sign the Schengen Agreement and that a wrong decision could have ‘grave consequences’ for the bloc’s security.

But the warning by Europe’s political and economic heavyweights received an angry reception in the continent’s southeast where Romania’s president, Traian Băsescu, sharply criticised it as ‘discrimination’. A spokesman for Germany’s interior ministry said minister Thomas de Maiziere and his French counterpart Brice Hortefeux agree the two countries, which joined the EU in 2007, do not yet fulfill the requirements for entering the continent’s visa-free travel zone.

More than 400 million citizens are able to travel without border checks within the so-called Schengen Area, which covers 25 EU member states, as well as three non-EU members — Iceland, Norway and Switzerland — but does not include Britain and Ireland.

Living outside the Schengen Area — named after the small wine-making village and commune in far south-eastern Luxembourg where the agreement was signed in 1985 — means more hassle for travellers and doing business is more complicated.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Islamic Terrorist Organization Recruits Norwegian Somali Youths

Islamic Somali militant group Al-Shabaab is actively recruiting young Scandinavians to join its terror network. At least five Norwegian-Somalis are involved with the organization.

An anonymous informant in Gothenburg that broke away from Al-Shabaab tells NRK that members of the group recruit young Somalis living in Scandinavia.

“It happens in mosques, but Imams are not involved. Other, less visible people come to mosques to recruit youngsters who are vulnerable and easily-led.”

Last Saturday’s suicide bomb attack in the heart of Stockholm put the possibility of terror firmly on the Norwegian menu, according to the Police Security Service (PST). It suspects fundraising for the organization is taking place in Norwegian territory.

Janne Kristiansen, head of the PST, has previously warned that terror organizations in Somalia, Pakistan, and Afghanistan are recruiting Norwegian youths.

Leader of the Somali Network in Norway, Bashe Musse, says he knows of specific cases where parents have travelled with their children to Somalia to join Al-Shabaab. He is concerned what might happen if they return here and meet the Norwegian values.

“It might be tough for them to accept our society, dress, freedom of speech, and such things. I do not know what they can do, but I’m afraid they might blow themselves up,” he says.

Distance

Somali expert Stig Jarle Hansen, associate professor at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Ås, is also concerned. He says his sources in Somalia tell him there are five or six Norwegian Somalis fighting for Al-Shabaab.

“I am worried that some of those who are taken down there and come back to Norway will return with a different mindset than before they left.

Bashe Musse believes second-generation Norwegian-Somalis are more vulnerable to extremist ideologies because of the language and cultural barrier. Often, their parents only speak their mother tongue.

“There is an emotional distance between parents and children, and communication is not present at all,” he says.

He believes the key to fighting any recruitment attempts by terrorist organizations is for parents to develop closer relationships to their children.

“They should know who and where their children are. A lot of Somali parents know little about them.”

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



Italy: All 23 Arrested During Rome Riot Out of Jail

Mayor blasts releases as ‘unjust’

(ANSA) — Rome, December 16 — All of the 23 protesters arrested during Tuesday’s riot in Rome are out of jail after a court ordered the release of 11 people on Thursday, sparking outrage from Mayor Gianni Alemanno.

One of the protesters is under house arrest but the other 22 are free while their cases are dealt with after violence on the day of a crunch confidence vote Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s government won.

“I’m forced to protest in the name of the city of Rome against the decision to release almost all of those facing charges for Tuesday’s incidents,” said Alemanno, who estimated Wednesday that the riot caused 20 million euros of damage. “There is a profound sense of injustice about these decisions because the damage caused to the city and seriousness of the incidents require a very different type of firmness in the magistrates’ judgement of those allegedly responsible”. On Tuesday hooded youths infiltrated what was meant to be a peaceful student demonstration against the government and its bill to reform Italy’s higher education system before unleashing mayhem that left over 100 hurt, 57 police and 62 protesters.

They attacked police with clubs, stones, smoke bombs and paint, set alight cars, police vans and barricades they had set up and trashed one of the capital’s main shopping streets, smashing windows and throwing around everything in their path.

Alemanno has compared the scenes to the political violence and terrorism Italy endured in the 1970s and 80s, the so-called ‘years of lead’.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi’s Daughter Upset by Sex Scandals

But 26-year-old Barbara still trusts her dad

(By Romina Spina) (ANSA) — Rome, December 21 — Silvio Berlusconi’s daughter Barbara said she was bitter at the recent sex scandals involving the Italian Premier but added that, while she did not agree with her father’s conduct, she still trusted him.

“These events saddened me and it’s difficult for me to talk about it,” 26-year-old Barbara said in an interview to be published Wednesday by the Italian edition of Vanity Fair. “I would like readers to put themselves in my shoes. “I obviously don’t agree with certain kinds of behaviour, but I also have to believe my father’s side of things,” Barbara Berlusconi said. Silvio Berlusconi has traded on a playboy image throughout his political career and has come through a series of recent sex scandals largely unscathed, boasting that he loves pretty girls and has never paid for sex. He defended himself from allegations this year that under-age girls were present and sex was involved at parties at his home, saying the call girl who made them and others who have made similar claims, had been paid to do so.

In the interview, Barbara Berlusconi also spoke out against some women politicians in her father’s entourage, expressing doubts about their abilities. She attacked Equal Opportunities Minister Mara Carfagna, criticizing her recent remarks denouncing political chauvinism she claimed to be victim of in Italy.

Carfagna, a former model and television starlet who was made a minister of Berlusconi’s centre-right coalition in 2006, should “have the decency to shut up”, the premier’s daughter said. “If she feels discriminated against — she went from TV awards to becoming a minister — that is just preposterous”.

Barbara Berlusconi added that “seeing certain girls in (government) staff cars isn’t good for the country’s image, because it’s hard to grasp why they deserve to be there”. Nevertheless, Barbara defended the premier saying that the Italian people voted for him.

Barbara is the eldest of the three children Silvio Berlusconi had with actress Veronica Lario. In the past, she has spoken about her parents’ divorce describing it as a painful affair for both. She spoke of her family as being “a fine one” and said she wanted to be close to both her parents.

Asked if her parents had shared a “great love”, Berlusconi replied “I’m certain it was the case for my mother”. The premier and Lario became involved 30 years ago and had their children while Berlusconi was still married to his first wife. They eventually married in 1990. Lario, 20 years the premier’s junior at 54, announced plans to seek a divorce in 2008 amid allegations of Berlusconi’s involvement with other women. Lario lodged a request for official separation in November 2009. The couple must wait three years from the date at which the separation is legally recognized before a divorce can be finalized. According to reports, Lario was keen to ensure her three children Barbara, Eleanora and Luigi would be guaranteed a role in Berlusconi’s business empire on a level with that of his children from his first marriage to Carla Dall’Oglio, Marina and Piersilvio. Barbara Berlusconi brushed off rumours of possible hereditary settlement issues between Marina and Piersilvio and Lario’s children.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslim Fundamentalist Group Launched in the Netherlands

A group — Sharia4Holland — calling on Muslims to fight for the setting up of a Dutch Islamic state has started operating openly in the Netherlands, writes the Protestant daily newspaper, Trouw.

The group, which has split from Sharia4Belgium, wants Islamic sharia law to be introduced in the Netherlands. Dutch National Counter-Terrorism Coordinator Erik Akerboom and the Dutch AIVD intelligence agency say they are aware of the group and its activities. Mr Akerboom believes it is too soon to intervene. “As far as we are aware, no crimes have as yet been committed,” he tells the paper.

He declines to go into the scale of the group or who might be behind it. It is to be found on the internet, including on YouTube and facebook, where Sharia4Holland says it is “a group of young people from the Netherlands” who are prepared to fight for the law of Allah.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Stockholm Bombing: We Need Action Not Just Words to Prevent it Happening Again

It could have ended badly. Really badly. If the young man, Taimour Abdulwahab, who blew himself up in Stockholm a week ago, had succeeded he could have killed and injured hundreds of people. Either he was a complete amateur or something unexpected happened. The only one he killed was himself.

What went through his mind in his last minutes we cannot say. He had prepared a statement, as suicide bombers normally do. The Swedish people should be punished for all the suffering we have caused Muslims, especially in Afghanistan. Children, women, Muslims; it did not matter. All those walking on the streets should die. Most likely he believed that his cause was just.

This is the first suicide bomber in Scandinavia and I am surprised that so many are — surprised. It reminds me of when the passenger jets crashed into the towers in New York. I never understood the surprise that followed. Wasn’t this exactly what we had expected? A situation where the extreme, the desperate and the furious attacked the western world that for so long had humiliated Muslim countries. An attack that would be understandable but nevertheless wrong and worthy of condemnation.

I remember thinking to myself that the reaction in many cases was completely honest. But in other cases it was more a question of covering up the fact that those in charge of security had not made the correct assessment of different threats and the information at hand.

I am not saying that the Swedish security police should have detected Abdulwahab: I am certain it is impossible to monitor all those who might be preparing a terrorist attack. But the reaction of surprise suggests that many Swedish people do not fully realise what this extremism can lead to. There have been warnings. The Swedish artist Lars Vilks, for example, has ridiculed Islam and the Prophet in some of his work. It was well known that some people wanted to kill him, but no one really believed that the threat would mean something even more serious.

However, many people in Sweden seem unable to grasp that by having troops in Afghanistan we are now the enemies of the extremists. Our troops should never have been sent there. I am not saying that I am afraid of extremists. But I do not want Swedish soldiers to fight a war that is not ours, but that of the United States’.

The reaction from leading Muslims in Sweden was unusually good and unusually fast. At the Friday prayers a couple of days after the bombing, the country’s leading Imam condemned the attack. Other Muslim organisations also reacted strongly against the attack. The problem is that this is not enough. When the mass media invokes an anti-Islamic opposition, the reaction from leading Muslims is inadequate. It is perfectly clear that words are no longer enough. As always, the action has to prove the word, not the other way around.

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Shopkeeper Whose Store Cameras Provided the Vital Footage of Stockholm Jihad Bomber Told to “Remove Cameras”

(UKPA) A shopkeeper whose security cameras gave police vital video footage of the Stockholm suicide bomber has been told to remove them because he does not have the correct permit. Naresh Lakhwani owns a watch store in the shopping district where the bomber blew himself up and injured two people on December 11. Mr Lakhwani said that security cameras he had installed outside the store caught the bomber on tape before the explosion and he did not hesitate to hand it over to police. “I have pretty much the whole sequence of events on there, with the bomber running up and down the street,” he said. He said investigators were grateful for the tape, but that did not stop the County Administrative Board, which handles permits for security cameras, from taking action. A legal expert at the board, Cecilia Forssell, said it had ordered Mr Lakhwani to remove the equipment after receiving several complaints.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Swedish Community Demands Protection

The Swedish Jewish community has appealed to the authorities for greater security provision after an Islamic suicide bomber struck a busy shopping street in the capital, Stockholm. In a statement, Lena Posner-Körösi, president of the Swedish Central Jewish Council, said: “We have, on numerous occasions, expressed our concern to the authorities and explained our vulnerability. We know from experience that Jewish targets are appealing to terrorists.” The 28-year-old, Iraqi-born suicide bomber, Taimur Abdulwahab al-Abdaly, was the only fatality in the 11 December attack in Stockholm. He emigrated to Sweden at the age of 10 and graduated from Luton’s Bedfordshire University with a degree in physical therapy. Days after al-Abdaly narrowly missed wreaking havoc among Christmas shoppers, the Swedish intelligence agency Säpo declared that they had identified 200 violence-promoting Islamic extremists in Sweden. Al-Abdaly had not been known to the agency, however. The police have now stepped up security at Jewish institutions in Sweden, including in Malmö, the third largest city, which has seen a surge in antisemitic hate crimes. The JSS has advised Jews there not to wear kippot or other Jewish symbols. The Simon Wiesenthal Centre — the Los Angeles-based Human Rights organisation — has issued a travel advisory, urging Jews to avoid visiting Sweden. A representative of Jewish Security Sweden (who wants to be anonymous for security reasons) said that al-Abdaly had not directed any threats at Jewish institutions or individuals. He added: “Naturally, Jews in Sweden are particularly concerned, however. We have received phone calls from parents with children in the Jewish school who are afraid that they might be targeted in the future. Unfortunately, as we’ve seen in other terror attacks in Mumbai and elsewhere, Jews are at the top of the list of targets for Muslim fundamentalists.”

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Rise of North Yemeni Islamism in Birmingham, U.K.

One of the reasons generally given for the rise of extreme Islamism is the Arab defeat at the hands of Israel in 1967 in the six day war.

It is theorised that, from this defeat (or Naksa as the Arabs refer to it), loomed the beginning of the end of Arab Nationalism and other, largely secular ideologies, which had hitherto led the struggle to liberate the Middle East from western domination and zionist colonialism. This defeat created the vacuum political Islamism has supposedly filled since.

This theory tends to be strongly insinuated at and espoused by British writers such as Seamus Milne, Jason Burke and the late Chris Harman. The theory overlooks one very important British initiated strategy played out in the Middle East and South East Asia during the Cold War. That is the employment by Britain (and then America) of extreme Islamists to counter left-wing, nationalist and communist parties or movements because these movements were considered by the West to be threats to their interests and to their allies in the region.

One of the ways Western backed regimes in the Middle East and South Asia guaranteed a steady flow of extreme Islamists was through ‘Islamising’ the education system or promoting a parallel Islamist education system alongside the official state education system.

The schools that were and are part of the Islamist education system are popularly referred to as ‘madrassas’. Graduates from these madrassas tended to have been highly receptive to the militant Islamist cause. Even more so if this cause happened to dovetail with Western interests, such as Afghanistan in the 1980’s.

It is in the 1980’s that madrassas became popular. According to Pervez Hoodbhoy, a Pakistani academic, “madrassas provided the US-Saudi-Pakistani alliance the cannon fodder they need to fight the holy war” in Afghanistan.

The madrassas in Pakistan catered for both Pakistani political groups and the Afghan refugees from the Soviet invasion. Free lodgings and food obviously made them even more popular.

Hoodbhoy claims that there could be up to 22,000 madrassa’s in Pakistan churning out 1.5 million students. While Ahmed Rashid in his popular book on the Taliban claims that there were 25,000 unregistered madrassas in Pakistan alone by the late 1980’s.

Another country where madrassas played a role in defeating the left and other secular ideologies is North Yemen. Here, the madrassas, were called ‘Scientific Institutes’. Like the madrassas that served the Pakistanis and Afghans, these ‘Scientific Institutes’ ran parallel with North Yemen’s official state education.

They were initially established in the mid-1970’s with Saudi Arabian finance. The person that was overall responsible or ‘guide’ for this Islamist educational operation was Abd al-Majid al-Zindani. In 1983, al-Zindani was appointed education minister in North Yemen.

Abd al-Majid al-Zindani also eventually served as a co-leader of the North Yemeni initiated Islamist, Islah Party alongside the tribal Sheikh Abdulla al-Ahmar.

Also in 1983, a ‘Scientific Institute’ was parachuted into Birmingham, England’s second major city by the then North Yemeni cultural attaché, Abdulla al-Shamahi.

The ‘Scientific Institute’ was initially based at 517 Moseley Road, in the Balsall Heath region of Birmingham before finally moving to the Bordesley Centre, in the Sparkbrook region of Birmingham. I was informed that Mr. al-Shamahi put forward £17k towards the purchase of 517 Moseley Road, a converted church. The purchase of the Bordesley Centre was largely financed by the Yemeni entrepreneur, Hayel Saeed.

There is a small Yemeni sub-community in Birmingham which originally arrived here in the late 1950’s and 1960’s for the same reasons that Caribbean, Indian and Pakistanis came to the UK: to fill the gap of the post world war labour shortage. Many Yemeni’s were from South Yemen (which was then a British protectorate) but there was a good proportion of North Yemenis. It maybe, because of this that Mr. al-Shamahi based himself in Birmingham.

Al-Shamahi like Anwar al-Awlaki, the Yemeni-American alleged to be behind the Christmas day bomber, is a son of the Yemeni political establishment. al-Shamahi’s father was said to be a ‘political advisor’ to the North Yemeni President in the late 70’s, while al-Awlaki’s father served as Agricultural Minister in North Yemen.

The curriculum of the ‘Scientific Institute’ was devised to make North Yemenis and whoever came into contact with it more than receptive to extreme Islamism. One British-American academic even goes as far as saying that the educational methods eventually utilised at the ‘Scientific Institutes’, were first used in Afghanistan “to indoctrinate young men against the Soviets.”

Although it was a dubbed an ‘Arabic School’ by young adults who were compelled to attend, the emphasis in the curriculum was religious instruction. Arabic was taught to facilitate the imbibing of Islamist indoctrination. The ‘Scientific Institute’ taught Arabic within an Islamist ‘indoctrination’ framework.

The ‘Scientific Institute’ operated largely on a daily basis. Young Yemenis were bussed in from Birmingham’s inner city and the surrounding Black Country, at the Scientific Institute’s expense, to receive their daily dose of North Yemeni scientifically institutionalised “education”. Anecdotally, I would say about 65-70% of young second generation Yemenis in the West Midlands passed through, at some stage, this ‘Arabic School’ in the 1980’s. In North Yemen, like Afghanistan, one of the major functions of the ‘Scientific Institute’ was to help the North Yemeni government in its war against left wing rebels, known as the National Democratic Front, in the southern part of North Yemen in the 1980’s. As one academic study put it, “they provided a useful bulwark against the rising leftist challenge from the…NDF.”

With the implementation of the curriculum in 1983 in Birmingham, teachers eventually arrived from North Yemen. For instance, Yahya Rassam, Ahmad Nu’man, Ahmad al-Rowny, Abdullah al-Himyairy, Faisal al-Za’za’y and Dtarash Abdullah all arrived during this period. They were later to be joined by home grown teachers such as Adnan Saif.

These teachers were not here to guide young second generation adults to meet the challenges of institutional racism, educational under-achievement or even maintaining one’s cultural heritage.

In sharp socio-political contrast to the vast majority of Yemenis in Birmingham, these teachers arrived here to implement the North Yemeni socio-political agenda, that is to ‘indoctrinate’ second generation Yemenis. The question is how were these teachers sourced? Who selected them to be teachers? Were these teachers paid? If so, how much and since Abdulla al-Shamahi was the cultural attaché of the North Yemeni embassy, was it he that paid them?

Since these ‘Scientific Institutes’ were initially supported by Saudi Arabia, did they provide the funds for the Birmingham operation as well? These are questions that Mr al-Shamahi, who still resides in Birmingham, does not answer.

More so, knowing what we now know about the collusion between US/UK and Islamism in foreign fields in this period, it is perfectly legitimate to ask whether al-Shamahi was given the green light to set up this educational operation by MI5 or MI6?

Indeed, Margaret Thatcher was enthusiastic for the people of the Middle East to, “build on their own deep religious traditions” so as not to “succumb to the fraudulent appeal of imported Marxism.” She even went onto claim that the mujahideen (holy warriors) fighting the Soviet occupation in the 1980’s were in “one of the most heroic resistance struggles known to history.”

Osama bin Laden who was also in Afghanistan during this period would have agreed, but probably now thinks the ‘War on Terror’ was “one of the most heroic resistance struggles known to history.”

In 1987, there were 1126 ‘Scientific Institutes’ in North Yemen churning out ready-made, ‘indoctrinated’ graduates. It is not known how many there were by the time the Yemeni government (North and South Yemen united in 1990) abolished them in the mid-1990’s. As such the Bordesley Centre ceased to offer this curriculum.

The teachers, on the other hand, remained in the UK rather than return to Yemen where they could enjoy the fruits of their so-called ‘Scientific Institute’. I understand, some went on to work for the various Islamic charities but others continue to be garrisoned at the Bordesley Centre in teaching and non-teaching capacities. The Bordesly Centre has not responded to my questions about them.

Unlike other teachers, Adnan Saif, a teacher and former manager of the ‘Scientific Institute’ as well as trustee of the Muath Trust which runs the Bordesley Centre, was not parachuted in the mid-1980’s to specifically teach the Islamist curriculum. He had been in the UK since arriving as the son of the late, Ahmad Ali Hasan al-Shamairy and is currently employed as Chief Executive of Urban Living for Birmingham City Council.

Furthermore, writing in a personal capacity, Mr. Saif positively compares the late co-leader of the Islamist, Islah party, Sheikh Abdullah al-Ahmar with Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Ghandi. He claims that Abdulla al-Ahmar was to Yemen what, “Ghandi and Mandela were to their respective countries.” Absolutely nothing could be further from the truth.

Mr.Saif draws this analogy because members of the al-Ahmar family were executed by the pre-revolution ruler of North Yemen, the ‘Imam’. He seems to give the impression that by virtue of them being killed by a despotic Imam they therefore must have been struggling for a good cause. Indeed, they were killed by the Imam but it was not “for opposing him and supporting the struggle for freedom.”

Abdulla al-Ahmar’s father and brother were executed by the Imam over a dispute in which the latter demanded the restitution of a tribute payment. Actually, the tribute was paid for assistance in quashing a perceived anti-Imam rebellion. When Abdulla al-Ahmar’s father and brother declined to return the payment, the Imam had them both summarily executed. Therefore, they were not killed “for supporting the struggle for freedom” as Mr. Saif would have us believe, but in support of holding onto their tribute. Mr. Saif has hitherto not responded to my enquiries about the ‘Scientific Institute’ at the Bordesley Centre, Birmingham.

Concentrating on the supposed defeat of Arab Nationalism and other secular ideologies is all very well but it does not fully explain the phenomena of the rise of political Islamism in the Middle East, South Asia or Birmingham, UK. Other compelling factors such as the role of madrassas, charities, state sanctioned political-military cells and financial institutions need also to be taken into consideration.

Today, Sheikh Abdulla al-Ahmar’s children are part of Yemeni economic and political elite. Indeed, one member of the al-Ahmar family is said to run “no less than 300 companies.” While, Abd al-Majid al-Zindani, his former co-leader in the Islamist, Islah party and the overall guide for the ‘Scientific Institutes’, is an internationally wanted man…

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



Top Terrorist’s Wife Tells German Court: I Raised the Funds

The Muslim wife of a convicted terrorist kingpin admitted Wednesday to a German court that she raised funds for associates of al-Qaeda and posted Islamist videos on the internet. Her convert-to-Islam husband, Fritz Gelowicz, is now serving 12 years for a foiled plot to set off a series of car bombs in Germany. The couple were fascinated by jihad or holy war against infidels. Dressed in a black veil from head to toe, the wife, 29, whose parents immigrated to Germany from Turkey, told a Berlin court she had been convinced that funding the jihad was a way of standing up for orphans and poor Afghans suffering from the war. ‘Yes, I wrote texts to publish on the internet and collected money. Of course I knew the money would be spent on weapons,’ she said. ‘Today, I realise that what I did just made everything worse.’ She said she had been been ‘carried away’ by her outrage over civilian suffering and had re-posted terrorist video messages on the internet out of a sense of defiance. But she denied knowing about her husband’s bomb plot and claimed she only began fund-raising for the jihad after he was arrested in 2007.

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Abu Hamza’s Daughter-in-Law Arrested ‘Trying to Smuggle Sim Card Into Belmarsh Prison Under Her Burka’

The daughter-in-law of hate preacher Abu Hamza has been arrested for allegedly trying to smuggle a mobile phone sim card into his jail under her burka.

Chayme Hamza, 26, was apprehended by guards during a routine search when she went to visit the firebrand cleric in Belmarsh high security prison in south-east London last Friday.

Police were called and she was arrested on suspicion of bringing a prohibited article into a prison.

The sim card was found in a pocket in clothing under her burka, according to The Sun.

Hamza’s eldest son Mohamed Kamel Mostafa — Chayme’s husband and a convicted terrorist — was arrested over the same incident the next day.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Benefits Christmas: Single Mother Eloise Spends £3,000 to Give Her Four Children Everything They Want for Christmas. And Guess What? You’re Paying for it.

Like many mothers, Eloise Little has been stockpiling her four children’s Christmas presents for months.

She’s had to budget, too: what with the designer clothes and expensive gadgets on their wish lists, she needs to spend at least £300 to £400 on each of them in order to meet the demands for laptops, computer games, trainers and bikes.

Then there’s all the food and drink required to see the family through the festive season.

That, she reckons, will set her back several hundred pounds, on top of the thousand of pounds or so she spends on other presents and festivities over the season.

They’re the sort of figures that would surely make the average working parent stare gloomily into their Christmas eggnog — few, after all, are in a position to contemplate spending such a sum.

But then, as 27-year-old Eloise, from Penryn, Cornwall, admits, she’s not a member of your average working family.

She’s on benefits, meaning that effectively it’s your money which is paying for her children’s Christmas — Xboxes and all.

Moreover, as far as Eloise is concerned, it’s all entirely fair — in fact, the merest hint of a raised eyebrow at her circumstances is enough to make her see red.

‘It makes me furious when people criticise how I choose to spend my money,’ she says.

‘Taxpayers seem to feel that they have the right to tell people on benefits how to spend their money,’ she adds. ‘They don’t — the government decides what people like me are entitled to, not the taxpayer.

‘If it’s offered to us, then of course we’re going to take it and we shouldn’t be criticised for doing so. Frankly, I believe it’s my right to do what I want this Christmas with the benefits I deserve.’

[…]

As she puts it: ‘I went to the JobCentre and we worked out that if I went back to work I would actually be £10 a week worse off. I receive £21,528 in annual benefits, and I’d need to earn 30 grand a year before tax to match that.

‘I’m not qualified to do a job which pays me that, so it makes no sense for me to do anything other than stay at home. I defy any parent in my position not to do what I’m doing.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Christmas Gifts Could be Illegal Under Bribery Act, Says Pwc

However, mouse mats, modest Christmas lunches attended by the hosts and even Kindle electronic readers should pass the “corruption smell test” under the Act, which takes effect on April 1, says PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). “This is the last year for Christmas gifts,” said Edwin Harland, a director in PwC’s forensic services practice. He listed lavish hampers, invitations to sporting events where the host is not present, anything delivered to a home address and a tablet computer as likely to be caught from April. Promotional expenditure which is “reasonable and proportionate” should not cause problems, but Ministry of Justice draft guidance does not provide monetary levels, leaving companies to work out for themselves where to draw the line. The legislation introduces the new offence to “offer, promise or give a financial advantage or other advantage, to another person to bring about improper performance of a relevant function or an activity, or to reward a person for the improper performance of a relevant function or an activity”. Mr Harland said: “I can’t pretend that Christmas gifts will be at the top of the Serious Fraud Office’s [SFO] priority list. But it will be taken into account on the day of reckoning. Your gift policy is one of the adequate procedures they talk about and you have to have in place.”

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Gang Who Battered Pedestrian With Crowbar in Brutal Road Rage Attack Jailed for Nearly 20 Years

A gang of thugs who stabbed a pedestrian in a road rage attack, torturing him with a crowbar, hammer and broken bottle have been jailed for almost 20 years.

A 30-year-old man was subjected to a brutal attack after almost being run over by a car as he left a popular Indian restaurant in Whitechapel, east London.

When the pedestrian swore at the driver in anger, he was confronted by three thugs who got out of the convertible BMW and another car following behind.

Rashel Hussain, 20, and his friends, twin brothers Jubhare and Taharak Hussain, both aged 21, battered the victim with a crowbar, causing serious injury to his left hand.

Terrified, the man ran back to Tayyabs restaurant — regarded as one of the best Indian restaurants in London — only to find himself trapped in the doorway as the doors had been locked by frightened staff.

Taharak knifed the man a number of times before running off with the others to get more weapons.

As the victim attempted to get help, stumbling towards the Royal London Hospital nearby, his attackers returned with a larger group of men who leapt on him.

Rashel Hussain battered him with a hammer, while another man, Shah Alom, 22, slashed him with a glass bottle and two others, Jubhare Hussain and Shofiqul Islam, 21, rained down punches on the defenceless man leaving him with serious neck, arm and thigh injuries.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Met Police Officers Suffered ‘Worst Violence in 30 Years’ During Student Riots

Metropolitan Police officers experienced the worst sustained violence in the past 30 years during the recent student riots, the force’s Commissioner said today.

Sir Paul Stephenson praised the ‘control’ of his staff who were forced to defend themselves during the protests against tuition fee rises.

Speaking on Radio 4’s Today programme, he said: ‘I spoke to an officer with 27 years’ service, an inspector. ‘He said to me he has been present on many of the violent protests in the past, he was there during the Poll Tax riots, he was there at Tottenham.

‘What he faced [during the student riots] was the greatest degree of sustained violence he’s faced on any public order of his career.

‘There’s clearly a sense of anger out there that’s led to a level of violence.’

He said some protesters were determined to breach police lines and had come prepared, and added: ‘I think we have got a sense of a real passion about a cause out there. Within that, there are various levels of passion that lead to extremism.’

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Men Accused of Burning Poppies Deny Charge

Two men from east London accused of burning poppies on the anniversary of Armistice Day have each denied a public order offence. Mohammad Haque, 30, and Emdadur Choudhury, 26, were arrested during a demonstration by Islamist group Muslims Against Crusades. The group held a noisy and confrontational demonstration in Kensington, west London, on November 11. Haque, of Mace Street, Bethnal Green, east London and Choudhury of Hunton Street, Spitalfields, east London, stood in the dock during the short hearing at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court to confirm their respective names, ages and addresses. The pair, who both had beards and wore traditional black Muslim robes under their coats, each pleaded not guilty to one count under section five of the Public Order Act. It is alleged that on November 11 at Kensington Gore both employed threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour within hearing or sight of persons who could be alarmed or distressed by this. Outlining the charge, Prosecutor Malachy Pakenham said: “It is a matter of so-called protest. They burned poppies on Armistice Day, it is as straightforward as that.

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Slammed for Failing to Spot a Car Containing Dead Body for Three Days

Police failed to spot a car containing a man’s dead body lying at the side of a busy dual carriageway on the outskirts of Leicester for three days.

An investigation was today launched into how officers were unable to find father-of-one Martin Kent, despite being alerted to his crashed car’s exact location.

The 23-year-old is believed to have died on December 12 after an accident while driving to his home in the Newfoundpool area of the city.

A lorry driver who knew Mr Kent spotted his vehicle the following day and informed his family, who passed the information on to police.

But officers were unable to find the car.

It was only on December 16 — four days after the accident occurred, and three days after police were made aware of its location — that the lorry driver again called to say the car was still there.

Mr Kent’s friend, Jason Jones, then drove to the scene and found evidence of the crash.

Police returned to the spot and, following a second search, the car and Mr Kent’s body were recovered.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: School Caretaker Harassed After Islamists Hack EDL

A school received hatemail targeting its caretaker after he was wrongly identified as a fascist by opponents of the English Defence League, based on data stolen by an Islamist hacking group.

The headmaster of the comprehensive school in Dorset, which The Register has agreed not to name, summoned the caretaker to his office early last week.

He was shown anonymous emails which accused his wife of being a member of the English Defence League (EDL) and urging that he be sacked. The couple live together with their children inside the school grounds.

The emails cited data recently exposed by an attack on the EDL’s website. The hacker posted his haul — lists of hundreds of members and financial supporters of the far-right group — on several sites frequented by anti-fascist activists.

“At first I was very confused and more than a little worried as the tone of one of the emails was threatening,” the caretaker told The Register.

“I was sure I wasn’t married to a fascist or a football hooligan as the email implied.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Vatican: Pope Calls for Church to Reflect on What Led to ‘Unimaginable’ Abuse

(AKI) — Pope Benedict XVI on Monday said the Catholic Church has to reflect on how the Christian lifestyle and the Vatican’s message may have led to the sexual abuse of children.

The pope said the Church must improve its training of priests to prevent further abuse. He also said the Vatican must understand how to help victims heal.

Benedict spoke to cardinals and bishops who gathered at the Vatican for the traditional Christmas speech. The pope often uses the occasion to speak about important issues facing the Church hierarchy.

“We must ask ourselves what we can to to fix the injustice that has been done. We must ask ourselves was wrong in our message, in the whole way in forming the way of being Christian,” he said..

The pope has expressed regret for the abuse of thousands of children over decades that has come to light this year in an international scandal that has rocked the Vatican.

The pope on Monday said the scale of abuse reached an “unimaginable dimension.”

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



Wales: ‘Christmas Bomb Plotters Were Radicalised in Jail’

A neighbour of three men arrested in Cardiff said that, after they were convicted of theft and drugs offences, they “went to prison as petty criminals and came out expressing extreme views”. Twelve men, mainly British nationals of Bangladeshi origin, were still being questioned by anti-terrorism officers last night following co-ordinated raids in the Welsh capital, London, Stoke-on-Trent and Birmingham on Monday. Sources said the gang was planning a “spectacular” attack on banks, shops and “iconic” sites in London. Lord Carlile, the Government’s counter-terrorism watchdog, told MPs yesterday that there were allegations of a “significant” terrorist plot. Giving evidence to the Commons home affairs select committee, he said: “The gestation period for the arrests has been long. I was aware of an operation some time ago which led to these arrests. On one occasion I was able to observe, literally observe, some of it occurring. I believe that it is very possible that people may well be charged and prosecuted.” The alleged cell was said to have been linked to the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun and its offshoot Islam4UK, as well as Anwar al-Awlaki, the radical al-Qaeda preacher based in Yemen.

The neighbour of the three Cardiff men said he believed a “radical preacher” had “politicised” them in prison.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks: USA ‘Pressured’ Italy on Calipari Case

Intelligence offier killed in Iraq in 2005 by ‘friendly fire’

(ANSA) — Rome, December 21 — The whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks on Tuesday made public transcripts of additional diplomatic cables which appeared to indicate that the United States pressured Italy on a 2005 case involving an Italian intelligence officer killed by US troops in Iraq.

On Monday, Wikileaks released a dispatch from the US Ambassador to Rome at the time, Mel Sembler, who said that the Italian government in 2005, then as now headed by Premier Silvio Berlusconi, would move to ensure that the Italian parliament did not initiate any in-depth probe into the death of Nicola Calipari.

The Italian agent was killed March 4, 2005 when US troops at a checkpoint opened fire on the car he was using to take a just-released Italian hostage to Baghdad airport.

The hostage, journalist Giuliana Sgrena, was wounded in the incident while another Italian agent, who was driving the car, suffered minor injuries.

According to Sembler’s May 2 cable — sent after he had met with then-foreign minister Gianfranco Fini, now the House Speaker, and Cabinet Secretary Gianni Letta — Italy’s probe into the incident would be “specifically designed” to stress the unintentional nature of the friendly fire.

Both sides agreed, he added, that it was important to maintain bilateral relations and avoid Rome making any accusations against Washington.

Rome’s “determination” to avoid any problems with the US, Sembler added, was confirmed by the fact that no one raised the “fundamental” question of “why only one car was fired upon of the 30 which passed through the checkpoint that day”.

Berlusconi’s office on Monday flatly denied the allegations made in the ambassador’s dispatch and said the meeting with Sembler had only seen “an exchange of views”. In an interview published by the Turin daily La Stampa on Tuesday, the agent’s wife, Rosa Calipari, said “we’ve always known that the Italian government would never step on the accelerator in discovering the truth”.

The widow, who is now an MP for the center-left opposition Democratic Party, told another daily, Corriere della Sera, that “the only thing new is that a cable was sent. I knew nothing of this but the rest has been common knowledge for the past five and half years”.

She also said that her husband’s death had been a “political murder” because “he was not a secret service ‘agent’ and they keep saying he was. He was a department chief. He was not a soldier, like the one who shot him, he held the rank of general. It was not normal that he should have been there.

People of his rank are usually sitting behind a desk”.

The American soldier who shot Calipari was identified as Mario Lozano and a cable made public on Tuesday indicated that on March 20, 2007, seven months before the Italian judiciary decided not to press charges against the marine, the then-Bush administration sought to put pressure on the center-left government of the time, headed by Romano Prodi.

According to the transcript, Washington wanted Rome to make it clear to Italian magistrates that actions on the battlefield were outside their jurisdiction.

The cable made reference to a meeting between the then-US deputy secretary of state, and later intelligence ‘czar’, John Negroponte and Rome’s ambassador to Washington, Giovanni Castellaneta.

Negroponte was said to have explained to the ambassador that placing Lozano on trial would be “very problematic” and that trying the solider in absentia “would send a terrible message and must be stopped”. The ambassador replied that under Italian law crimes committed against Italians outside Italy were under Rome’s jurisdiction and that while for the Washington and Rome “the case is closed”, there was little hope that the Italian government could stop a trial.

Nevertheless, the ambassador said he would make Washington’s position known to then-foreign minister Massimo D’Alema.

On October 25, 2007, Rome’s third court of appeals ruled that it did not have the jurisdiction to bring Lozano to trial, a decision later confirmed by the supreme Cassation Court.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



World’s Cartoonists Thrash Dutch Anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders

The international video journalist and cartoonists platform, VJ Movement, asked cartoonists in Islamic and other countries how they saw the increasing criticism of Islam in Europe.

The call produced 30 satirical drawings, most of them featuring Dutch rightwing anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders. Six are included in this article.

According to spokesman Tjeerd Rooyaards of The Hague-based VJ Movement, “Mr Wilders’ face is well-suited to being caricatured”. Next month, VJ movement will launch a separate platform, Cartoon Movement.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Montenegro: GDP 41% of EU Average

(ANSAmed) — PODGORICA, DECEMBER 17 — Montenegro is ahead of four countries in the region according to the gross domestic product (GDP) per capita measures by the purchasing power parity. Montenegro recorded GDP per capita in the amount of 41% of the EU average, while Serbia recorded 37%, Bosnia and Herzegovina 31% and Albania 27%. Luxembourg recorded the highest GDP in the EU and Bulgaria the lowest, while Croatian reached 65% of the European average.

In the group of candidate countries, which includes Croatia, the remaining two countries, Turkey and Macedonia, recorded worse results than Croatia.(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Syria: 30 Million Euros From France for Infrastructures

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 21 — A financial package worth thirty million euros has been announced by the French Cooperation Agency as aid to Syria for a project to improve water infrastructure in the Damascus area. According to the Italian Foreign Trade Commission in Damascus, the loan will be used for improving the water distribution network in the outskirts of the city — an area inhabited by 34,000 people.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Press: Network Spying for Israel Uncovered

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 20 — A network of spies working for Israel, which intercepted telephone conversations of members of the Egyptian government and passed them on to Israel’s secret services, has been uncovered and dismantled in Egypt, the Egyptian press writes. Press agency MENA writes that the country’s legal system has arrested an Egyptian man, and that two Israelis are on the run. According to the independent daily Al Masri Al Yom, four Egyptians have been arrested. Egypt’s public prosecutor has indicted the three and has handed them over to the high court for State security, accusing them of harming national interests, MENA writes without specifying further details. According to Al Masri Al Yom, the recorded telephone calls were passed on to a liaison office in Tel Aviv. The network, the newspaper writes, started its activities after a meeting between one of the two wanted Israeli officials and the Egyptian man, who works at a travel agency.

MENA writes that the name of the Egyptian man is Tarek Abdel Razek Hussein, 37 year old and owner of an import-export firm.

The Israelis are Eddie Moshe and Joseph Dimor.

According to the Egyptian prosecutor, Abdel Meguid Mahmud, when he was in Israel Hussein gave his Israeli contacts information on Syrians, Lebanese and Egyptians working in telecommunications who could be recruited as moles for the Mossad. The three have been charged with “spying and harming Egypt’s national interests, and activities that could have led to a break in ties with Syria and Lebanon”.(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Fatwa by Egyptian Wahabi Group to Kill Elbaradei, Anhri

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DEC 20 — The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) today deeply resented that a Muslim cleric, in charge of the association Ansar elSunnah elMuhammadiya in Damanhur, would issue a fatwa calling to force elBaradei, Former President of the International Agency for Atomic Energy and a likely candidate for the presidency, to repent otherwise the Egyptian government would have the right to imprison or kill him to prevent sedition.

Mahmoud Amer presents himself on the website of this association as holder of Bachelor in Islamic law and a Diploma in preaching. These degrees — if true — are not equivalent to a Master’s degree rendering him incompetent of issuing fatwas, reports an ANHRI communique. This extremist fatwa comes several days after elBaradei has slammed rigging of the last public elections asserting that the citizens have every right to peaceful demonstration to demand change.

Gamal Eid, ANHRI executive director said: “This association published a statement in 2005 calling to support Mubarak as a Khalif (leader of all Muslims). This fatwa inciting to murder is a reminiscent of the fatwas that spread in the nineties of the past century calling to kill secular writers and thinkers, leading to the murder of Farag Fuda and an attempt to kill Naguib Mahfouz, a Noble Laureate”. “We cannot live that atmosphere of terror again, the government has to take a clear stance from these Fatwas to kill opponents, as the classic governmental indifference in such situations would imply approval and a license to kill”, added Eid.

The website of this association was created by a Saudi extremist institute in order to promote such hard line Wahabi concepts, ANHRI informs, judging the Arabic Network as an indicator to the popularity of this radical way of thinking.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Appeal by Milan Academic, Berber Scholars Seized

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 21 — A young Libyan academic, Madghis Buzakhar, “has been seized along with his brother by Lybian security officials in plain clothes and nothing has been heard of their fate since December 16”. The denunciation, which picks up on an alert across various internet sites, comes from Vermondo Brugnatelli, a lecturer at Milano-Bicocca University who also chairs the Berbera cultural organization. Brugnatelli has made an appeal to the Italian government to intervene in order to cast light on the affair.

Mr Brugnatelli points out that archive material was also confiscated, along with some books the Milan academic had given them during their recent visit to Italy: “The reason for this kidnap-arrest appear to be alleged contacts the two had with an Italian tourist with whom they spoke about the situation in Yefren, their native village in the Berber region of Gebel Nefusa”.

“It is justifiable to talk of a fresh Gaddafi offensive against the Berbers: seeing that this kidnapping has come just a few weeks after the 5-year prison sentence given to a Berber singer from Libya, Abdullah Ashini, from Zuara. The singer was guilty of having sung a song in Berber during the Las Palmas Festival of Berber Music two years ago”.

“Given these serious violations of human rights, the Berber Cultural Association is appealing to all of Italy’s authorities, and to the Prime Minister and Foreign Minister in particular, to act in order to obtain the immediate release of the two brothers as well as the restitution of the confiscated materials: the overturning of the sham trial given to Abdullah Ashini and his immediate release from prison, the end to any form of persecution against Berbers in Libya and the recognition of Berber as a national language alongside Arabic”.

“It is inconceivable that a democratic nation such as Italy should abide by a Treaty of Friendship, Partnership and Cooperation with a country that repeatedly violates the most basic human rights. For this reason we are calling on Italy to freeze this treaty until the persecution of the Berbers in Libya comes to an end”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Christmas Trees ‘Provocative: ‘ Nazareth Suburb’s Mayor

The mayor of a Jewish suburb of Nazareth sparked outrage on Wednesday after refusing to allow Christmas trees to be placed in town squares, calling them provocative. Predominantly Jewish Nazareth Illit, or Upper Nazareth, is adjacent to Nazareth, where Jesus is said to have spent much of his life. It has a sizable Arab Christian minority, as does mostly Muslim Nazareth itself. “The request of the Arabs to put Christmas trees in the squares in the Arab quarter of Nazareth Illit is provocative,” Mayor Shimon Gapso told AFP. “Nazareth Illit is a Jewish city and it will not happen — not this year and not next year, so long as I am a mayor,” he said of the northern Israeli town. “Nazareth is right next door and they can do what they want there,” he said. His decision angered the town’s Arab and Christian minority, who accused him of racism. “The racism of not putting a tree up is nothing compared to the real racism that we experience here,” said Aziz Dahdal, a 35-year-old Christian resident of Nazareth Illit. “When we asked the mayor to put up a Christmas tree in the Arab neighbourhoods of Nazareth Illit he said this is a Jewish town, not a mixed town,” said Shukri Awawdeh, a Muslim Arab member of the town council.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Christians Senselessly Tormented by Extremists in Muslim World

The Christmas season encourages us to think of Jesus, so highly revered and loved by both Christians and Muslims. So it is even more tragic to contemplate relations between the two religions today — and particularly the plight of Christians in the Muslim world. In Iraq, savage killings of Christians have led thousands to flee the country. In Egypt, Christians are under severe pressure and siege. In Pakistan, there are too many cases like that of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who is facing a death sentence under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws for allegedly slandering the Prophet of Islam. For both of us, a Muslim and a Christian, this violence is a matter of utmost gravity. One of us, Akbar Ahmed, was educated by Roman Catholic priests at Burn Hall, in North Pakistan, and then Presbyterian teachers at Forman Christian College in Lahore, and gratefully acknowledges the immeasurable debt he owes them, which he attempts to repay in promoting Christian-Muslim dialogue. The other, John Chane, is concerned as a bishop but also as someone also passionately devoted to promoting good relations between Christians and Muslims. We find that the situation has reached a breaking point because of the crisis in the Muslim world. Extremist Muslims feel that Islam is under siege by the West and seek to lash out at Christians, seeing an attack on Christians in their countries effectively as an attack on Israelis, U.S. troops in Iraq or the intelligence agencies behind U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



From Lebanon: Egypt, Syria and Israel With Love

I confess! I was wrong when I doubted the wisdom of Ahmet “Strategic Depth” Davutoglu’s ambitious peace plans for the always chaotic Middle East. The Turkish foreign minister’s vision has already created what was unthinkable only a few years ago: Israel, Egypt, Syria and Lebanon are agreeing on borders — well, not their own, but Cyprus’s offshore borders.

About three years ago, Cyprus launched a plan to draw, through bilateral agreements, the borders of its Exclusive Economic Zone, or EEZ, with the aim of controlling all economic resources within this specified zone including fishing, mining and oil and natural gas exploration.

Naturally, the Cypriots needed offshore “partners” in order to map their EEZ, and started talks with their offshore neighbors. That unnerved Ankara since an internationally-ratified Cypriot EEZ could have unwanted economic and political implications for Turkey. Hence, the repeated Turkish objections to Cyprus’s oil and gas exploration in eastern Mediterranean.

Luckily, the first doors the Cypriots knocked on were the Turks’ Muslim friends. All the same, before Ankara could move a finger, Orthodox Cyprus ratified an offshore border deal with Islamic Egypt. Bah… Egypt is Egypt. But Turkey’s neo-Ottoman vision would surely work with Lebanon where Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is a folk hero.

In 2007, Turkey warned Lebanon about maritime agreements with Cyprus. Ankara said it would not recognize the delimitation of the EEZs and alleged that Lebanon should ask for Turkey’s opinion before signing any agreement with Cyprus. With the failure of that friend-to-friend warning, a year later Cyprus protested to the United Nations and the European Union over what it called Turkish harassment of ships conducting exploration surveys in its EEZ.

In early October 2010, Cyprus and Lebanon agreed to delimit their EEZs, pending parliamentary ratification at the Lebanese parliament. The same month, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri visited Cyprus and said Lebanon would soon define offshore boundaries with Cyprus and Syria. During the same visit, Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias thanked Mr Hariri for reconfirming “the principled position of Lebanon on the Cyprus problem for a solution.”

Apparently, Cypriot policy, through the strategic EEZ campaign, has done more than Turkish mediation efforts in bringing together major Middle Eastern adversaries. Last week, Cyprus announced that an agreement with Israel had been signed on the two countries’ sea border that will allow the offshore neighbors to press ahead in their search for energy resources in the eastern Mediterranean. Experts agree the demarcation is an important step for oil and gas exploration.

The Cypriot campaign looks like the real interfaith dialogue the Turks have been thriving for over the past several years: it unites one Jewish, three Muslim and one Orthodox state around common offshore borders, without a single bullet shot, a suicide bomb exploded or a rocket launched. The dialogue even stretches across the Aegean.

Greece, which in the 1980s was widely considered the European country most hostile to Israel —the two countries, in fact, did not have any formal diplomatic relationship until 1992 — today has soaring bilateral ties with Israel, thanks to Mr Davutoglu’s “zero-problems with neighbors” policy.

Apart from being on a Turkish list that bans land sales to their citizens, Jewish Israel and Orthodox Greece enjoy spectacularly improving ties. According to Arye Mekel, Israel’s ambassador to Athens, “Greece and Israel have opened a new chapter in their ties [following] a decision to develop multifaceted cooperation in the fields of politics, security, economy and culture.”

Meanwhile, the Turkish diplomats in Ankara are increasingly worried that a critical dispute is spinning out of control, and in a direction they would hate the most: an internationally-recognized EEZ for the internationally-recognized, EU member state of Greek Cyprus. Mssrs Erdogan and Davutoglu would certainly propose a faith-based explanation if the Cypriots had signed offshore maritime agreements with Israel only. Ironically, Egypt, Lebanon and Syria are Turkey’s “Muslim friends” in the region.

The world owes a lot to Turkey’s Israel policy since it is making the eastern Mediterranean a genuine sea of peace. Hats off to Mr Strategic Depth! But wait a minute…

Wire services reported Monday that Turkey summoned the Israeli envoy to convey its unease over the deal with Cyprus. The services said Ambassador Gaby Levy was summoned to the Foreign Ministry on Thursday, a day before the agreement was signed. According to Anatolia news agency, Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu warned Levy the agreement would have an adverse impact on efforts between Cyprus’ Greek and Turkish communities to end the 36-year division of the island.

I have no idea if Ambassador Levy asked Undersecretary Sinirlioglu why the 36-year division remained for 36 years prior to, or without, the Cypriot-Israeli offshore border deal, or whether the Turkish Foreign Ministry was equally upset when Cyprus signed the same deals with Lebanon or Egypt.

But let’s look at the bright side of life: the Lebanese cheers over Mr Erdogan’s visit last month calls for the revival of the Ottoman Caliph — in the personality of Mr Erdogan — and the memorable moments during the prime minister’s public rally in the former Ottoman lands are still fresh memories.

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



Iraq: Around “1,100” Christian Families Have Fled to Kurdish North

(AKI) — Around 1,1000 Christian Iraqi families have abandoned Baghdad for refuge in the north of the country where Kurds are the dominant group, according to Iraqi Christian website Ankawa, citing a government official.

“At the moment there are 1,100 Christian families that have found refuge in the north following the October attack” on a Christian church in Baghdad, secretary-general of Iraq’s council of ministers, Ali Mohsen Ismail al-Allaq. “Unfortunately this is in the interest of the Islamic terrorists.”

Separately, human rights group Amnesty International on Monday called on Iraq’s government to step up protection of Christians, after 44 worshippers were killed on 31 October in an attack on a Baghdad church.

Amnesty “called on the Iraqi government to do more to protect the country’s Christian minority from an expected spike in violent attacks as they prepare to celebrate Christmas,” the rights group said in a statement.

“Attacks on Christians and their churches by armed groups have intensified in past weeks and have clearly included war crimes” Malcolm Smart, Amnesty’s director for the Middle East and north Africa, said in the statement.

A branch of Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the October attack and said Christians are “legitimate targets.”

Iraqi defence ministry spokesman Major General Mohammed al-Askari on Monday said the army’s special forces troops killed three Libyans who were planning suicide attacks against Christians in the northern city of Mosul.

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



Syrian Leader Says EU Must Accept Turkey

The European Union must accept Turkey as a member if it wants to avoid being a “Christian club,” according to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Without Turkey, “the EU would become only a Christian club,” al-Assad told daily Hürriyet and German daily Bild in a recent interview. “Europe talks about intercultural dialogue, yet isolates itself culturally. You cannot [refute this argument] by demonstrating that 5 million Muslims live in Germany and 7 million Muslims live in France.”

Al-Assad also praised Turkish foreign policy, saying Turkey, which he deemed to be playing a vital role in the peace process of Middle East, had handled the process of Mavi Marmara incident adroitly after the death of nine Turkish activists who were bringing support to Gaza.

“That was a very complex problem. The way Turkish people coped with the situation was very successful. If Israel doesn’t apologize or pay compensation to the families whose relatives died, you cannot talk about the fact that you need a relationship with Israel. You cannot say, ‘We can continue our relationship with Israel without getting anything.’ This is your pride and right. In fact, it is Israel cutting this relationship,” said al-Assad.

The Syrian president also said the West was withdrawing from Turkey, in response to a question about Turkey’s foreign policy axis. Although Turkey has relationships with the West, it is wrong to define Turkey as the West, he added.

“Turkey should carry on the role it has been playing for the last three years. Especially, after Sept. 11, diverse balances were created in this agitated region,” said al-Assad.

In Islamic societies, people fear becoming a more conservative society and such debates occupy the agenda of Islamic world, said al-Assad.

“Extremism has gained strength in the Islamic world for the last 10 years and as Muslim people our responsibility should be struggling with this extremity,” he said.

As secular states, Turkey and Syria have moderate Muslims in power, but every Islamic country does not possess this variety, said al-Assad, adding that other religions should be accepted and that people should learn to live in harmony without getting into conflicts or killing each other.

Asked whether he would like to see more or fewer women wearing headscarves in Syria, al-Assad said everybody had the right to live as they choose.

“We don’t look at the issue this way in Syria. We look at how the minds operate and how they approach other cultures,” said al-Assad.

Noting that a variety of lifestyles and beliefs exist in Syria, al-Assad said that the headscarf was sometimes a look, part of an identity or the symbol of conservatism.

“Once you attack Islam, people sometimes want to put their identities to the forefront. At times, they show it with their looks,” said al-Assad.

Terrorism is more powerful than it was on Sept. 11 and finds its place within societies, said al-Assad, noting that the West was as fragile to the threat of terrorism as Middle Eastern countries.

“How long can you permanently make your soldiers ready at airports or other places? I don’t think anybody needs such a thing. Wars always create more terror,” said al-Assad after being asked whether the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq would protect the West from terrorism.

“No war can protect the West. The thing shielding the West is politics and economics. They should think about what they can do to help other countries flourish. They should give a response to terror this way,” said al-Assad.

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



Turkish Man Goes on Trial for Plot to Kill Rabbis

A Turkish news agency says a court has released a man whom prosecutors accuse of plotting to murder Jewish rabbis and the Istanbul-based leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians.

The Anatolia agency says suspect Ismet Recber was freed pending the outcome of the trial following the first hearing Wednesday.

Recber, a carpenter, faces up to 15 years in prison if found guilty of plotting to kill Patriarch Bartholomew I. He denies the accusations.

Anatolia says the man was arrested after an anonymous letter was sent to authorities claiming that a suspect in a separate trial had chosen Recber to carry out the killings.

The separate trial involves an alleged secularist plot to bring down the Islam-oriented government.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghan Sex Practices Concern U.S., British Forces

A document released by WikiLeaks described efforts by high-ranking Afghan officials to quash reports of police officers and other Afghans arrested for “purchasing a service from a child.”

The leaked diplomatic cable quoted former Minister of the Interior Hanif Atmar’s concern that publicity about the arrests, which involved the hiring of “dancing boys,” would “endanger lives.” The author of the diplomatic cable fretted that the case would be “blown out of proportion, an outcome that would not be good for either the U.S. or Afghanistan.” The vast gulf between U.S. and Afghan attitudes about homosexuality and pedophilia has generated concern among U.S. advisers in Afghanistan since the American presence there began to expand.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Afghan Taliban Leadership Splintered by Intense US Military Campaign

The US military onslaught against the Taliban in Kandahar has dealt a major blow against insurgent commanders who have been forced to flee areas they used to control and reduced two of the most senior insurgent field commanders to squabbling over footsoldiers, residents in the critically important southern province say.

Tribal elders and ordinary villagers living at the centre of Barack Obama’s military surge in and around Kandahar city say it has severely damaged the Taliban’s capability, with senior commanders and foreign fighters quitting the key districts of Zhari, Panjwai and Arghandab altogether.

Local fighters have been promoted to leadership positions and left to fend for themselves and continue attacks against coalition forces. But local people say that, cut off from their leaders, local Taliban have shied away from fighting.

“Two months ago the Taliban were everywhere,” said Malim Juma Gul, a tribal elder from Zahri district. “They were attacking Nato forces every day and they were searching people and arresting anyone whom they suspected of working for the government. But after the big operations began, the commanders all ran away and the local fighters now just stay at home, or they work as day labourers and even on US cash-for-work schemes.”

Zhari and other districts bordering Kandahar city have been the main targets of a major effort to quell the insurgency in the Taliban’s home province of Kandahar.

US officials hope the upsurge in American troops and a huge increase in night raids targeting Taliban commanders will deal a devastating blow to the insurgency in the south and reverse its momentum countrywide.

Local people say such raids, which have been condemned by Afghan president Hamid Karzai, have made it extremely difficult for commanders to communicate with their men or even feel safe sheltering for the night.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks: Bangladeshi ‘Death Squad’ Trained by British Government

Members of paramilitary group the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) were trained by British authorities in “investigative interviewing techniques” and “rules of engagement”, according to wires from US ambassador to Dhaka James Moriarty. In a cable dating from May 2009, Mr Moriarty writes: “The US and UK representatives reviewed our ongoing training to make the RAB a more transparent, accountable and human-rights compliant paramilitary force. “The British have been training RAB for 18 months in areas such as investigative interviewing techniques and rules of engagement. “They said that the training had been widely disseminated within RAB and that they were undertaking an assessment of its effectiveness.” The latest revelations from the cache of US embassy cables also revealed British police provided training to members of the RAB to address the allegations of human rights abuses.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


WikiLeaks Cables: US Intervened in Michael Moore NZ Screening

Whatever else WikiLeaks may have revealed, one fact has been repeatedly confirmed: the US government under George Bush really loathed the documentary filmmaker Michael Moore.

After a leaked cable from US diplomats in Havana falsely claimed Cuba had banned Moore’s documentary Sicko — when in fact it was shown on state television — another cable reveals US officials flying into a panic after hearing a rumour that a New Zealand cabinet minister was hosting a screening of Moore’s film Fahrenheit 9/11.

Labelling the event a “potential fiasco”, the classified cable from the US embassy in Wellington in 2003 reads like a failed plotline for an episode of In the Loop, breathlessly reporting a series of calls to the New Zealand prime minister’s office and to the minister involved, Marian Hobbs.

Michael Moore, appearing on the Rachel Maddow Show on Tuesday night, said the New Zealand cable uncovered by WikiLeaks showed the unsettling reach of US influence. “If they were micromanaging me that much, if they were that concerned about the truth in Fahrenheit 9/11 that they have to go after a screening in a place I don’t even really know where it is — I know it’s way too long to sit in coach for me — I want to know. Because I think it speaks to a larger issue: if they have the time for that, what else are these guys up to?”

Sadly for the world’s only superpower, the New Zealand government wasn’t concerned in the slightest, based on the puzzled responses recorded by the US deputy chief of mission, David Burnett, to his protests.

Burnett contacted the prime minister’s office, to be told they knew nothing about a screening. He then called Hobbs, only to be rebuffed by a receptionist. “The minister’s office declined to make her available to discuss the matter,” Burnett sniffed.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Ghana: Imam Predicts Doom in 2011

The Spiritual Leader of the Salawatia Muslim Mission of Ghana, Sheihu Imam Rashid Hussein Salawat Qutubu Az-zamaan, has revealed that natural disasters such as landslides, earthquakes, storms, thunders, volcanic eruptions and floods would occur in the country and entire world in 2011.

According to Salawat Qutubu Az-zamaan, the disasters are expected to occur “as a result of the unbalanced nature of the world where there is too much weight to one side.” He averred that the situation can only be prevented if huge pyramids are constructed along the equator. He stressed that Ghana could escape the world disaster if President Mills allows Muslim leaders to recite the Holy Quran 220 times, slaughter 7 white and 6 brown cows to feed the poor and provide $490,000 as alms to the needy in society.

The renowned Islamic scholar made the prophecy at the Rashiddiya Mosque in Tamale last Sunday when addressing this year’s Ayaam U1-Lah. “The 2011 year will also be a year of prosperity and blessings where there will be plenty of agricultural produce around the world. Businesses will flourish in some countries, while some will overcome their economic difficulties and other challenges,” Imam Rashid Hussein told the congregation.

The spiritual leader’s predictions about the future of the world have over the years come to reality. In 2009, for instance, he revealed that 2010 will experience a lot of disasters such as earthquakes, floods, wind fires, air crashes, volcanoes, epidemics severe weather conditions and many deaths among the youth. Continuing, he intoned that prominent politicians and chiefs would pass away in 2011, if principles of “Unfolding the Scriptures” are not properly adhered to. The Islamic concept of Unfolding the Scriptures is an old Islamic ritual or tradition, where every year scriptures from the Holy Quran are revealed to depict the future.

[…]

[DF — “too much weight to one side.” — LMAO . Natural disasters occur every year. More people on the planet means more people living in areas prone to natural disasters.]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Luis Fleischman: A Closer Look at Brazil’s Foreign Policy

Latin America is increasingly turning into a geo-political and international challenge. On the one hand, Venezuela, under the leadership of Hugo Chavez, continues to support the Colombian narco-guerilla group known as the FARC. The FARC protects the activities of drug cartels, and cooperates with terrorist groups such as Hezbollah. On the other hand, a number of Southern Cone countries led by Brazil (and supported by Argentina and Uruguay) did not go as far as Venezuela but have conducted a foreign policy which is detrimental not only to the United States but to the free world, in general.

Brazil under the government of Jose Inazio Lula Da Silva took advantage of the country’s economic growth (which was the cumulative result of years of economic and developmental polices that began before Da Silva took office) to flex its muscles in the regional and international arena.

President Lula Da Silva surprised the world, when despite having a left-wing background plus having been a co-founder along with Fidel Castro of the anti-American Foro de Sao Paulo, appointed conservative figures to his cabinet. That move was aimed at maintaining the continuity of Brazil’s economic development which was pretty much based on the strong role and cooperation of the business community. The fact that Lula did not go left on domestic and economic polices led many people in the region and in Washington to believe that Brazil’s stand in the international arena would be similar…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


New Census Data Reveal Immigration is Fueling Runaway U.S. Population Growth

Today’s release of 2010 Census data reveal that the U.S. population grew by more than 27 million during the last decade — representing a nearly ten percent increase in our population in just ten years. The single largest factor in this enormous, and unwelcome, increase was excessive legal and illegal immigration.

Here is how the math works:

  • During the past decade, about 13 million new immigrants arrived in the United States legally and illegally. Accounting for emigration and deaths, the net foreign-born population increased by some 8 million people.
  • An additional 10 million births to foreign-born women were recorded during the 2000 decade.
  • Net immigration plus births to immigrants swelled the U.S. population by some 18 million people during the previous decade, accounting for about two-thirds of the population growth during that period.
  • The population surge of the 2000s was the third largest in U.S. history, exceeded only by the 1950s and 1990s.

The new data also confirm warnings by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) that continued mass immigration places this country on an unsustainable population growth trajectory. Unless significant reductions in overall immigration to the United States are enacted, soaring U.S. population growth will further strain our natural resources and steadily diminish quality of life for all Americans.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Ex-Illegal Immigrant Shares Her Story

It is estimated that Switzerland is home to 70,000-180,000 illegal immigrants. One of them was Colombian Annalilia Sanchez, who has shared her story with swissinfo.ch.

Sanchez, now 41, managed to live in Switzerland illegally for 14 years before she received a much-desired residence permit three months ago after applying as a hardship case.

“This residence permit is the best gift ever — I can still hardly believe my luck,” Sanchez* tells swissinfo.ch, her eyes shining. Yet the old fear of being discovered and deported still lingers.

“If I pass a police officer or there’s an unexpected knock at the door, I still get jumpy. Illegal immigrants live as though they’re in prison,” confesses the petite woman with curly dark hair.

Without proper papers, you can neither rent an apartment nor sign up for mobile phone service — never mind visit the doctor.

Sanchez, dressed in jeans and a grey sweatshirt, tells the story of a friend who broke her leg but didn’t dare go to hospital. Thanks to the support of an organisation that helps illegal immigrants, Sanchez has had health insurance for a couple of years.

Ten francs for four words

Her German is very good — she says she’s been working on it since she came to Switzerland. Sanchez, who admits that she doesn’t know much about politics, concedes that it would be hard to “legalise” all immigrants.

Yet in her view, each case should be examined individually: “We’re not just illegal immigrants; we are people with hearts and families.”

Sanchez adds that she doesn’t understand why foreigners can’t do domestic and garden work, considering that so few Swiss people are willing to do it.

It was work that brought Sanchez to Switzerland 14 years ago. Her cousin, working as a cleaner here, was expecting a child.

Sanchez jumped in to take her place — and the women settled in a small attic apartment without a kitchen or a shower. Neither could speak the local language.

In the beginning, Sanchez could only afford to buy phone cards worth about ten francs. Yet after exchanging just three or four words with her mother and daughter in Colombia, the credit ran out.

“I cried a lot at the beginning, but having to rely on myself made me strong,” Sanchez remembers.

A tough life

Sanchez comes from a very poor family. Her mother worked as a washerwoman — not with a machine, but with soap and a rock. When she became ill, Sanchez had to drop out of school and get a job.

Her father suffered a fatal accident at the age of 49. This left the six-child-family without money or any prospects.

Sanchez, herself a single mother without an education, wanted a better life for her own daughter. Yet she has had to make a lot of sacrifices.

Her daughter, who stayed behind in Colombia with her grandmother, has only visited Switzerland three times. As Sanchez recalls, “I thought about her all the time. That gave me strength.”

Thanks to her work as a cleaning lady for a doctor’s family, Sanchez has been able to support her mother financially and send her daughter to school.

“If I had stayed in Colombia, I wouldn’t have been able to help my family,” Sanchez concludes. Her daughter now supports herself as a flight attendant…

* Not her real name

Corinne Buchser, swissinfo.ch

(Translated from German by Susan Vogel-Misicka)

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

Culture Wars


UK: ‘Christmas is Evil’: Muslim Group Launches Poster Campaign Against Festive Period

Organisers plan to put up thousands of placards around the UK claiming the season of goodwill is responsible for rape, teenage pregnancies, abortion, promiscuity, crime and paedophilia.

They hope the campaign will help ‘destroy Christmas’ in this country and lead to Britons converting to Islam instead.

Labour MP and anti racist campaigner Jim Fitzpatrick branded the posters ‘extremely offensive’ and demanded they were immediately ripped down.

The placards, which have already appeared in parts of London, feature an apparently festive scene with an image of the Star of Bethlehem over a Christmas tree.

But under a banner announcing ‘the evils of Christmas’ it features a message mocking the song the 12 Days of Christmas.

It reads: ‘On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me an STD (sexually transmitted disease).

‘On the second day debt, on the third rape, the fourth teenage pregnancies and then there was abortion..’

According to the posters, Christmas is also to responsible for paganism, domestic violence, homelessness, vandalism, alcohol and drugs.

Another offence of Christmas, it proclaims, is ‘claiming God has a son’.

The bottom of the poster declares: ‘In Islam we are protected from all of these evils. We have marriage, family, honour, dignity, security, rights for man, woman and child.’

The campaign’s organiser is 27-year-old Abu Rumaysah, who once called for Sharia Law in Britain at a press conference held by hate preacher leader Anjem Choudary, the leader of militant group Islam4UK.

Former Home Secretary Alan Johnson banned Islam4UK group earlier this year, making it a criminal offence to be a member, after it threatened to protest at Wootton Bassett, the town where Britain honours its war dead.

Mr Rumaysah told the Mail that he was unconcerned about offending Christians.

He said: ‘Christmas is a lie and as Muslims it is our duty to attack it.

‘But our main attack is on the fruits of Christmas, things like alcohol abuse and promiscuity that increase during Christmas and all the other evils these lead to such as abortion, domestic violence and crime.

‘We hope that out campaign will make people realise that Islam is the only way to avoid this and convert.’

Mr Rumaysah, who said his campaign was not linked to any group, boasted that the posters would be put up in cities around the country, including London, Birmingham and Cardiff.

The campaign was highlighted by volunteers from a charity which distributes food and presents to pensioners and the lonely at Christmas.

Sister Christine Frost, founder of the East London Neighbours in Poplar charity, said: ‘The more posters I saw, the more angry I got.

‘Someone is stirring hatred which leaves the road open to revenge attacks or petrol bombs through letter-boxes.

‘I told the Mayor we are all scared.

‘If we said such things about Muslims, we’d all be hanging from lamp-posts.

‘The posters appear to be professionally printed’.

Poplar and Limehouse MP Mr Fitzpatrick said: ‘These posters are extremely offensive and have upset a lot of people — that’s why we jumped on it and asked the council to remove them.

‘Sister Christine is rooted in the community and doesn’t take offence lightly.

‘But these hate posters really upset her. Christmas is close to her belief.’

A Met Police spokesman said they had received complaints and were investigating.

Tower Hamlets mayor Lutfur Rahman said the posters had ‘upset and antagonised many residents’.

He added: ‘The messages on these posters are offensive and do not reflect the views of the Council or the vast majority of residents.’

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Christian NHS Worker Could be Sacked for Handing Out Books on Risks of Abortion

A Christian health worker is facing the sack for giving a colleague a booklet about the potential dangers of abortion.

Margaret Forrester was ‘bullied’ and ‘treated like a criminal’ after she handed the pro-life leaflet to a family planning worker at an NHS centre.

Miss Forrester, 39, said she offered the booklet during a private conversation, because she felt the NHS did not give enough information about the potential risks.

It told of the physical and psychological problems suffered by five women after terminating pregnancies. But her NHS employers have launched disciplinary action against her and she fears she could lose her job.

Miss Forrester, a Roman Catholic, has been accused of ‘distributing materials some people may find offensive’.

It is the latest example of Christians facing disciplinary action for expressing religious views.

Miss Forrester attended an internal disciplinary hearing yesterday, but will not be told the outcome until January, meaning she faces Christmas without knowing whether she will lose her job.

She said: ‘My pro-life views do come from my Christian belief, but a lot of people have a religion. It’s not a criminal offence.

‘A religious opinion is expressed in the booklet, so therefore it’s not entirely neutral, but I believe women considering abortion should have a full range of information.’

Miss Forrester has worked for the NHS for six years and is a mental health worker at the Central North West London Mental Health Trust, in Camden, North London.

In early November she gave two copies of the booklet called Forsaken — Women From Taunton Talk About Abortion to a female colleague with whom she had been discussing the information offered to patients.

It features five women who have experienced what it describes as ‘post-abortion syndrome’, including depression, relationship issues, suicidal feelings and fertility problems.

Miss Forrester said there was no sign her colleague was offended by the £4 charity leaflet, or by their conversation. But a few days later her manager told her she was being sent home on ‘special leave with full pay’..

She was ordered not to see any patients and to stay away from any NHS site while the trust investigated.

Miss Forrester was then told she had not been suspended and to return to work but claimed she was not allowed to do her normal job.

Instead she was put on other duties, which she found ‘bullying and offensive’, adding: ‘I felt physically sickened by their bullying.’

She was eventually signed off on sick leave and has not been back to the health centre since.

After her hearing, Miss Forrester said: ‘There is an authoritarian management at work here, which is encroaching on very basic freedoms. It is a kangaroo court.’

NHS advice says ‘repeated abortions’ can cause damage to the womb, which can result in fertility problems.

Its website says research suggests abortion does not lead to psychological problems, ‘however, some women can feel sad or guilty after an abortion, and post-abortion counselling services are widely available’.

Miss Forrester’s case is backed by the Christian Legal Centre, whose director Andrea Minichiello Williams said: ‘The level of intolerance in the public sphere, particularly in public sector employment, is deeply worrying and suggests we are living in a society that is less and less free.’

Earlier this year, nurse Shirley Chaplin, 54, lost a tribunal over her right to wear a crucifix at work.

Lillian Ladele, a registrar with Islington Council in North London, lost a case at the Appeal Court in which she argued she was entitled to refuse to conduct gay civil partnership ceremonies because they were against her beliefs. She has since left her job.

A spokesman from the NHS trust said she could not comment on internal disciplinary cases.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

General


Objective Islam, Subjective Islam

You can sort the written and spoken words about Islam into two categories — negative and apologist. Closer observation shows that the negative camp and the apologist camp use different logic, as well as come to different conclusions.

An easy way to see this is to go to a reporting source on the web such as a newspaper that has an article about Islam. Read the comments. The negative comments tend to be more based on ideas taken from the Islamic source material from the Koran and Mohammed. Or they quote a jihadi, a poll or a historical fact.

The apologist comments tend to quote a Muslim friend or establishment expert and attack those who criticize Islam. Critics are called bigots, neo-Nazis, Islamophobes or some other cruel name. In essence, having negative comments or judgments about Islam is labeled as evil. The term hate speech is even bantered about. The critic of Islam is a failed sinner who is shamed and morally condemned. It is all very personal and very much about feelings.

A good apologist will have a second attack on the problem of, “Is Islam good or bad”? Islam must be supported by something besides an attack on the person. There must be with some facts about Islam from other apologists, mainly Muslim scholars and academic types. These experts are authorities who can deliver judgment from on high. But, many times they don’t have facts, only opinions.

If you are to base your arguments on what some expert says, then what “expert” do you ask? What imam or what professor? If you quote a Jew-hating Saudi imam found on MEMRI (Middle East Media Research Institute) you fail the criteria of the expert the apologist needs, because the “expert” must be a moderate, at all costs. So that fire breathing Palestinian jihadi just won’t do.

If you turn to Google, you can wind up at sites like ReligionLink, a website for reporters. This looks very official, very authoritative; surely you can trust them, but if you are knowledgeable, there are organizations on the site that are associated with the Muslim Brotherhood, such as ISNA, which should raise a flag to the knowing.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



OIC Chief Affirms Need for Strong Islamic Media

Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, secretary-general of the 57-member Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), on Wednesday emphasized the need for a strong media to confront the smear campaign against Islam and Muslims.

“There is big negligence from the part of Islamic media organizations in keeping with the fast developments in the media world,” he told the General Assembly of the Islamic Broadcasting Union (IBU), an affiliate of OIC.

Ihsanoglu said the extraordinary OIC summit that was held in Makkah in 2005 at the initiative of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah had called for strengthening OIC media agencies such IBU and the International Islamic News Agency (IINA).

Culture and Information Minister Abdul Aziz Khoja, who presided over the meeting, emphasized the need to strengthen IBU in order to realize the hopes and aspirations of the Ummah.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101221

Financial Crisis
» China ‘Very Concerned’ By European Debt Crisis
» Citigroup Warns of Fresh Wave of Bank Failures in Europe
» Spain: Zapatero Confirms Objective of Pensions at 67
» You’d Rather See China or Russia Leading?
 
USA
» Arms Treaty Clears Key Hurdle in Senate on 67-28 Vote
» FCC Approves Controversial ‘Net Neutrality’ Regulations
» FCC Poised to Adopt Network Neutrality Rules
» Hillary Attends ‘North American Union’ Meeting
» Islamic Group Asks DOJ to Review Police Training
» Latest Terror Threat in US Aimed to Poison Food
» NASA Selects United Negro College Fund to Help Build Science Careers
» New York Taxi Drivers to Wear Bulletproof Vests in Pilot Scheme
» Taking Names, Napolitano Style
» Tension Over US Chamber Vote on Armenian Massacre
» The Day the Internet Died?
» U.S. Buffets and Salad Bars ‘Threatened With Poison Attacks by Al Qaeda Group Behind ‘Ink Cartridge’ Bomb Plot
» Why You Need to Care About Net Neutrality
 
Canada
» Al Qaeda-Affiliated Website Targets Arab Christians in Canada
» More Than 100 Arab Christians in Canada Named on Al Qaida-Affiliated Website
 
Europe and the EU
» French Jihadist Muslim Gang’s Sentences Upheld in Halimi Case
» Italy Sees Failures in Turkey’s EU Talks
» Italy Indicts Eight in Mexico for Death of Tourist
» Italy: Bomb Found on Rome Underground
» Italy: Rome Police: Metro Train Suspect Package Was Not Bomb
» Spain: Rajoy’s PP 13.6 Pts Ahead of Zapatero’s PSOE, Poll
» Spain: Bones Give Peek Into the Lives of Neanderthals
» Sweden: Malmö Shooter Remanded Again as Charges Mount
» Sweden: Bombing Was an Attack on Swedish Society: PM
» Sweden Could be a ‘Catalyst of Understanding’ After Attack
» Swedish Accusers in ‘Tizzy’ For STDs: Assange
» Switzerland: Rightwing Raises Stakes Over Future EU Relations
» The Latest WikiLeaks Revelation: 1 in Three British Muslim Students Back Killing for Islam and 40% Want Sharia Law
» UK: Anglo-Saxon Settlement Unearthed in Northumberland
» UK: BBC Radio Presenter Lubna Qazi Exposed as £18,000 Benefits Cheat But Avoids Jail
» UK: Flu: 300 People in Intensive Care as Swine Flu Spreads
» UK: Humiliated Vince Cable Stripped of Sky Role After ‘War With Murdoch’ Gaffe
» UK: Harry Potter Star Afshan Azad ‘Asked Police to Drop Assault Case Against Her Brother’
» Wales: Five Terror Suspects Arrested After Raid by Police on Homes in Cardiff
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: Visas: For Italy, First Reconciliation With Serbia
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Kidnapped by the CIA, Milan Imam Says Facebook Closed His Account-Four Times
» Libya: Italy’s ENI Makes Deal to Invest in Social Programs
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Caroline Glick: A Time to Shout
» Mahmoud Abbas Against Dahlan’s ‘Private Militia’
 
Middle East
» A Christmas of Mourning for Iraq’s Christians
» Iran: Fired Foreign Minister Criticises President Ahmadinejad
» Qatar 2022: Blatter: Misunderstanding About Gays
» Syrian Leader Proposes Schengen-Like Visa-Free Zone
» The Saudi Succession Threat
 
Russia
» As Ethnic Tensions Simmer, Putin Visits Soccer Fan’s Grave
 
South Asia
» Indonesia: Catholics in Bogor (West Java) Not Allowed to Celebrate Christmas Mass
» Malaysia: In Prison Robes and Handcuffs, The British Wife Facing the Gallows for Heroin Haul
» Malaysia Gay Man Gets Threats
» US Drones Wipe Out Key Commanders of British Islamic Army in Waziristan
» WikiLeaks Cables: Bangladeshi ‘Death Squad’ Trained by UK Government
» WikiLeaks Cables: UK Hopes to Influence Islamic Education in Bangladesh
 
Australia — Pacific
» Haneef Settlement Figure Kept Under Wraps
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Approaching Referendum in Sudan
 
Immigration
» Australia’s Wave of Boat Children
» Berlin Blocks Bulgaria, Romania From Schengen
 
Culture Wars
» Feds Force Bank to Remove Christmas Decorations
» Left: Can’t We All Just Get Along? Islam: No.
» The Death of Free Will
» Why It’s Natural for Girls to Play With Dolls and Boys to Love Guns
 
General
» UN Subterfuge… The Global Warming Hoax

Financial Crisis


China ‘Very Concerned’ By European Debt Crisis

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — China is keeping a close eye on Europe’s ongoing debt crisis and has urged the bloc’s policymakers to turn tough rhetoric into “real action”. The comments by China’s commerce minister Chen Deming on Tuesday (21 December) come as senior EU and Chinese officials meet in Beijing for the third High-Level Economic and Trade Dialogue between the two sides.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Citigroup Warns of Fresh Wave of Bank Failures in Europe

Prof Willem Buiter, the bank’s chief economist, said the eurozone was paralysed by a “game of chicken” between the European Central Bank and EMU governments. Both sides are trying to shift responsibility on to the other for shoring up southern Europe and Ireland, raising the risk of contagion spreading. “The market is not going to wait until March for the EU authorities to get their act together. We could have several sovereign states and banks going under. They are being far too casual,” he said. Mark Schofield, Citigroup’s credit chief, said Portugal would need an EU rescue soon and that it was “highly likely that Spain will go the same way”. This risks overpowering the €440bn (£373bn) bail-out fund. “Restructuring of some sovereign debt is inevitable. There is a chance that Spain could still make it, but the debt trajectory looks unsustainable if a broader EU-wide solution isn’t found,” he said. The warnings came after Moody’s said it might downgrade Portugal’s A1 rating by one or two notches on growth worries, but said the country’s solvency was “not in question”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Spain: Zapatero Confirms Objective of Pensions at 67

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, DECEMBER 17 — Spain’s socialist Premier Jose’ Luis Zapatero has confirmed that his government has the objective of adopting pension reform raising the retirement age from 65 to 67, on January 28 as market pressure is dictating.

In a statement made to the Spanish press in Brussels on the sidelines of the European Council, Zapatero said “this is our proposal, but we first want to speak with all political groupings”. For the present, not one of the opposition parties at the centre of the Toledo Pact Commission, which is examining the reform, has expressed itself in favour of raising the retirement age. The socialist Premier said he was willing to integrate “reasonable factors of flexibility” into the reform, but he repeated that responsibility for a final decision “is the government’s responsibility”.(

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



You’d Rather See China or Russia Leading?

The euro crisis and enduring political divisions between Europeans have undermined the Old Continent’s standing in a globalised world. It’s time to save the European way, urges Venezuelan columnist Moise’s Naim: the alternatives — US hegemony, Chinese capitalist communism or Russian autocracy — are far worse.

Forecasting Europe’s increasing irrelevance in the world has become as popular a continental sport as making fun of blunders in Brussels. In just a few decades, Europe’s share of the world economy will shrink from 20% today to well below 10%. And the European Union’s decisions leave much to be desired. My visits to Brussels have borne out my feeling that, in our day, the European project seems more of a government jobs scheme for the continent’s middle classes than an ideal that will generate hope and energise the region.

The inability to cope effectively with the economic crisis is just a symptom of a deeper problem of leadership. Why is it that Europe has suffered the most painful and prolonged consequences of the global crash? The Irish crisis has bred even more pessimism. Gideon Rachman, for example, writes in the Financial Times: “My current best guess is that the single currency will indeed eventually break up — and that the euro’s executioner will be Germany, the most powerful country and economy inside the European Union.”

His argument is that the string of financial crises will eventually wear out the patience of the Germans, who will end up thinking they’ve done — and paid for — everything they could, but “the other Europeans won’t do what is necessary to save themselves”. Germany, he says, “might then feel released from its historic obligation to ‘build Europe’“.

Unjust redistribution of wealth tolerated in the United States

Naturally, the collapse of the European monetary system could well deal a crippling blow to the project of European unity. That would obviously be bad for Europe. What is less obvious is that a world without an influential, integrated Europe would be worse for everyone. The values and examples Europe imparts to the world are superior to those coming from anywhere else. But Europe’s economic and political decline now undermines the force of that positive influence.

The repudiation of war that prevails here in the aftermath of the two horrifying 20th-century conflicts is derided by those who confuse pacifism with weakness. But better a world with a regional power willing to make some mistakes to avoid war than one in which powerful countries have no qualms about making the mistake of starting “pre-emptive wars”. If the government of your country begins violating human rights, torturing, “disappearing” opponents and imprisoning journalists, who would you rather see leading the international community? The Chinese Communist Party? Putin’s Russia? Or Europe?

While the most unjust redistribution of wealth in a century is tolerated in the United States and nouveaux riches amassing inconceivable fortunes are celebrated in Russia and China, Europe remains highly allergic to inequality. Which do you prefer: a world in which 1% of the population holds 95% of the wealth, and the poor and excluded masses fight it out for the rest, or a world dominated by an up-and-coming politically powerful middle class?

Whole world will suffer if Europe fails

Europe represents the second scenario. We know the European social model is the best in the world, though we also know it is not viable in many countries. But a model in which millions of people are deprived of adequate health care, or left defenceless when they lose their jobs or grow old, is not sustainable either, nor is it worthy of emulation. European development aid for the poorest countries tends to be ineffective. But no-one is more generous and supportive towards the neediest than Europeans…

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

USA


Arms Treaty Clears Key Hurdle in Senate on 67-28 Vote

The Senate voted 67 to 28 on Tuesday to advance a new arms control treaty that would pare back American and Russian nuclear arsenals, reaching the two-thirds margin needed for approval despite a concerted Republican effort to block ratification.

Eleven Republicans joined every Democrat present to support the treaty, known as New Start, which now heads to a seemingly certain final vote on Wednesday, as the Senate wraps up business before heading out of town. Voting against the treaty were 28 Republicans who argued that it could hurt national security.

“Today’s bipartisan vote clears a significant hurdle in the Senate,” said Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, the Democratic chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee who led the floor fight. “We are on the brink of writing the next chapter in the 40-year history of wrestling with the threat of nuclear weapons.”

[Return to headlines]



FCC Approves Controversial ‘Net Neutrality’ Regulations

If they pass and telecoms are allowed to move forward with their plans, “the Internet as we know it would cease to exist,” Sen. Franken concluded in an editorial published by Huffington Post.

“That’s why Tuesday is such an important day,” he continued. “The FCC will be meeting to discuss those regulations, and we must make sure that its members understand that allowing corporations to control the Internet is simply unacceptable.”

In a recent speech, Genachowski specified that the FCC’s rules would permit ISPs to charge heavy bandwidth users even more, creating a tiered pricing structure. ISPs would also be able to charge fees to businesses serving large quantities of data.

[…]

Republican Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell warned Tuesday that the new “Net Neutrality” rules would be used by President Barack Obama to takeover the Internet.

“The Obama Administration, which has already nationalized health care, the auto industry, insurance companies, banks and student loans, will move forward with what could be a first step in controlling how Americans use the Internet by establishing federal regulations on its use,“ he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



FCC Poised to Adopt Network Neutrality Rules

WASHINGTON (AP) — New rules aimed at prohibiting broadband providers from becoming gatekeepers of Internet traffic now have just enough votes to pass the Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday.

The rules would prohibit phone and cable companies from abusing their control over broadband connections to discriminate against rival content or services, such as Internet phone calls or online video, or play favorites with Web traffic.

[…]

Republicans, meanwhile, warn that the new rules would impose unnecessary regulations on an industry that is one of the few bright spots in the current economy, with phone and cable companies spending billions to upgrade their networks for broadband.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hillary Attends ‘North American Union’ Meeting

Trilateral process with Mexico, Canada proceeds with little notice

With little attention from mainstream media, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with the foreign ministers of Canada and Mexico in a North American Foreign Ministers Meeting in Quebec, Canada.

The Dec. 13 meeting is a prelude to the next North American Summit Leaders meeting in 2011, a yet unscheduled trilateral summit that is the continuation of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America. Under the low-key format, the continental meetings have been carried out with little fanfare and outside of congressional oversight.

The Canadian government website detailed that the Quebec meeting identified as important areas of trilateral cooperation” the following:

    Engagement with the countries of Central America, with a view to creating a North America-Central America dialogue to strengthen regional cooperation and efforts against trans-national criminal organizations;

  • Trilateral cooperation on natural disaster reduction, prevention/mitigation, preparedness and response in the Americas;

[…]

Also mentioned on the website of the Canadian government was “the importance of an integrated North American approach to climate change, clean energy, and environmental issues writ large,” as well as trilateral cooperation cyber security, Internet freedom and privacy.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Islamic Group Asks DOJ to Review Police Training

Two groups representing American Muslims differed sharply Monday over revelations in The Washington Post about the sometimes-ignorant quality of local police training on radical Islam, with one group calling for a Justice Department investigation, the other saying it “is not a systematic problem.”

“Monitoring America,” by staff reporters Dana Priest and William M. Arkin, cited examples of “experts” without formal training who are telling law enforcement groups that most U.S. Muslims want to take over America and replace the legal system with a strict code of religious laws known as sharia.

“They want to make this world Islamic,” one instructor, a former Army Special Forces sergeant and Los Angeles Police Department investigator who is now a private security consultant, told The Post. “The Islamic flag will fly over the White House…My job is to wake up the public, and first, the first responders.”

Another trainer quoted by The Post says he warns police officers that “you need to look at the entire pool of Muslims in a community,” and recommended that law enforcement authorities “monitor Muslim student groups and local mosques and, if possible, tap their phones.”

The Post said such views echo “Shariah: The Threat to America,” a study by the neoconservative Center for Security Policy, which argues that radical Muslims are conducting a “stealth jihad” in the United States.

“Government terrorism experts call the views expressed in the center’s book inaccurate and counterproductive,” The Post said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Latest Terror Threat in US Aimed to Poison Food

(CBS) In this exclusive story, CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports the latest terror attack to America involves the possible use of poisons — simultaneous attacks targeting hotels and restaurants at many locations over a single weekend.

A key Intelligence source has confirmed the threat as “credible.” Department of Homeland Security officials, along with members of the Department of Agriculture and the FDA, have briefed a small group of corporate security officers from the hotel and restaurant industries about it.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



NASA Selects United Negro College Fund to Help Build Science Careers

NASA has selected the United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corp. of Falls Church, Va., to administer a $1 million career development and educational program designed to address the critical shortage of U.S. minority students in science and engineering fields.

“Our nation’s underserved populations are a tremendous resource on which we must draw, not just for science, but for everything we do,” said Carl Pilcher, director of NASA’s Astrobiology Institute. “We are extremely pleased that the NAI MIRS program will continue contributing under the leadership of such a strong and experienced partner.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New York Taxi Drivers to Wear Bulletproof Vests in Pilot Scheme

New York taxi drivers are notable for their unique yellow cabs.

But soon they could have something else to distinguish them: bulletproof vests.

A dozen Big Apple cab drivers, who have to work in suburbs with high crime-rates, have been selected to pilot the scheme.

The president of the New York Federation of Taxi Drivers, Fernando Mateo, believes the vests will provide another — potentially vital — layer of protection for drivers in high-crime areas.

Mr Mateo said there are some 300 robberies and assaults against New York taxi drivers every month.

‘One shooting is a lot and whatever we can do to help improve the safety of our drivers is something that we will do,’ he said.

The pilot program is being launched in honor of cab driver Cesar Santo, who was fatally shot in June. And the vests are being donated by Security USA.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Taking Names, Napolitano Style

TSA, under the direction of Napolitano, consent of Obama, collecting names, personal information, labeling them as potential “domestic extremists.”

Did you see the Washington Post this morning? That was the one sentence e-mail I received yesterday from my DHS contact who alerted me to the DHS/TSA memorandum about the domestic intelligence agency’s creating and maintaining a list of individuals who were determined to be “interfering” with the enhanced airport TSA screening procedures through their objections or “opting out” of such procedures.

In my November 23rd report titled DHS making a list, checking it twice, I wrote that the DHS, through the arm of the TSA, under the direction of Napolitano and with the full consent of Obama, was collecting the names and personal information of such individuals, labeling them as potential “domestic extremists.”

Meanwhile, the very same agency was busily averting an uprising by air travelers and a potential public relations nightmare by temporarily suspending their draconian security measures during one of the busiest travel times of the year.

This tactic was first disclosed by Alex Jones and was widely reported at airports across the country, further confirming that the measures enacted are all about the total behavioral control of the populace and have little to do with air security. Mockingly and in what could be considered borderline delusional, the TSA and the corporate media actually reported that the “opt-out” day had turned into a TSA appreciation day.

[…]

The Washington Post article identifies the collection of names and profiles of Americans as the new Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative, or SAR for short. When a “suspicious” incident is observed or reported, information about you is collected, either through direct questioning or by more covert means, such as running your license plate through a state DMV database or even photographic surveillance for facial recognition purposes.

What happens next, however, is perhaps the most disturbing aspect to this story.

Even if the reported activity is deemed to be completely innocent and harmless, the data collected about you remains stored in the SAR “Guardian” database indefinitely. Accordingly, the DHS will be able to quickly compile in-depth profiles on you whenever they determine it to be necessary despite being completely innocent or cleared of any crime or criminal behavior.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tension Over US Chamber Vote on Armenian Massacre

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, DECEMBER 21 — There is renewed tension between Ankara and Washington over a vote scheduled for today in the American House of Representatives on a resolution to recognise as ‘genocide’ the massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Empire troops between 1915 and 1917. Turkey has always denied that one and a half million Armenians killed were victims of genocide and has always claimed that they died as part of a civil war.

The US Congress Commission of Foreign Affairs gave its verdict in March with 23 votes in favour and 22 against resolution number 252. The Presidency and the make-up of the House of Representatives will change in the new year, with Presidency shifting to the Republican party. This means that the motion voted by the Foreign Affaris Commission automatically lapses. A number of Turkish commentators say that it is this lapse that has lead the Speaker of the Chamber, Nancy Pelosi, to accelerate the vote in favour of the motion, in order to make it law.

All Turkish papers are reporting on the issue today, quoting the letter sent yesterday by the Prime Minister, Tayyip Erdogan, to the US President, Barack Obama, in which the Turkish head of state underlines that the approval of the resolution “could damage the relations between the two countries”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Day the Internet Died?

Legions of bloggers and news site publishers everywhere are worried today that the Information Highway may be made inaccessible for average Americans, an impact should it happen, that will impact the world.

[…]

“The rules would prevent Internet service providers from blocking Web sites and applications on Internet lines feeding into U.S. homes. Those carriers— such as Comcast and AT&T—could not deliberately slow down one Web site over another. The rules frown on the practice of charging Web sites for better or faster delivery, but observers say that practice would not be strictly prohibited.

[…]

For the past year, masterful Canada Free Press (CFP) researcher Sandy Williams has been probing the Spider’s Web of the corporate and government world underworld by joining the dots to show through research how a few people interacting together through a network of well-funded organizations control the lives of ordinary Americans:

FCC

Michael J. Copps is a commissioner for the Federal Communications Commission, and was the assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Note: Linda M. Conlin is the assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Commerce, and was the first VP & vice chair for the Export-Import Bank of the US.

James H. Lambright was the chairman & president for the Export-Import Bank of the US, a VP at Credit Suisse First Boston, is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (think tank), and the interim chief investment officer for the 2008-2009 financial bailout

Jackie Clegg Dodd was the vice chairman & first VP for the Export-Import Bank of the US, and is married to Christopher J. Dodd.

Christopher J. Dodd is married to Jackie Clegg Dodd, a U.S. Senate senator, and was a mortgage recipient from the Countrywide Financial Corporation.

Barbara Boxer is a U.S. Senate senator, and was a mortgage recipient from the Countrywide Financial Corporation.

Kent Conrad is a U.S. Senate senator, and was a mortgage recipient from the Countrywide Financial Corporation.

Paul Pelosi Jr. was a mortgage recipient from the Countrywide Financial Corporation, and his mother is Nancy Pelosi.

Nancy Pelosi is Paul Pelosi Jr’s mother and the member, speaker for the U.S. House of Representatives…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S. Buffets and Salad Bars ‘Threatened With Poison Attacks by Al Qaeda Group Behind ‘Ink Cartridge’ Bomb Plot

Al Qaeda terrorists planned to poison food at multiple US hotels and restaurants over a single weekend, it has been revealed this morning.

The ‘credible’ plot involved slipping the poisons cyanide and ricin into salad bars and buffets, according to CBS news.

The terrorist group behind the failed ‘ink cartridge’ attacks on cargo planes in October were said to have hatched the plan.

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula branded the plot ‘Operation Haemorrhage’.

Militants say the plot consists of ‘attacking the enemy with smaller but more frequent operations’ to ‘add a heavy economic burden to an already faltering economy’.

Department of Homeland Security officials, along with members of the Department of Agriculture and the FDA, have briefed a small group of corporate security officers from the hotel and restaurant industries about it.

‘We operate under the premise that individuals prepared to carry out terrorist acts are in this country,’ said Janet Napolirano of Homeland Security a fortnight ago.

The subtle attacks would ‘initially look very much like food poisoning’, said professor of pharmaceutical sciences at St. John’s University, Dr Susan Ford.

In the CBS News report she illustrates how just a tiny portion of each poison could prove fatal. ‘250 milligrams… that is the fatal dose,’ said Dr Ford.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Why You Need to Care About Net Neutrality

Thanks for watching that YouTube video! That will be 50 cents, please.

Sound unrealistic? It’s actually fairly likely, thanks to a ruling handed down Tuesday by the FCC that will allow Internet service providers to charge customers based on the amount of bandwidth they use. And some argue that it’s the greatest threat to freedom we face today.

Welcome to the complex world of net neutrality.

The basic problem is simple: As online video has grown in popularity, thanks to sites like YouTube and Hulu.com, Internet service providers (ISPs) complain that each consumer is more of a burden to service — that’s you, me and your next-door neighbor, Phil.

[…]

Today, Comcast, Time Warner, or whomever you pay monthly, charges you and Phil more or less the same amount. But Phil watches four hours of basketball online every night. Should he pay more for that? There’s the neutrality part, the argument that you should pay one fee for access to the entire Internet, regardless of what type of content you watch or which sites you visit.

Well … that makes sense, right? If service providers could charge based on the type of content you watch, they could easily create a system like that of today’s cable television market. Want HBO? It’s an extra $5. Want our streaming video package, with YouTube, Hulu, TV.com, and more? That’s $5 too. Don’t pay and you can’t watch. Period.

“Internet service giants like Comcast and Verizon want to offer premium and privileged access to the Internet for corporations who can afford to pay for it,” worried Minnesota senator Al Franken in an editorial at the Huffington Post. ISPs argue — and the FCC just agreed — that they should be allowed to charge based on the amount of bandwidth they use. It remains to be seen whether the type of content will be protected, however.

[…]

Net neutrality may be designed to allow for a tiered Internet. Or it may end up preventing one entirely. Who knows? The FCC held most discussions behind closed doors, until this morning’s debate and final approval of the regulations.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Al Qaeda-Affiliated Website Targets Arab Christians in Canada

More than 100 Canadian-Arab Christians are listed on an Al Qaeda affiliated website, apparently targeted because of their alleged role in attempting to convert Muslims.

Some of those named say concerned Canadian intelligence officials have contacted them.

The Shumukh-al-Islam website, often considered to be Al Qaeda’s mouthpiece, listed pictures, addresses and cellphone numbers of Coptic Christians, predominantly Egyptian-Canadians, who have been vocal about their opposition to Islam.

In a forum on the website, one member named Son of a Sharp Sword, says “We are going to return back to Islam and all of the Mujahedeen (holy warriors) will cut off their heads.”

Three pages of the fundamentalist, Arabic-language website titled “Complete information on Coptics” sets to “identify and name all of the Coptics throughout the world who hope to defame Islam,” The website calls the Coptic Christians living abroad “dogs in diaspora,” a derogatory reference in Arabic.

Among those named on the Shumukh-al-Islam website is Samuel Tawadrous, a Coptic Egyptian living in Quebec.

“This is a direct threat against our lives,” Tawadrous said in an interview.

“They are trying to inform each other in hopes that someone can carry out this threat. They could be in Egypt and they could be here. Our names and our pictures are listed.”

Tawadrous’s picture and cellphone number were listed on the site.

One of the prominent figures listed on the website is Salim Naguib, who helped establish a Coptic organization in Canada. Naguib is described on the website as opposing Islamic Shariah and converting Muslims to Christianity. His picture, career background and cellphone number are listed on the website.

But he said in an interview he won’t be frightened.

“I only fear God,” said Naguib when reached by phone. “These websites mean nothing any more.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



More Than 100 Arab Christians in Canada Named on Al Qaida-Affiliated Website

VANCOUVER — More than 100 Canadian-Arab Christians are listed on an al-Qaida affiliated website, apparently targeted because of their alleged role in attempting to convert Muslims.

Some of those named say concerned Canadian intelligence officials have contacted them.

The Shumukh-al-Islam website, often considered to be al-Qaida’s mouth piece, listed pictures, addresses and cell phone numbers of Coptic Christians, predominantly Egyptian-Canadians, who have been vocal about their opposition to Islam.

In a forum on the website, one member named Son of a Sharp Sword, says “We are going to return back to Islam and all of the Mujahedeen (holy warriors) will cut off their heads.”

Three pages of the fundamentalist, Arabic-language website titled “Complete information on Coptics” sets to “identify and name all of the Coptics throughout the world who hope to defame Islam,” The website calls the Coptic Christians living abroad “dogs in diaspora,” a derogatory reference in Arabic.

Among those named on the Shumukh-al-Islam website is Samuel Tawadrous, a Coptic Egyptian living in Quebec.

“This is a direct threat against our lives,” Tawadrous said in an interview.

“They are trying to inform each other in hopes that someone can carry out this threat. They could be in Egypt and they could be here. Our names and our pictures are listed.”

Tawadrous’s picture and cell phone number were listed on the site…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


French Jihadist Muslim Gang’s Sentences Upheld in Halimi Case

Nearly 5 years ago we wrote about the case of Ilan Halimi, a French Jew who was lured by a woman into a trap set by a Muslim gang and then tortured to death over the period of three weeks. You can refer to the original articles to see the extent of what he endured [see, Torture Death Of French Jew By Muslim Gang Produces Collective Yawn By MSM and Coverup Of Muslim Torture Killing Of French Jew Continues]

At the time and since, the MSM has ignored the story or worse, if covering it at all, sanitized it as to mask the religious nature of the attack and to present Halimi’s jihadist murderers as common criminals looking only for a quick monetary score.

As the LA Times dissembled in its Feb 28, 2006 edition, “Rather than a premeditated anti-Semitic murder, it seems a more complex result of dysfunction in the narrow world of thug culture…”

AP and other news sources offered similarly tepid analysis, “…AP and UPI, in feeds to the U.S., barely mentioned the possibility of anti-Semitism. After arrests were made, the BBC worked hard to avoid using the word “Muslim,” though verses from the Koran were recited during the torture…” [source, Birmingham Jewish Federation, http://www.bjf.org/update_archive/2006_03_01_archive.html]

Of course this should be expected from the MSM combine whose multicultural self-censorship is legendary, under the circumstances, even 5 years later, the coverage should still shake the sensibilities of journalists.

Today however, we note that a French court has upheld an appeal by 16 members [out of a total of 24 convicted] of the Muslim gang responsible for the Halimi atrocity.

AP’s coverage this time around however is the stuff of pure revisionism, finally attributing the murder to the gang’s anti-Semitism rather than the originally claimed financial motivation, “The case revived worries in France about anti-Semitism, which is considered the main motive of those involved in the killing. It has led to deep anxiety in France’s Jewish community — the largest in Western Europe.” [source, AP, http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=199954]

So…five years after the fact AP is forced to confront reality. Though this is a small victory for sure, in the current state of media affairs, it should still be savored.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Italy Sees Failures in Turkey’s EU Talks

A European political heavyweight has confessed that negotiations with Turkey are not going well, expressing deep frustration over the failure to open any new negotiation chapters during Belgium’s presidency of the European Union.

“I agree things are not going very well. Bad results were achieved recently, as we were not able to open a single chapter during [the Belgian] presidency, despite the efforts of [the] presidency,” Franco Frattini, foreign minister of Italy, a founding member of the union, told a small group of Turkish journalists Wednesday on the sidelines of a conference about the Middle East in Rome.

“I would like … very much to see at least the competitiveness chapter to open, if not the energy chapter, which is also extremely important,” he said.

Turkey had aimed to open the chapter on competition during the Belgian presidency, but it was not able to complete the necessary legislation and other requisite procedures on time. Diplomats said they expected the chapter to be opened in the first months of the upcoming Hungarian presidency.

A candidate country has to open and successfully negotiate all 35 chapters to be able to become a full member of the European Union. Turkey has only been able to open 13 and close only one since the beginning of negotiations in 2005. The EU has suspended eight of the chapters due to Turkey’s objection to opening its ports and airports to Greek Cyprus (Additional Protocol), while France vetoed Turkey’s opening an additional five chapters, making it more difficult for Turkey to accelerate the talks.

The EU recently urged Turkey to respect its contractual obligations toward the EU through implementing the Additional Protocol to be able to accelerate the ongoing talks. “In the absence of progress on this issue, the council will maintain its measures from 2006, which will have a continuous effect on the overall progress of the negotiations,” it said in a joint communiqué released after Tuesday’s General Affairs Council meeting.

No return to neo-Ottoman policies

However, slowing down the negotiation process has also had a negative impact on Turkey’s image, with many pundits starting to voice concerns over whether Turkey is drifting away from the West through so-called neo-Ottoman approaches interpreted in Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s policies and speeches.

Frattini disagreed with this idea. “I do not think Turkey is moving away from Europe. I do believe Turkish people still understand how important it is to keep the negotiations on track with Europe, and Turkish leaders still see that it is much better to be in the club than outside it,” he said.

Frattini said he encourages his European colleagues to recognize that Turkish membership is in the mutual interest of both Turkey and the European Union. “It’s not a gift for Turkey.”

Frattini and the foreign ministers of United Kingdom, Sweden and Finland co-authored an article explaining why Turkish membership was important for the continent. “As we wrote in an article recently, European interest should be seen as equally important as Turkish interest,” he said.

Despite negative developments in the Turkish accession process, Frattini did not hide his optimism that Turkey would become a full member one day. “Many European states have doubts, they say, ‘How is it possible for a Muslim state to one day become a member of the EU, a member of the club?’ I have been one of the strongest defendants of the EU’s Christian roots. And exactly because of this I am saying that Turkey will become a full member of the EU, provided it fulfills the Copenhagen criteria,” he said.

Turkey a key player in the Middle East

Frattini also expressed his gratitude for Turkey’s contribution to the stability of the Middle East. Contrary to many, the top Italian diplomat said he did not share “the fears of those who claim that Turkey has returned to its neo-Ottoman policy.”

“Italy views Turkey as both a European and regional power whose close links with Middle East countries can provide added value to our efforts to stabilize the region,” he said.

In this sense, Frattini called on Turkey and Israel to resume normal bilateral relations for the latter to play the role of honest broker more effectively. Recalling that Turkey was still waiting for an apology from Israel for its deadly attack against the Gaza-bound Mavi Marmara, Frattini said Turkey’s helping Israel during that country’s worst ever forest fire was a positive development. He said the act helped show Israelis that “Turkey was still there and not an enemy.”

Turkey’s reconciliation with Israel would result in launching a new round of talks between Israel and Syria under Turkish auspices and that could have tremendous impact on the regional stability, he said.

“I believe that Turkey, which is asking for apologies, is also thinking about playing again that role. That’s why I am optimistic. Turkey has a chance to once again be a key player, to play the role to bring stability to the region.”

Recalling that Iran and the international community were scheduled to meet in Istanbul next month to discuss Tehran’s controversial nuclear program, Frattini appreciated Turkey’s contributions to regional peace. “Turkey is playing another good role trying to persuade Iran to negotiate for a peaceful solution,” he said.

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



Italy Indicts Eight in Mexico for Death of Tourist

Rome applies UN torture convention for first time

(ANSA) — Lecce, December 20 — A preliminary hearings judge here in this southeastern Italian city has indicted eight Mexican nationals on manslaughter charges related to the 2007 death of an Italian tourist in Mexico.

This is the first time that Italy has applied the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, which both Italy and Mexico have ratified. The case centers on the March 3, 2007 death of 34-year-old Simone Renda, a bank employee from Lecce, who died of a heart attack after allegedly being kept in a prison cell for 42 hours without light, food and water.

Renda was taken into custody on charges of indecent exposure after he came out of his hotel room in his underwear.

He was apparently seeking help after suffering the first symptoms of a heart attack and was allegedly refused medical assistance during his detention.

The incident took place in Playa del Carmen, a seaside resort south of the tourist mecca of Cancun, on the Yucatan peninsula.

Indicted by Preliminary Hearings Judge Vincenzo Brancato are: Judge Mermilla Valero Gonzales; municipal policemen Francisco Javier Frias and Jose’ Aldredo Martinez; Playa del Carmen jail supervisor Gomez Cruz; the deputy wardens of the municipal prison, Pedro May Balam and Arceno Parra Cano; and prison guards Luis Alberto Arcos and Najera Sanchez Enrique.

“This has been a battle which Simone deserved. It was a transatlantic battle which I waged alone,” the victim’s mother, Cecilia Greco, said on hearing of the indictments.

“With this decision Simone will never die, his memory will live on forever because this precedent will allow others to appeal for justice,” she added.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bomb Found on Rome Underground

Police in Rome have found a crude bomb in an empty underground train

It has been reported that police in Rome have discovered a crude bomb located in an empty underground tube line.

The device, described by Rome police officials as “rudimentary”, was found by a driver preparing a train for service in a yard near the Rebibbia metro station at about 9am on Tuesday, 21 December transport authority ATAC said.It was in a box with cables, batteries and antennas, according to an ATAC spokesman.

Police have revealed the device contained a small quantity of explosive powder but lacked a detonator and could not have exploded.

The device was discovered at a time of increased tension in Italy following anti-government protests last week that descended into some of the worst violence in Rome for years.

A senior Iraqi official said last week that al-Qaeda was planning attacks in the US, Britain and Europe around Christmas.A suspected suicide bomber was killed in a botched attack in Stockholm earlier this month.

Police believe he was planning to attack a train station or department store at the height of the Christmas shopping season.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Italy: Rome Police: Metro Train Suspect Package Was Not Bomb

Italian police say a suspicious package found on a metro train in Rome did not contain explosives.

Bomb-disposal experts said the powder contained in the package, which was found under a seat, was inert.

They confirmed earlier reports that it did not contain a trigger mechanism.

Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno said: “It’s a bluff, a provocation in bad taste that regardless showed there was no danger of attacks in our city.”

He said Rome could “breath a sigh of relief”, Associated Press news agency reported.

The black powder found in the device’s metal tubes was “very much like cement”, said Sgt Agostino Vitolo, a police spokesman.

Earlier, police said the device contained explosive material, while a city council spokesman said it had been “ready to explode” and could have been detonated by remote control.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Spain: Rajoy’s PP 13.6 Pts Ahead of Zapatero’s PSOE, Poll

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, DECEMBER 20 — A poll published today by the Spain’s leftist newspaper Publico has confirmed the sharp advantage in the intentions to vote for the Partido Popular (PP) under the head of the opposition, Mariano Rajoy, against the PSOE under Prime Minister José Luis Zapatero: a difference of 13.2 percentage points. If elections were to be held today, according to the Publiscopio poll, the PP would get 43.2% compared with the 30% that would go to Socialists. Compared with the 2008 general elections, the PP has gained 3.1 points, while the Socialists have lost 13.6. According to the poll, on the left Izquierda Unida has gained support and is now the third top political party in Spain with 7.5%, compared with the CIU Catalan nationalists (4.5%) and the UPYD centrists (4.5%).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Bones Give Peek Into the Lives of Neanderthals

Deep in a cave in the forests of northern Spain are the remains of a gruesome massacre. The first clues came to light in 1994, when explorers came across a pair of what they thought were human jawbones in the cave, called El Sidrón. At first, the bones were believed to date to the Spanish Civil War. Back then, Republican fighters used the cave as a hide-out. The police discovered more bone fragments in El Sidrón, which they sent to forensic scientists, who determined that the bones did not belong to soldiers, or even to modern humans. They were the remains of Neanderthals who died 50,000 years ago.

Today, El Sidrón is one of the most important sites on Earth for learning about Neanderthals, who thrived across Europe and Asia from about 240,000 to 30,000 years ago. Scientists have found 1,800 more Neanderthal bone fragments in the cave, some of which have yielded snippets of DNA.

But the mystery has lingered on for 16 years. What happened to the El Sidrón victims? In a paper this week in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Spanish scientists who analyzed the bones and DNA report the gruesome answer. The victims were a dozen members of an extended family, slaughtered by cannibals.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö Shooter Remanded Again as Charges Mount

The 38-year-old suspected Malmö serial shooter had been ordered to remain in custody as suspicions against him widened to three murders and 10 attempted murders.

The man, who has been identified as Peter Mangs, was to remain in custody until Tuesday, when a decision would be made on whether he will be charged for additional suspicions.

He remains in detention as a suspect with probable cause since he could obstruct the investigation and according to the district court, there is a risk he could continue to engage in criminal activity.

Mangs is currently in custody on suspicion of the murder of a young woman in the fall of 2009 and five cases of attempted murder.

In addition, he is now considered a suspect in the murder of two men in the Malmö’s Lindängen in the summer of 2003 and an additional five cases of attempted murder from 2006 to 2010.

Mangs denies the crimes. However, he has agreed to remain in detention for the murder in 2003 and the five attempted murders for which he had previously been arrested.

Through his lawyer, Christina Brink, he has challenged the detention for the two additional murders and five attempted murders.

Chief prosecutor Solveig Wollstad has justified the demand for detention, saying that Mangs could otherwise remove evidence and continue to engage in criminal acts.

In addition, the crimes that Mangs is under suspicion for carry minimum prison terms of two years, bolstering the detention demand, according to Wollstad.

She also requested a closed-door session for the continuation of negotiations and non-disclosure in terms of everything that is said there.

Following the ruling to keep Mangs in custody, police commissioner Börje Sjöholm and Wollstad held a press conference together with Dag Andersson from the National Criminal Investigation Department (Rikskriminalen) and Åsa Palmkvist, assistant district police commissioner in Malmö.

“The investigation will take time. There is extensive investigative work to be done, but it is hard to say how long it will take. It depends also on whether he falls under suspicion for other crimes,” said Wollstad.

She did not elaborate on what Mangs said in questioning other than revealing that he denied the crimes. She also declined to specify what the technical investigation has uncovered, but investigators have confirmed that there is certain technical evidence and two confiscated weapons.

At its peak, 70 detectives worked on the investigation, said investigation leader Sjöholm.

“I have never before been involved in an investigation of a similar size,” he said.

Investigators received about 1,200 tips, one of which involved Mangs.

“The tip described a personality that fitted our criminal profile. However, it was an anonymous tip and it took us two weeks to uncover the tipster’s identity, which gave us a completely different direction,” said Sjöholm.

The investigators were constantly worried that the suspect would commit new crimes.

“The nightmare was that he would shoot someone while he was under investigation, but it did not happen. We discussed a lot about how to deal with the situation and also what could happen during an arrest if he was armed,” said Sjöholm.

As such, it was imperative to apprehend the suspect at the right moment. An intensive dialogue took place continuously between investigators and prosecutors.

Wollstad outlined the entire list of murders and attempted murders that Mangs is under suspicion for at the press conference.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Bombing Was an Attack on Swedish Society: PM

Sweden’s prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt used his Christmas speech to condemn the suicide bombing in Stockholm as “an attack on Swedish society”, praising Muslim leaders for standing up for freedom and openness.

Speaking at Skansen open-air museum in central Stockholm on Monday, Reinfeldt focused on the recent terror attacks which killed the bomber and left two people injured.

Reinfeldt described the bomber, who blew himself up before reaching his presumed destination of a crowded shopping district, as someone who hates that which Sweden stands for — freedom, openness and diversity.

“A suicide bomber steps right into Swedish society and it is that which he challenges. Freedom and openness, it is that which he hates,” Reinfeldt said.

The prime minister also referred to the fact that the attack was apparently carried out with a religious pretext.

“It had to do with religion. It is difficult to understand a secular country such as Sweden. From a starting point in religion the right is claimed to threaten others.”

Reinfeldt underlined that the religions are not ranked according to importance in Sweden and that even atheists deserve respect for their non-faith.

“In multicultural Sweden the religions exist side-by-side,” he said.

Furthermore, Reinfeldt reserved praise for the strong reactions from Swedish Muslim leaders after the attack and argued that imams and others had clearly defended Sweden’s openness and condemned the terror attacks.

“I welcome the fact that Muslim Sweden has unequivocally stood up.”

Reinfeldt interpreted the reactions in that there is a strong sense of unity over the importance of fighting for openness, freedom and diversity in Sweden.

He stated that everyone can understand the importance of upholding “the contract”, which means that you can’t just make use of openness and freedom for your own gain, but do your bit to enable others to be able to do the same.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden Could be a ‘Catalyst of Understanding’ After Attack

While Sweden is left asking why after experiencing its first suicide bombing, Fulbright scholar and US Muslim Dr. Abdul Majeed Azad calls on the country to deploy its history of neutrality to build bridges across Europe to defeat the radicalisation of Muslim youth.

The news of the suicide bombing last Saturday has shocked everyone. I was boarding the train at Stockholm central station to return to Göteborg after attending the Nobel Prize award ceremony the previous night in Stockholm, when this happened. I got a frantic call from my wife in the US, who had just then seen the news and had freaked out, because she knew I was in Stockholm at that time. It all appears so surreal and one question that everybody is asking is: why Sweden?

A few years ago, in his broadcast timed to coincide with the US Presidential election in 2004, Osama bin Laden had laconically remarked, “If it was freedom they were against, al-Qaeda would have attacked Sweden.”

Ironically, on that Saturday afternoon Sweden eventually became the victim of one of the ideologues of Bin Laden’s vengeful militancy.

Acting alone, Taimour Abdulwahab — an Iraqi immigrant and naturalized Swede — struck Stockholm’s idyllic innocence, blowing up his car and himself. Even though there were no other casualties in terms of human life, one shudders to even imagine that the eve of his 29th birthday eerily coincided with his death.

Eighteen years is a long time to nurse a grudge and cultivate perpetual hatred for a place and people that welcomed you with open arms. A new branch of psychiatry needs to be opened and explored to understand the mindset of such dark personalities.

This was a lone act, thankfully without much damage. Had it been successful, it would have caused carnage of unimagined proportions during the festive season. It was no less barbaric though, as it succeeded in painting Islam once again as a monster religion hell-bent on causing destruction, particularly in the West.

As the pages from the life of Taimour in Tranås (Sweden) and Luton (England) are unfolding, it is unfathomable that a married man with three children could be driven to such levels of blind fanaticism.

Nine years ago on a crisp, beautiful, soft and sunny autumn morning, the innocence of humanity we all knew and took for granted, was struck on September 11th, when a horrendous tragedy was perpetrated in the name of Islam on the American soil. Nine years later, the wounds are still bleeding, the scars are still fresh and the anger is still seething.

Nine years ago, we thought American people and institutions were the sole victims of that attack. Nine years later, we know Islam also was the target. That day, we surmised that planes were hijacked, buildings were rammed into and innocent people were killed. Today we know, a storied faith was molested and its 1.6 billion followers became pariahs and ostracized for as long as it takes for the fog of ignorance and disbelief to lift.

For me as a Muslim, the very fabric of the faith which taught me the sanctity of life and what constitutes its decorum was torn on that day. Life is holy in all religions; it takes a person of ignoble misunderstanding and instability to advocate or perform violence against it. The morality and integrity of a people as a whole are vital in dealing with all people.

The Qur’an exhorted Muhammad to tell Muslims: “Come, I will rehearse what God has really prohibited you from: take not life, which God has made sacred, except by the way of justice and law; thus does He command you that you may learn wisdom” (4:151).

Islam categorically forbids Muslims from taking life in a cowardly and unjust way — their own or those of others. The precepts of my religion, my way of life uphold this.

But when events like that of December 11th in Stockholm occur, no explanation, no apology would do. Yet, while I learned with total disbelief the swift unfolding of this ruthless act, I was longing for signs of condemnation from the Muslim community in and around Stockholm and beyond. A brief written statement from the imam of the Södermalm mosque is not enough. By now, Muslims should be on the streets shrieking strongest condemnation at the top of their lungs for this act by one of their own.

The silence of Muslims in the Swedish community would send the wrong message, making their neighbours angry, co-workers suspicious, and, acquaintances and friends, disillusioned.

Saturday’s event proves that some sections of Muslim community, no matter how small, are on the path of destruction — self and otherwise, despite the vehement denial by their community elders.

Al-Qaeda might have been weakened collectively, but apparently it has been slowly but steadily succeeding in poisoning the minds of the Muslim youth — one at a time. This supply chain must be cut at the very central artery. No material and technical sophistication or eavesdropping, no coalition of the willing, no unmanned drones and no cells at Guantanamo will be able to destroy or deter the new crop of zealous doctrinaires. Why? Because, Muslim youths are being infected with twisted thoughts and are being fed distorted version of their faith. There is no benignity about this cancer. Physician, heal thyself! Muslims alone would have to muster the courage to

stand up and destroy it.

It is well-agreed that what al-Qaeda stands for and what it strives to achieve is a response, primarily to the excesses and somewhat double standards of Western foreign policy in relation to the ‘world of Muslims’ — not necessarily the ‘world of Islam’.

During the past three months of my stay in Sweden, I have found Swedes to be open, gentle, supportive, helpful, and least bothered about or biased towards others’ belief systems. It is also by far, the most tolerant country in Europe towards Muslims. Her ready acceptance of large contingents of immigrants from predominantly Muslim lands is testimony of that.

The majority of Muslims are peace-loving law-abiding citizens, caring, respectful and compassionate neighbours all across the globe. My plea to the Swedish people and its leaders is that their future approach towards Muslims in Sweden, should not be dictated by this and other such sporadic acts of violence.

Al-Qaeda and its cohorts may be inspired by the foggy misinterpretation of Islam by its leaders, but it is not a religious organization. In fact, what it has done, is doing and plans to do in future is everything Islam abhors and stands against. To

defeat this demon, all Swedes — Muslims included — must come together. They must resolve to understand the dynamics of its evil fangs and stand against its outlook of the world affair.

In the aftermath of 9/11, American-Muslims have forged strong alliances with US officials in being vigilant and safeguarding our communities, neighbors and the homeland. It is not a choice: it is incumbent upon us as the adherents of Islamic faith.

In the light of what happened in Stockholm, no less is expected of Muslims who call Sweden home. As a country that takes ‘no side in conflicts’ Sweden could be a catalyst to building bridges of understanding, thus defeating the radicalization within its borders as well as in Europe at large.

Dr. Abdul Majeed Azad, a U.S. citizen, is the Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Alternative Energy at Chalmers University in Gothenburg, Sweden. His current research in Sweden pertains to the investigation of novel oxygen carriers with CLOU properties for solid fuels, including coal. Dr. Azad has been a professor in the Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering at the University of Toledo since 2003.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Accusers in ‘Tizzy’ For STDs: Assange

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange alleged on Tuesday that the Swedish women who accused him of sexual assault got into a “tizzy” about possibly contracting a sexually transmitted disease from him.

Assange told the BBC that one account of what happened in August — the month at the centre of allegations against him — was that the two women had panicked when they found out they had both slept with him and went to police, who “bamboozled” them.

He insisted he was fighting a Swedish extradition warrant because he believes “no natural justice” would occur in Sweden.

“There are some serious problems with the Swedish prosecution,” he said in an interview from the mansion of a wealthy supporter in eastern England where he must stay as part of his bail conditions.

Sweden wants Britain to extradite the 39-year-old Australian to face questioning over allegations from two women that he raped one of them and sexually assaulted the other in Stockholm in August.

Assange claimed that the Swedish authorities had asked that his Swedish lawyer be “gagged,” adding that his offers to be interviewed by video link or by Swedish officials in Britain had been rejected.

“I don’t need to be at the beck and call of people making allegations. I don’t need to go back to Sweden. The law says I…have certain rights and these rights mean that I do not need to speak to random prosecutors around the world who simply want to have a chat and won’t do it in any other standard way,” he said.

He said that one account of what occurred in August was that after having discovered they had each had sex with him, they had got into a “tizzy,” or a panic, about the possibility of sexually transmitted diseases.

As a result, he said, the women had gone to the police for advice “and then the police jumped in on this and bamboozled the women.”

WikiLeaks has enraged Washington by releasing thousands of US diplomatic cables and US Vice President Joe Biden described Assange as a “hi-tech terrorist.” US officials are believed to be considering how to indict Assange for espionage.

In an interview with The Times on Tuesday, Assange compared WikiLeaks’ “persecution” to that endured by Jews in the US in the 1950s.

Assange also confirmed that WikiLeaks was holding a vast amount of material about Bank of America that it intends to release early next year.

“We don’t want the bank to suffer unless it’s called for. But if its management is operating in a responsive way there will be resignations,” he told The Times, without giving details about the material.

Shares in Bank of America have fallen amid speculation that it was a WikiLeaks target.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Rightwing Raises Stakes Over Future EU Relations

The rightwing Swiss People’s Party is calling on the government to rule out the option of Swiss membership of the European Union and the adoption of EU law.

In an interview with swissinfo.ch Hans Fehr, senior party member and parliamentarian, accuses the government of being ambiguous about future ties between Bern and Brussels.

Switzerland has concluded more than 120 bilateral accords with the 27-nation bloc, but the EU is now stepping up pressure to find different forms of cooperation.

The cabinet is expected this week to discuss a report on the issue by a joint working group of experts from Switzerland and the EU.

It was set up in July to examine possible ways in which Switzerland could adopt EU law and to discuss the introduction of a tribunal to resolve contentious issues.

Hans Fehr: We must be unequivocal with Brussels and tell them clearly what we want. Switzerland is an independent country with complete freedom of action. This is the aim of our foreign policy according to article two of the federal constitution.

H.F.: What we need is a clear position and no ambiguous language and double speak.

Brussels believes the Swiss government wants to take the country into the EU. But it is well known that the Swiss people do not want to join it. Who would want to be drawn into the disaster of a poorly constructed union with a doomed common currency?

It’s time for the government to respect the opinion of its citizens and finally withdraw its application for membership [launched in 1992 and put on ice since].

H.F.: Officially the government reaffirms that bilateral treaties are the best way to work with the EU. But at the same time the political establishment in Bern complains that the bilateral policy has reached its limits and it wants to make concessions to Brussels.

The EU for its part is turning up the heat because it needs more funds.

This is why it is time to make clear that Swiss voters have opted for bilateral accords and do not want EU membership.

H.F.: It is a matter of political intentions. A deal on electricity is a priority for the EU, not for us.

H.F.: There are also different opinions in Switzerland about a treaty on the electricity market. What the EU really wants is an accord with the chemicals industry and the financial industry. Brussels is trying to weaken Swiss banks and undermine cantonal tax autonomy.

We have to say once and for all: So far and no further!

But it is too easy for Brussels if the Swiss government indicates that it wants to join the EU at some point in the not too distant future.

H.F.: The Swiss government, not the negotiators are the real problem. It sends out ambiguous signals and has failed to formulate clear mandates for the negotiations. When in Brussels ministers talk of membership, but they make the Swiss people believe that they have decided to continue the policy of bilateral treaties.

H.F.: First of all, the EU benefits more than Switzerland from the bilateral accords.

Of course Switzerland can oppose the demands from Brussels. We are not an EU colony.

Take the example of the Schengen regulations in Europe [the agreement abolishing border controls between members]. We have been forced to adopt new laws — about 120 modifications just a few years — without being able to consult Swiss voters.

At the same time the costs for the Schengen treaty are soaring and the single border policy area is threatened by growing insecurity.

The joint working group in Brussels is discussing ‘institutional solutions’. They want us to take over new laws automatically and be subject to foreign judges.

But this is unacceptable for a sovereign state.

H.F.: It was possible to get the foreign labour we needed with the old quota system and without suffering the problems of the free movement of people accord.

Managers and some business sectors may benefit in the short term from the free movement of people, namely a larger workforce to choose from who can be paid lower salaries.

But practically unlimited immigration has led to a dangerous increase in the number of foreigners every year. It jeopardises the social security system, has resulted in problems in schools, a higher crime rate and poorly integrated foreigners.

We have to act now to counter overpopulation. Immigration has to be curbed and we need a better accord. Otherwise we are likely to go from bad to worse from the middle of next year if the free movement of people regulations are extended to eastern Europe.

H.F.: The People’s Party has no problems if Switzerland takes over technical EU norms. We categorically oppose any attempt to bypass the people and direct democracy.

Switzerland will end up as a colony if it cannot maintain its independence and sovereignty.

H.F.: We don’t want Switzerland to be isolated. But everybody wants to come to this paradise.

We are an important trading partner for the EU. We are building a new transalpine rail link for about SFr30 billion ($31 billion) and they are paying nothing. There are 230,000 cross-border workers from the EU and 1.2 million other EU citizens in Switzerland.

Imports of goods from the EU exceed Swiss exports by about SFr20 billion. I don’t think Brussels will want to spoil things with such a trading partner.

The People’s Party wants Switzerland to be on good terms with EU but not at any cost. In any case, the growth markets are primarily in Asia and South America.

Andreas Keiser, swissinfo.ch

(Adapted from German by Urs Geiser)

Context

Switzerland and the EU have concluded about 120 bilateral agreements since 1972 when voters approved an Efta accord with Brussels on a free trade zone.

The Swiss government applied for negotiations on EU membership in 1992. The application remains on ice.

The government’s 2006 report on European integration stated that the Swiss policy is based on bilateral treaties.

Last August the government reiterated that bilateral accords are the best way to work with the EU, but it said amendments were needed to continue cooperation with Brussels amid increasing difficulties.

The People’s Party is one of Switzerland’s four main political parties. It has one seat in the seven-strong cabinet…

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



The Latest WikiLeaks Revelation: 1 in Three British Muslim Students Back Killing for Islam and 40% Want Sharia Law

Around a third of young British Muslims favour killing in the name of Islam, according to a survey revealed by the WikiLeaks’ publication of U.S diplomatic cables.

A survey of 600 Muslim and 800 non-Muslim students at 30 universities throughout the UK conducted by the Centre for Social Cohesion found that 32 percent of Muslims on UK campuses believe killing in the name of religion is justified.

A U.S. diplomatic cable from January 2009 quoted the same poll as saying 54 per cent wanted a Muslim party to represent their world view in Parliament and 40 per cent want Muslims in the UK to be under Sharia law.

The survey results, revealed by WikiLeaks’ release of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables, suggests increasing radicalisation among Britain’s young Muslims.

A further U.S. cable, dated February 5 2009, said reaching out to Britain’s Muslim community there was a ‘top priority’ for U.S. embassy staff.

“Although people of Muslim faith make up only 3 to 4 percent of the UK’s population, outreach to this key audience is vital to U.S. foreign policy interests in the UK and beyond. … This is a top Mission priority,” stated the cable.

The February cable outlined a plan encompassing ‘engagement and community capacity-building’ to counter the possible growth of ‘violent extremism’ in the UK.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Anglo-Saxon Settlement Unearthed in Northumberland

Investigations also revealed a number of other sites

The remains of an Anglo-Saxon settlement have been discovered at a surface mine in Northumberland.

Buildings and artefacts dating from the 6th to 8th centuries have been uncovered at Shotton Surface Mine, on the Blagdon Estate, near Cramlington.

The site had been investigated by archaeologists before the start of open-cast mining work.

Experts said the find had provided “the first direct evidence” of Anglo-Saxon settlement in that part of the county.

A team of archaeologists from TWM Archaeology, funded by Banks Mining, undertook the excavation and discovered the settlement.

Remains ‘surprise’

It comprised of at least six rectangular post-built halls — each thought to house a family unit — two buildings with sunken floors and a system of enclosures, fences and trackways.

Anglo-Saxon pottery, loom weights and metalworking residues have all been recovered from the site.

The archaeological investigations on the surface coal mine also revealed a number of other sites including several Iron Age roundhouses, ditches and pit alignments — which were used as land divisions.

Part of the restoration plans for Shotton include the Northumberlandia landform The potential of the site was recognised by Northumberland County Council archaeologists but despite the extensive preliminary work, the council said the remains came as a surprise.

Karen Derham, Northumberland County Council Assistant County Archaeologist, said: “We know Northumberland was at the heart of the early medieval Kingdom of Bernicia and yet archaeologists have so far only discovered a very small number of settlement sites, all previously in the north of the county.

“The surface mine at Shotton has given us the first direct evidence of Anglo-Saxon settlement in this part of the county and has confirmed its potential for making important archaeological discoveries.”

Banks Mining has been operating Shotton Surface Mine since 2008.

Part of the restoration plans for Shotton include the Northumberlandia landform which is currently being constructed and will be open to the public in 2013.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: BBC Radio Presenter Lubna Qazi Exposed as £18,000 Benefits Cheat But Avoids Jail

A BBC radio presenter who was exposed as an £18,000 benefit cheat has avoided jail.

BBC Asian Network presenter Lubna Qazi, aka DJ Kanwal, wrongly claimed Carer’s Allowance for her sick husband without declaring her job at the corporation.

The 53-year-old presenter, from Kings Heath, Birmingham, told Department for Work and Pensions bosses in 2003 she was caring for her husband, who spent 35 hours a week in bed after suffering a stroke.

But she falsely claimed state handouts for seven years by working just nine hours a week for the BBC, earning £24.47 per hour.

In total she swindled £18,014 in benefits by not declaring her job as presenter of two weekend Bollywood music shows on the BBC’s Asian Network radio station.

The presenter earned nearly £25 per hour working for the corporation for nine hours at weekends, exceeding the upper limit of £95 a week for the allowance.

Birmingham Crown Court heard today Qazi was overpaid £18,014 between March 2003 and January 2010 as a result of the fiddle.

But Recorder Collingwood Thompson QC described it as an ‘exceptional’ case and sentenced her to a 12-month conditional discharge.

He said: ‘I have to sentence you on the basis you knew you were not entitled to the benefits.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Flu: 300 People in Intensive Care as Swine Flu Spreads

Data from the Department of Health for England revealed there were 302 people in intensive care beds. It is unclear how many have swine flu but they are expected to be in the majority. New figures on the number of deaths from flu and swine flu will be released by the Health Protection Agency on Thursday. Health Secretary Andrew Lansley briefed Cabinet colleagues this morning on the flu situation and told them the NHS had plenty of capacity to deal with the upsurge in cases. Prime Minister David Cameron told a press conference at 10 Downing Street: “We had a report at Cabinet this morning from the Health Secretary about the situation as regards flu, and particularly swine flu.

“He gave a report about the number of critical care beds being used for people with flu. While obviously… the number of flu cases has doubled in the last week, there is still plenty of capacity in the NHS.

“I think the figures on flu are are quite similar to two years ago. They are a little worse than last year.

“I think there is a very good grip in the Department of Health on this issue. Andrew Lansley has a great grip over that department.”

Mr Cameron said he did not know whether his wife Samantha had been advised of the risk of swine flu to pregnant women while she was carrying their fourth child, Florence, who was born earlier this year.

As of yesterday, there were 24 children under five in critical care with confirmed or suspected flu, another 12 aged five to 15, and 243 in the 16 to 64 age group.

There were also 23 people aged over 65 in critical care.

So far this flu season, 14 people have died with confirmed swine flu and another three from flu type B.

This figure will be higher when new figures are released on Thursday. Last year, 474 people died from swine flu.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Humiliated Vince Cable Stripped of Sky Role After ‘War With Murdoch’ Gaffe

A humbled and diminished Vince Cable was tonight allowed to cling on to his cabinet post as business secretary, but was stripped of all responsibility for media policy after it emerged he had told undercover reporters that he had “declared war” on Rupert Murdoch over the media magnate’s plans to take over all of BSkyB.

Cable’s reckless claims, in a secretly recorded conversation, were considered a flagrant breach of his duty to take a quasi-judicial approach to the proposed takeover, and were declared “totally unacceptable and inappropriate” by Downing Street. Many had expected an angry David Cameron to sack Cable or transfer him to a lesser cabinet role.

But instead the business secretary was hauled in front of his party leader, Nick Clegg, and then Cameron. After a series of emergency meetings, which included George Osborne, the chancellor, Clegg felt he could not afford to lose the second most senior Liberal Democrat from the government.

Nearly 70 civil servants responsible for all aspects of media and telecoms policy will now be transferred from Cable’s business empire to the Department of Culture Media and Sport headed by Jeremy Hunt, the culture secretary and a Conservative likely to be sympathetic to Murdoch.

One Downing Street source said: “Losing a big chunk of his department is more humiliating for Cable than being transferred to another cabinet post.”

But No 10 denied Cable was being parked on the political equivalent of death row pending the expected return to government of David Laws, the former chief secretary to the Treasury and a close ally of Clegg. Laws stood down from the post in May and is hoping to be cleared of allegations of expenses abuse by the Commons standards and privileges committee early next year. The government will be hoping that the onset of the Christmas recess will create a political lull that will shield Cable from media calls for him to thrown out of the government.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Harry Potter Star Afshan Azad ‘Asked Police to Drop Assault Case Against Her Brother’

A star of the Harry Potter films who was attacked by her brother over her relationship with a Hindu man asked police not to take action against him — because it would put her in ‘genuine danger’.

Muslim actress Afshan Azad — who played one of the Patil twins in the hit films — was assaulted by brother Ashraf Azad, 28, at the family home in Beresford Road, Longsight. Manchester Crown Court heard she was so terrified that she escaped from her bedroom window and now lives in London.

A former pupil at Whalley Range High School For Girls, Ms Azad, 22, initially gave police a statement.

Richard Vardon QC, prosecuting, said she then ‘made it plain’ that she ‘did not support any action’ being taken against either her father or her brother because she feared that it could make the situation worse and place her in danger.

And although she was called as a witness she failed to turn up at court. But she had never retracted her initial allegations — and the case went ahead without her.

Her brother Ashraf pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm and will be sentenced next month.

The judge, Roger Thomas QC, ruled a verdict of not guilty over a charge of threatening to kill her should be entered.

He also ordered that Ms Azad’s father Abul Azad, 53, be found not guilty of threatening to kill her. He was bound over to keep the peace for 12 month in the sum of £500.

JudgeThomas said that vulnerable victims of domestic violence would continue to be protected by prosecutions even if they refuse to personally give evidence in court.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Wales: Five Terror Suspects Arrested After Raid by Police on Homes in Cardiff

RAIDS on terror suspects in Cardiff, Stoke-on-Trent and London followed months of surveillance and monitoring by counter terrorism and MI5 officers, sources revealed last night.

Police yesterday searched at least four properties in the Welsh capital after arresting five men in the city on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in the UK.

Four men from Stoke-on- Trent and three from London were also arrested on suspicion of the same offences following co-ordinated 5am raids.

Home Secretary Theresa May said she had been kept fully informed of the police operation, adding the UK faced “a real and serious threat from terrorism”.

Police sources indicated no firearms or explosives had been found during yesterday’s searches.

The searches in Cardiff were being carried out at two adjoining terraced houses in Ninian Park Road, Riverside, a large, seven-bedroom terraced house in nearby Neville Street and in a flat next door to the Raj Indian takeaway on Cowbridge Road West. One of the flat’s front doors had been broken down.

All the men, who were aged 23, 24, 25, 26 and 28, are thought to have been from the Bangladeshi community. Three were arrested in Riverside and two in Ely.

A neighbour on Neville Street, Marc Davies, 26, said: “I was driving to work when I saw police all suited up. It looked like they were wearing chemical suits.

“There were police everywhere, there were vans parked up on the side of the road and it looked all go.”

One female neighbour, who asked not to be named, said: “There have been undercover officers in and out all day, they keep taking stuff away and then coming back.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: Visas: For Italy, First Reconciliation With Serbia

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 16 — The time has not yet come to abolish visas for citizens of Kosovo who want to enter the European Union, as “reconciliation with Serbia must first be pushed forward”. This is according to the Italian Foreign Minister, Franco Frattini, the day after the visas were officially abolished for Albanians travelling to countries in the Schengen area.

Answering questions from Albanian television in the Foreign Ministry in Rome today, Frattini explained that “the final target is for all Balkan countries to join the EU,” although “at the moment, Kosovo still needs our help,” as is shown by the fact that “our soldiers are there to calm tensions” with Serbia.

The Minister added that he would travel to Pristina and Belgrade in January, in an attempt towards reconciliation ahead of the resumption of talks.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Kidnapped by the CIA, Milan Imam Says Facebook Closed His Account-Four Times

Cairo, 20 Dec. (AKI) — An Egyptian clieric kidnapped seven years ago in Milan by CIA and Italian agents says social networking giant Facebook has recently shut his account — for the fourth time.

“I had to open a reserve account,” said Osama Hasan Mustafa Nasr, commonly known at Abu Omar, in an interview on Monday with Adnkronos International (AKI).

Speaking by telephone from Egypt where he resides, Nasr, once an imam in Milan, said he has received no response from Facebook requesting an explanation.

Nasr’s abduction from a Milan street in February 2003 was specifically mentioned in a secret CIA document released in August by the whistle-blowing Wikileaks website discussing the US as a possible “exporter of terrorism.”

In a landmark ruling in November, 2009 an Italian judge convicted 23 CIA agents and two Italian agents of Nasr’s abduction in broad daylight.

Three other Americans were acquitted on grounds of diplomatic immunity, including the CIA’s former chief in Italy.

All of the Americans were tried in absentia.

Nasr alleges he was flown to Egypt and tortured in prison there.

He was released in 2007 and now lives in the Egyptian city of Alessandria. He is suspected of recruiting Muslim fighters to train in Afghanistan and said he will set up an Islamist party with any legal damages he is awarded.

Nasr and his wife are seeking 15 million euros in compensation.

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



Libya: Italy’s ENI Makes Deal to Invest in Social Programs

(AKI) — Eni, Italy’s biggest energy company, has said it will help Libya construct a naval port, desalinization plant and 1,000 houses in the El Agheila area along the Gulf of Sirte.

The memorandum of understanding foresees Rome-based Eni making a “significant” investment, the company said in a statement, without providing specific terms of the agreement.

Eni controlled by the Italian government, the company’s biggest shareholder — said the pact was part of a 2006 deal with the Libya to invest in social hospitals, the preservation of archaeological sites, training Libyan graduates, and other social programs.

Italy and Libya in 2008 inked a “friendship treaty” in which Italy agreed to pay Tripoli 5 billion dollars for its 30-year occupation of the north African country.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Caroline Glick: A Time to Shout

The new campaign calling for the release of Israeli agent Jonathan Pollard from prison in the US is in many ways a curious development. Pollard was arrested in 1985 and convicted on one count of transferring classified information to Israel during his service in US Naval Intelligence. He pleaded guilty to the charge in the framework of a plea bargain in which the US attorney pledged not to request a life sentence.

Despite this, Pollard was sentenced to life. So far, he has served 25 years, much of it in solitary confinement and in maximum security prisons. His health is poor. He has repeatedly expressed remorse for his crime.

Pollard’s sentence and the treatment he has received are grossly disproportionate to the sentences and treatment meted out to agents of other friendly foreign governments caught stealing classified information in the US. Their average sentence is seven years in prison. They tend to serve their sentences in minimum or medium security prisons and are routinely released after four years…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Mahmoud Abbas Against Dahlan’s ‘Private Militia’

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, DECEMBER 17 — Tensions appear to be rising in the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) between the entourage of President Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) and Mohammad Dahlan, one of the more eager “colonels” of his party, Al-Fatah. So reported today Israeli newspaper Haaretz, which specifies that Dahlan is apparently suspected by the presidential staff of working on the formation of a private paramilitary militia in the West Bank, outside the institutional control of the PNA.

The news, which is also highlighted by the Palestinian press agency MAAN, is based on speculations that are attributed to political sources in Ramallah. According to these sources, Dahlan has started a recruitment campaign distributing money, weapons and military commands. Abu Mazen is reportedly trying hard to strike down this initiative.

Dahlan has denied the speculations, and claims that he is at the centre of a “gossip” campaign which has damaged his ties with the President, but “will not be able to cause a break”.

Still the existence of a conflict seems hard to deny. Dahlan is considered to be one of the coming men in Fatah, despite the setback in 2007 when his image as ‘strong man’ of the Gaza Strip was smashed by the defeat by Hamas. Now he has suddenly been dismissed as man in charge of the mass-media sector of the central Committee. He was elected in this position during last year’s congress in Bethlehem, a re-launch as one of the possible future successors of Abu Mazen. And that’s not all: his license for a new television channel set up under his control has been cancelled, and his personal guard has been taken away by the PNA security services. These setbacks have probably to do with his recent remarks, in which he criticised the moderate comments made by Mahmoud Abbas on the stalemate in the peace talks with Israel, mediated by the USA. But also, according to some commentators, with the uncertain prospects of the succession of the 76-year-old successor of Yasser Arafat. Mahmoud Abbas seems in fact unlikely to step back at the moment, also because of the relative weakness of his many possible successors and their mutual fierce rivalry.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


A Christmas of Mourning for Iraq’s Christians

After the series of anti-Christian attacks, Iraq will mark Christmas again under tight security. No functions will be held on Christmas Eve, nor decorations or ceremonies. A community enduring suffering and losses is preparing to experience the message of hope brought by Jesus to earth because, for Iraqi Christians, Christmas is always a time of joy as well as martyrdom. Mgr Louis Sako, Chaldean archbishop of Kirkuk, bears witness.

by Louis Sako*

Baghdad (AsiaNews) — Midnight Christmas Mass has been cancelled in Baghdad, Mosul and Kirkuk as a consequence of the never-ending assassinations of Christians and the attack against Our Lady of Perpetual Help Cathedral on 31 October, which killed 57 people. For security reasons, churches will not be decorated. Masses will be sombre and held during the day.

A sense of sadness and mourning prevails among Christians. There is much concern for the future of young people. For the past two months, they have been unable to go to university. The same is true for many families that fled north who now must plan a future without any concrete bases.

No one expects anything from the government as far as protecting Christians. Political leaders are too caught up in setting up a new administration.

Security is slightly better in Kirkuk than in the capital, but here too abductions and threats occur. For this reason, we have decided for the first time since the war began not to celebrate Midnight Mass. We shall simply not have any feast, period. Santa Claus will not be coming for the children; there will be no official ceremony with the authorities proffering their best wishes.

For the past six weeks, we have not celebrated Mass because of a lack of security, except late in the morning and Saturday afternoons. For now, we have also stopped teaching the catechism.

We do not have the right to put people’s lives in danger. All our parish churches have security guards, but when worshippers step outside the church and into the street, they become an easy target.

Yet, despite everything, we shall pray for peace this Christmas and help the poor families of Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah. So far, 106 families have arrived from Baghdad and Mosul.

In my homily, I am going to focus on such problems, on the clashes and on people’s fears but also on the fact that Christmas brings a message of hope. Of course, heaven and earth are two different realities. The Massacre of the Innocents followed Christmas. Thus, for us in Iraq, Christmas is a time of hope and joy as well as pain and martyrdom.

Peace is a goal that people of good will should make happen. If we Christians want to be Christian and welcome Christmas and its message, we must be peacemakers, and build harmony among our Iraqi brothers and sisters.

* Chaldean bishop of Kirkuk

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



Iran: Fired Foreign Minister Criticises President Ahmadinejad

Tehran, 20 Dec. (AKI) — The former Iranian foreign minister who was abruptly fired last week spoke out against president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and said his firing was “un-Islamic”, local media reports said.

“Dismissing a minister during a mission is un-Islamic, undiplomatic and offensive,” Manouchehr Mottaki said. “I was never informed,” according to report by Mehr new agency.

Ahmadinejad last week replaced Manouchehr Mottaki with Iranian nuclear chief and close ally Ali Akbar Salehi as a ‘caretaker’ foreign minister.

Ahmadinejad announced the move while Mottaki was on a visit to Senegal. In a letter, he said he appreciated Mottaki’s efforts during his term and appointed Ali Akbar Salehi as the caretaker of the ministry.

Mottaki in recent months challenged Ahmadinejad’s plan to place the president’s handpicked special envoys to the Middle East, Afghanistan and the Caspian Sea region. Mottaki won that round after reportedly getting Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to intervene. Ahmadinejad eventually reclassified the envoy posts as advisers.

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



Qatar 2022: Blatter: Misunderstanding About Gays

(ANSAmed) — ABU DHABI, DECEMBER 17 — “A remark of mine about homosexuals in connection with the 2022 World Cup which I made over the past few days has been misunderstood and condemned. It was not my intention to offend anybody. If I have done so, I apologise to all concerned”. Joseph Blatter, the FIFA President chose his words carefully during today’s meeting in the capital of the United Arab Emirates in which he took stock of the situation ahead of the World Club Cup final.

Over recent days, a gay rights group had expressed its opposition to a world soccer championship being held in Qatar where homosexuality is a crime. And, speaking on the matter of possible discrimination against homosexual football fans who come to this small Gulf Emirate, Blatter quipped that they should “abstain from any sexual activities”.

Blatter went on to say he was “sure there would be no problems” adding that “there is a different culture in the Middle East because this is a different region, but there are no frontiers in football. We open up everything to everybody and there shouldn’t be any discrimination against any human being.

If they wish to attend the matches in Qatar, I am certain they can do so”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syrian Leader Proposes Schengen-Like Visa-Free Zone

The Syrian president has proposed a visa-free travel region for Syria, Iran, Turkey and other neighboring countries that would be similar to Europe’s Schengen Zone.

“I was the first one to bring this issue to the agenda. I started talking about [visa-free travel] between Turkey and Syria three years ago,” Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said Sunday in an interview with daily Hürriyet and the German paper Bild that touched on regional influence, Middle East peace and his country’s reputation.

“When Erdoðan said, ‘We are ready’ [for a visa agreement] during my visit to Turkey last year, I was very surprised,” al-Assad said.

Asked about claims in U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks that he said Iran holds a more crucial position than Turkey, al-Assad denied the allegations and asked whether anyone would believe he said Syria ranks last among the three countries. “I allegedly said Iran ranks first, Turkey ranks second and Syria ranks third,” the president said with a smile. “Could you believe that I would make such a ranking? Unless I say Syria is the most crucial country in the region, such a claim is not correct.”

Pressed further on the topic, al-Assad said he thinks Syria, Iran and Turkey all hold significant positions, even though other perspectives are sometimes stated or written by U.S. people.

“If you have a good image, yet live in a bad reality, this is, in fact, a bad situation. If you have a bad image, yet live in a good reality, this is positive,” he said. “The most ideal is to have an image based on reality. The West will learn the realities in the region in time.”

The leader of Syria for 10 years, al-Assad said the country’s image had already been changed somewhat since the presidency of his father, Hafez al-Assad, but added that it would be even better if it were changed further. Agreeing with a statement by one interviewer that during his father’s time, soldiers, police and intelligence operatives created an image of dictatorship, but that Syria took on a more liberal image under his own presidency, al-Assad said he does not care whether other people like him or not.

Regarding the concept of an “Ottoman Nations Gathering” proposed by Turkish Foreign Affairs Minister Ahmet Davutoðlu, the Syrian leader said he could not evaluate what is meant by this phrase. He added that the question of how Turkish people define the difference between “Ottoman” and “Turkey” should be considered, and that it does not sound good if someone tells him that he comes from the Turkish nation. “Is this related to boundaries? I guess he [Davutoðlu] is not talking about the spread of Turkey,” al-Assad said.

The Syrian president said peace had not yet been able to come to the region because of conquerors and that even though local people live under very bad conditions, they managed to live in peace for many years within a social structure. “The civil war was not experienced here, but in Lebanon. The reason for all wars is conquerors. First the British, then the French and now Israel,” Al-Assad said, when asked for his comments on Middle East peace.

According to the Syrian president, peace will only come to the region if Israel applies all United Nations Security Council decisions and returns the land it conquered. When asked to compare Syria’s position with that of Iran, which does not accept the existence of Israel, al-Assad said Iran and Syria do not have different attitudes about peace in the region.

“Maybe we might have different perspectives on details, but if we think about the news headlines that will be utilized, there is no disagreement between Iran and Syria on this issue,” he said.

           — Hat tip: DL [Return to headlines]



The Saudi Succession Threat

Saudi Arabia has been a part-time ally of the U.S., crushing Al-Qaeda terrorists trying to overthrow the Royal Family in its own territory but promoting radical Islam outside of it. The U.S. has made the largest arms sale in history to the Saudis but these weapons could end up in dangerous hands, especially if Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz al-Saud becomes king. King Abdullah is 86 years old and in poor health. His designated successor, Crown Prince Sultan, is 82 and widely thought to have cancer. Aware that he and his successor could die in a short period of time, King Abdullah made Prince Nayef the Second Deputy Prime Minister in March of 2009, a position which is viewed as being the slot just below the successor. A cable from the U.S. embassy in Riyadh released by WikiLeaks is dated May 2009 and reports that “Crown Prince Sultan has been incapacitated by illness for at least (the) past year.” This means that Prince Nayef effectively becomes the king when Abdullah passes. Prince Nayef is already extremely powerful. As Interior Minister, he oversees the security forces including the religious police that enforce the Sharia law on the country. He is also the chairman of the Supreme Committee on the Hajj, making him the manager of the most important trip for Muslims all around the world. He also exercises power over foreign policy, such as by leading the delegation to the Gulf Cooperation Council summit this month. Nayef is understood to be an ally of the Wahhabist clerics and an opponent of the more reform-minded elements of the Royal Family like King Abdullah. His role in promoting extremism is so deep that in 2003, Senator Chuck Schumer wrote a letter to the Saudi ambassador to the U.S. requesting that Nayef be sacked because of his “well-documented history of suborning terrorist financing and ignoring the evidence when it comes to investigating terrorist attacks on Americans.” According to former CIA case officer Robert Baer’s book, Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude, Nayef bluntly said shortly after the 9/11 attacks that “the great power that controls the earth, now is an enemy of Arabs and Muslims.” He was also the head of the Saudi Committee for Support of the Al-Quds Intifada and told a Saudi newspaper on November 29, 2002 that “It is impossible that 19 youths carried out the operation of September 11, or that Bin Laden or Al-Qaeda did that alone…I think [the Zionists] are behind these events.” In May 2004, he reiterated this belief, saying “Al-Qaeda is backed by Israel and Zionism.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Russia


As Ethnic Tensions Simmer, Putin Visits Soccer Fan’s Grave

Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin appeared to offer support to soccer fans on Tuesday in a potentially explosive ethnic conflict with migrants from the North Caucasus region, most of whom are Muslim and have flooded the country’s major cities in search of work.

Mr. Putin held a formal meeting with representatives of soccer clubs, and paid his respects at the grave of a fan who was killed this month in a brawl with migrants from the North Caucasus.

The killing of the fan, Yegor Sviridov, 28, a member of a soccer club called Spartak, has stoked deep frictions between the two sides that the government has struggled to contain. Complicating matters, openly racist Slavic nationalists have allied with the soccer clubs, whose members have themselves sometimes used provocative slogans.

Mr. Putin’s visit to the grave — where he placed a bouquet of red roses — seemed to represent a highly symbolic effort to win the favor of the soccer clubs.

Mr. Putin suggested that if tensions were not curbed, the government might be forced to adopt restrictions on migrants settling in Moscow, St. Petersburg and other metropolises. Such a move might mark a return to the types of limits on movement that existed during the Soviet era.

“If we do not respect one another, then what are we going to have to do?” Mr. Putin said. “We are going to have to — to put it mildly — improve the registration rules in the territories of our country, especially in major centers.”

Mr. Putin made his comments less than two weeks after thousands of soccer fans and nationalists reacted to Mr. Sviridov’s killing by conducting a violent demonstration near Red Square that startled the Kremlin. The police since then have detained thousands of people in Moscow and other cities on both sides in an attempt to prevent disturbances.

Last week, Mr. Putin said the country needed to have strong law enforcement in order to deal with extremists.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Indonesia: Catholics in Bogor (West Java) Not Allowed to Celebrate Christmas Mass

The authorities ban all Christian activities, citing as their reason the lack of a proper place of worship, which Catholics have been demanding for years without success. Increasingly, radical Muslims are becoming intolerant towards Christian groups.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Bogor authorities have banned all public activities or celebrations associated with Christmas, including Christmas Mass, at Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church in Parung, Tulang Kuning, Bogor Regency (West Java Province). The official ban was issued in a letter that restated the usual reasons, namely the lack of a building permit for a place of worship (Izin Mendirikan Bangunan in Indonesian). Without it, even praying on Church-owned land is prohibited.

In Indonesia, permits are required for any type of building, but when it comes to Christian places of worship, they are issued only after 60 residents living near the would-be church have agreed in writing to the project and the local Inter-faith Dialogue Group has given its approval.

In this particular case, because the application has not yet been approved after a long period of time, worshippers have taken to meeting under a tent or in a restaurant. Complicating matters, local authorities have interpreted the law very restrictively, going so far as to prevent Christians from even meeting in public. Now local Catholics are at a loss because they cannot figure out how to interpret the ban.

“We still have no idea how to respond such demands, despite the urgency to find a peaceful solution that would allow Catholics to profess their faith at Christmas,” Fr Gatot, the local parish priest, told AsiaNews.

The situation is particularly worrying because of past episodes of violence. Some parishioners, who asked their names be withheld, told AsiaNews that the ban was preceded by repeated threats from local Muslim extremists, who are bent on preventing any Christian ceremony in a public place.

The fear is that radical groups might take advantage of the ban to carry out violent acts in case Catholics hold celebrations in a public place, under a tent for example, or in a restaurant in neighbouring villages, which they have done in the past.

In 2005, local hard-line Muslim groups disrupted Easter celebrations. More problems arose in 2008, when hundreds of radical Muslims blocked access to church-owned land. On that occasion too, Easter celebrations were interrupted. Nonetheless, Good Friday and Palm Sunday services were successfully pulled off without an incident.

Parung is home to at least 3,000 Catholics. The local diocese owns 7,500 m2 of land where it wants to build a church. However, Muslim extremists have tried to prevent them.

In April this year, radical Muslims stopped Catholics from holding Easter Mass, but parishioners at the Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church are not alone in experiencing such violence. The congregation of Gereja Kristen Indonesia (GKI, better known as Yasmin Church) have also gone through the same thing.

Although they were able to celebrate Mass on Easter Sunday, they had their building permit withdrawn on 14 February 2008. Local authorities issued a closure order for their church, because of protests by Muslim extremists.

In 2009, the Administrative Court, Indonesia’s highest civil court, ruled in favour of the Yasmin Church, which had successfully sued the municipality and won the right to keep its place of worship open.

Its victory was short-lived. On 11 March this year, the municipality closed it down permanently under pressure from Muslim extremists. As a protest, the faithful began celebrating Mass in the street (pictured).

Such cases illustrate what is happening across Indonesia. Non-Muslim religions are victims of a wave of intolerance fed by radical Muslims. Increasingly, it is taking on a violent form because local authorities are not taking decisive action to stop it.

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



Malaysia: In Prison Robes and Handcuffs, The British Wife Facing the Gallows for Heroin Haul

Dressed in orange prison robes and handcuffed to a fellow suspect, this is the daughter of a British nuclear scientist facing the death penalty in Malaysia for drugs trafficking.

Shivaun Orton, 41, and her husband were arrested after police found £16,000 of cannabis, amphetamine, ecstasy and heroin during a raid on their home.

If found guilty, she could become the first British woman to be hanged since Ruth Ellis in 1955. But yesterday she insisted she was innocent. She said that while her Malaysian husband Abdul Harris Badileh was a womanising drug user, she had been kept as a virtual prisoner at their home 12 miles from a beach resort they own.

Miss Orton’s late father Mike worked at the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment in Aldermaston, Berkshire, for 36 years. She grew up in the Welsh coastal town of Harlech but has lived in Malaysia since 1995.

Yesterday she wept as she told how she had arrived at her present predicament.

Having passed her A-levels, Miss Orton left for the U.S., where she did an arts degree at Miami University. It was there that she met her husband-to-be. Despite her mother Shirley’s disapproval of the relationship, they married and 15 years ago moved to Malaysia, although she always kept her British passport and surname.

She said she left America with about £20,000, with which she helped her husband set up the Ranting Resort, a group of chalets in Cherating. They have two sons, Jacob, 16, and Isaac, 14.

‘I soon learned what it was like to be an Islamic bride,’ she said. ‘My husband insisted I live across the border in Terengganu, which is a strict Islamic state and which I call Taliban Land. I cannot go out by myself. I have to cover up. I am there to serve my husband and family.

‘My husband on the other hand was out all the time, often with women and taking drugs. What angered me most was that the women were of no class at all, just tarts.

‘It got so bad that in 2003 I packed my bags and got in the car. I had made it almost 200 kilometres and was within an hour of Kuala Lumpur and the airport and a flight back to London when I was stopped by police at a checkpoint near a town called Bentong.

‘I was handcuffed and raped, twice each by two policemen, and one did it three times. My husband had phoned the police and set me up.

‘He later admitted that he had said I was a runaway prostitute and told police to give me a warning before sending me home.’

Miss Orton said she tried to make the relationship work for the boys’ sake.

‘But my husband still insisted on chasing women. Once I burst in and caught him with a girl and smoking heroin. Once I had got rid of the girl I asked him why. He said, “Because you do not get high and have fun with me”.

‘That’s when I agreed to do heroin with him, but only at the weekends, while my husband did it every day.’

Miss Orton was yesterday remanded in custody for a week with her pony-tailed 46-year-old husband and an 18-year-old girl, Ram Nazarul Shima. She is a friend of Jacob and was at the house when police raided.

As Miss Orton spoke, her husband listened with his head bowed. He said: ‘It’s true I forced Shivaun to stay and that I introduced her to drugs. I needed her to be dependent on me. If she was dependent on drugs she would not run away.

‘Our relationship was on-off. But we lived in separate rooms. The heroin was mine and it was in my room. It had nothing to do with her.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Malaysia Gay Man Gets Threats

A Muslim gay man in Malaysia says he fears for his safety after speaking about his sexuality in an Internet video that attracted online death threats and accusations by religious authorities that he is insulting Islam.

Azwan Ismail told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Tuesday he was taking safety precautions following fierce criticism in this conservative, Muslim-majority country over his clip, which has been viewed more than 140,000 times on YouTube in just six days.

The segment, titled “I’m Gay, I’m OK,” features the 32-year-old engineer encouraging other gay Malaysians to be confident in themselves. It is part of a series of interviews posted online by gay rights activists since last week, but Azwan has attracted heavy attention because he is the only one from Malaysia’s ethnic Malay Muslim majority so far.

“I don’t know what to expect next,” Azwan said Tuesday in his first comments to the media after his nearly three-minute clip was posted Dec. 15. Other gay Malaysians featured in the “Independent Sexuality” video campaign so far are mainly ethnic Chinese non-Muslims, who generally face less of a public stigma about homosexuality.

Azwan said he has tried to avoid going out alone or lingering at public places after a few of the 3,000 people who commented on his video issued death threats and many others rebuked him. He has also made his personal details more private on social media websites. Although Azwan’s face appears clearly in the video, he declined to be photographed for the AP interview.

Malaysia’s Cabinet minister for Islamic affairs, Jamil Khir Baharom, voiced concerns over the weekend that gay activists were trying to promote homosexuality. He said officials might take “appropriate action to prevent this from spreading because it would hurt Islam’s image.”

Harussani Zakaria, one of Malaysia’s top Islamic clerics, reportedly said Azwan should have not made such an open declaration that “derided his own dignity and Islam in general.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



US Drones Wipe Out Key Commanders of British Islamic Army in Waziristan

LAHORE: The Pakistan-based Islamic Army of Great Britain (IAGB) has suffered another major setback with the killing of its two more white commanders, both British nationals, in a US drone attack in North Waziristan on December 10. The operational chief of the Britons had earlier been killed in a drone strike in the same area on October 4, 2010.

Well-informed sources in the Pakistani security agencies have confirmed that the December 10 drone strikes had killed two Britons in Khadar Khel town of Miranshah in North Waziristan who have been identified as Stephen and Smith. The white commanders, who were known in the militant circles with their pseudonyms of Abu Bakar (Stephen) and Abu Mansoor (Smith), were travelling in a car with two other local militants when the American drone targeted them. Even though the car was completely destroyed and little remained of the bodies, local militants were quick to take out from the burnt car the mutilated corpses for burial. Stephen alias Abu Bakar, 47, has been identified as a senior al-Qaeda operative who was imparting terror training to a group of white jehadis from Great Britain in North Waziristan for carrying out terrorist activities in Europe and America. Smith alias Abu Mansoor, 28, has been identified as the right hand man of Stephens in the Islamic Army of Great Britain.

While the deaths of the Britons have not yet been confirmed by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) which actually runs the deadly drone programme, it is not for the first time that reports of Muslim converts from Europe fighting for al-Qaeda and Taliban in the Pak-Afghan area have emerged. On October 4, 2010, Abdul Jabbar, a British terror suspect, was killed in a drone attack in North Waziristan. Later identified as the chief operational commander of the Islamic Army of Great Britain, he was a British citizen, came from Jhelum district of Punjab, and had a British wife. Abdul Jabbar had earlier survived a drone strike on September 8, 2010, targeting a militant training camp being run by Hafiz Gul Bahadur, a Pakistani Taliban commander allied with the Haqqani militant network. Jabbar was reportedly tasked by the Waziristan-based al-Qaeda leadership to plan the Mumbai-style fidayeen attacks against targets in the Great Britain, Germany and France.

Besides Abdul Jabbar, two German nationals were also killed in the October 4 US drone attack. They were usually known in the militant circles of North Waziristan with their Islamic names of Imran and Shahab. According to the intelligence information the British authorities have shared with their Pakistani counterparts, Jabbar, Imran and Shahab had been making phone calls to London and Germany to their contacts in a bid to set off the terror plot by finding accomplices in Europe. In their conversations, the British and German jehadis used to talk about facilitators and logistics they needed in Europe to execute their terror attacks. However, Jabbar’s younger brother, who is a key leader in the lslamic Army of Great Britain, and two other most wanted German jehadis were lucky enough to have survived the October drone hit. The white Germans — 27-year-old Mouneer Chouka alias Abu Adam and 25-year-old Yaseen Chouka alias Abu Ibrahim are real brothers. Coming from Bonn, both lead a group of 100-plus German militants who had travelled to the border areas of Pakistan in recent years, raising the latest security alert in Europe.

The information about the presence and activities of the Chouka brothers in North Waziristan as well as the hatching of a Mumbai-like terror plot for Europe actually came from none other than an arrested German jehadi of Afghan, Rami Mackenzie alias Ahmed Siddiqi. The 36-year-old was part of an 11-member jehadi cell which was to take part in the European terror plot, but was arrested in the Afghan capital, Kabul, in the beginning of July 2010. He is reported to have told his American interrogators that the European terror plot was approved by none other than Osama bin Laden who had also provided some funding. Currently being held at the US military airbase at Bagram, Siddiqi further told his interrogators that small teams of militants were to model their missions in European countries on the pattern of Mumbai attacks by first seizing and then killing hostages. The unearthing of the terror plot soon led to an unprecedented surge in the drone strikes in North Waziristan, primarily to target the hide outs of the Islamic Army of Great Britain, thus killing its top leadership.

Top security officials from UK have informed their Pakistani counterparts in recent months that many of the planned terror attacks in Britain in the past had been linked directly or indirectly to Pakistan, starting with the 7/7 suicide bombings of London’s busy transport network in 2005. The attacks, which killed 52 people, were conducted by four British nationals of the Pakistani origin. The UK officials have further informed that the September 1, 2005 video message of one of the four bombers, Mohammad Sidique Khan, was recorded in the Waziristan area during the latter’s November 2004 visit to Pakistan. Through the video broadcast, showing pictures of Dr Ayman al-Zawahri and the bomber, the al-Qaeda had claimed responsibility for the July 7, 2005 London attacks. “Until we feel secure, you will be our targets and until you stop the bombing, gassing, imprisonment and torture of my people we will not stop this fight,” said Khan in the video tape.

The recent killings in Waziristan of the white jehadis from Britain have confirmed the fears of the British agencies that the al-Qaeda network based in Pakistan now poses the greatest terror threat to the security of United Kingdom. They believe the threat includes both terrorist attacks and the financial and ideological networks that support and inspire such attacks. According to a recent study conducted by the British home department, three quarters of the most serious terrorism cases investigated since the 7/7 London attacks have links to al-Qaeda in Pakistan. Similarly, of the 90 individuals convicted or punished in Britain for their involvement in jehadi terror plots between September 2001 and September 2009, 64 were affiliated with al-Qaeda and 27 were trained either in Pakistan or in Afghanistan — more than in any other country across the world.

These figures clearly show that al-Qaeda now seeks to employ white men with Western nationalities to successfully strike in the heart of the West. Therefore, the Western agencies believe that dismantling of well-entrenched al-Qaeda network in the Waziristan area is a must to protect the West from any further act of jehadi terrorism.

amir.mir1969@gmail.com

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



WikiLeaks Cables: Bangladeshi ‘Death Squad’ Trained by UK Government

The British government has been training a Bangladeshi paramilitary force condemned by human rights organisations as a “government death squad”, leaked US embassy cables have revealed.

Members of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), which has been held responsible for hundreds of extra-judicial killings in recent years and is said to routinely use torture, have received British training in “investigative interviewing techniques” and “rules of engagement”.

Details of the training were revealed in a number of cables, released by WikiLeaks, which address the counter-terrorism objectives of the US and UK governments in Bangladesh. One cable makes clear that the US would not offer any assistance other than human rights training to the RAB — and that it would be illegal under US law to do so — because its members commit gross human rights violations with impunity.

Since the RAB was established six years ago, it is estimated by some human rights activists to have been responsible for more than 1,000 extra-judicial killings, described euphemistically as “crossfire” deaths. In September last year the director general of the RAB said his men had killed 577 people in “crossfire”. In March this year he updated the figure, saying they had killed 622 people.

The RAB’s use of torture has also been exhaustively documented by human rights organisations. In addition, officers from the paramilitary force are alleged to have been involved in kidnap and extortion, and are frequently accused of taking large bribes in return for carrying out crossfire killings.

However, the cables reveal that both the British and the Americans, in their determination to strengthen counter-terrorism operations in Bangladesh, are in favour of bolstering the force, arguing that the “RAB enjoys a great deal of respect and admiration from a population scarred by decreasing law and order over the last decade”. In one cable, the US ambassador to Dhaka, James Moriarty, expresses the view that the RAB is the “enforcement organisation best positioned to one day become a Bangladeshi version of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation”.

In another cable, Moriarty quotes British officials as saying they have been “training RAB for 18 months in areas such as investigative interviewing techniques and rules of engagement”. Asked about the training assistance for the RAB, the Foreign Office said the UK government “provides a range of human rights assistance” in the country. However, the RAB’s head of training, Mejbah Uddin, told the Guardian that he was unaware of any human rights training since he was appointed last summer.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks Cables: UK Hopes to Influence Islamic Education in Bangladesh

British government officials have made moves towards influencing Islamic education in Bangladesh as part of regional counter-terrorism strategies.

A leaked diplomatic cable, released on WikiLeaks, has revealed how the Department for International Development (DFID) has been working with the US to change the curriculum of thousands of madrasas as a “common counter-terrorism goal”.

In one cable discussing British and American counter-terrorism tactics for Bangladesh, the US ambassador to Dhaka, James Moriarty, notes how their plans involved asking the country’s prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, to develop and implement a standardised curriculum for unregulated Islamic madrassah schools.

The moves followed a proposal for a madrasa “curriculum development programme” to the Bangladeshi government by the US government development agency, USAid.

There are around 64,000 Islamic schools in Bangladesh. They are seen as an important part of Bangladesh’s education system, often providing free schooling to children whose parents are unable to send them to conventional schools.

However, the 15,000 or so unregulated madrasas have been a constant cause for concern for the current government, which claims the standard of education received is poorer than average.

Some have also blamed madrasas for radicalising children, with claims emerging that they could be used to set up jihadist training camps.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Haneef Settlement Figure Kept Under Wraps

The Federal Government says it is unable to disclose the amount of money paid to Mohamed Haneef over his wrongful detention on terrorism-related charges.

Dr Haneef, who had been working as a hospital registrar on Queensland’s Gold Coast, was wrongly accused of being involved in the botched 2007 terrorist attack at Glasgow in Scotland.

He was detained for more than three weeks and charged. After being granted bail, then immigration minister Kevin Andrews cancelled his visa.

Dr Haneef was later cleared of any wrongdoing and his lawyer Rod Hodgson says after two days of negotiations, Dr Haneef accepted a substantial compensation settlement with the Government.

In return he has dropped a civil claim against the Commonwealth and defamation action against Mr Andrews.

“The resolution of this matter will lead to the cessation of all legal proceedings against the Commonwealth and Mr Andrews,” he said.

The Government says the terms of the settlement cannot be revealed because of a confidentiality agreement.

A spokesman for Mr Andrews says he is overseas and unavailable for comment.

In a statement Attorney-General Robert McClelland says he is pleased the matter has been resolved in the interests of Dr Haneef and the Government.

The Opposition will be briefed on the settlement this morning.

Meanwhile, Dr Haneef says he now wants to resume a normal life with his family.

“We look forward to possibly returning to Australia one day,” he said.

“I would like to thank the people in Australia who have supported me. I also wish to thank the people of India; all of you have been a great source of strength for me and my family.”

He is currently working as a doctor in the United Arab Emirates but wants to resume his training and eventually work as a specialist physician in Australia.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Approaching Referendum in Sudan

‘Already Flying the Flag of an Independent State’

Voters in Southern Sudan will soon decide whether to secede from Sudan. Many anticipate that the referendum could result in renewed violence between the north and the south. Southern Sudan’s regional representative in Cairo, Ruben Marial Benjamin, spoke with SPIEGEL about the approaching ballot.

SPIEGEL: On Jan. 9, 2011, Southern Sudan will vote on secession from the republic of Sudan. Are you certain that the majority will vote for secession?…

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

Immigration


Australia’s Wave of Boat Children

THE number of children being taken on dangerous sea crossings to Australia has exploded since the Gillard Government said two months ago it would free women and children from detention.

In October 141 children arrived by boat, up from 58 in September and Department of Immigration figures show 124 arrived by sea last month.

The Christmas Island boat crash tragedy showed how vulnerable children are on the journey with seven killed, including three baby girls and a baby boy.

The toll was yesterday revised up to 48, with Prime Minister Julia Gillard revealing there were most likely 90 men, women and children on the SIEV 221 when it smashed into rocks last week.

Already 30 Iranian, Iraqi and Kurdish asylum seekers have been confirmed dead, while 42 were rescued. Ms Gillard said it was likely a further 18 had died.

“We are talking about very rough seas, very rocky and difficult coastline and so it may be that there are bodies of people who travelled on the boat that are never recovered,” she said.

Asylum seeker advocate Jamal Daoud said more children were being placed on rickety sea vessels to come to Australia because of delays caused by the Government’s decision to freeze new asylum claims earlier this year.

He said traditionally a male asylum seeker would come by boat and then arrange for his wife and children to fly in under a family reunion program.

“We understand more children are coming by boat because of the slow process of applications and there was a freeze … before 2008-09 there was not many women and children coming because the time for applications to be processed was less than three months,” he said. “You would be out of detention and there would be a family reunion. Now you have people in detention for more than one year.”

Immigration Minister Chris Bowen denied the Government’s policies had given incentive for asylum seekers to bring children because they knew they would be housed in the community.

“The increase in children in terms of numbers is commensurate with the increase in total arrivals. In short, there’s no noticeable trend. This percentage has barely moved,” a spokesman said.

In August, 43 children arrived by boat, 100 came in July, 77 in June and 118 in May. In October a total of 766 people arrived by boat, 729 arrived in November and arrivals in the other months ranged from 327 people to 617.

The Federal Government defended the number of arrivals this week, saying the influx was caused by violence in Afghanistan and Sri Lanka not by its policies.

As the focus turned to how to stop people smuggling, Federal independent MP Andrew Wilkie called for Australia to double its humanitarian refugee intake — which Ms Gillard ruled out.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Berlin Blocks Bulgaria, Romania From Schengen

France and Germany decided Tuesday to block Bulgaria and Romania from joining Europe’s borderless 25-nation Schengen area next year, a move denounced by the Romanian president as discriminatory.

French Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux and German counterpart Thomas de Maiziere told European home affairs commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem in a letter that it was “premature” to let them enter the passport-free travel area in March 2011.

The ministers said a decision on the applications would be made once the two former communist bloc nations make “irreversible progress” in the fight against corruption and organised crime, according a copy of the letter seen by news agency AFP.

Romanian President Traian Basescu slammed the Franco-German move as “an act of discrimination.”

Bulgarian officials said they would do their utmost to ease any doubts about their readiness to join.

The Schengen area allows more than 400 million citizens to travel across a territory that ranges from Greece to Finland, and Portugal to Poland, without having to pull out a passport.

The area includes 22 of the European Union’s 27 members plus Iceland, Switzerland and Norway.

Romania and Bulgaria joined the EU in 2007. By choice, EU members Britain and Ireland have not joined the travel zone while Cyprus has applied to enter Schengen.

Experts from EU states who visited Romania and Bulgaria will present a report in January that will be used by governments to make a decision.

Allowing a country to join Schengen must be agreed by members states by unanimity, meaning that France and Germany have veto power over the applications.

The decision to block the entry of Romania and Bulgaria follows a summer row over France’s deportation of Roma migrants from the two eastern European nations, although the issue was not cited as a reason for the Schengen veto.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Feds Force Bank to Remove Christmas Decorations

A Jew or Muslim or Atheist May be Offended…

Perkins, Oklahoma — A small-town bank in Oklahoma said the Federal Reserve won’t let it keep religious signs and symbols on display.

Federal Reserve examiners come every four years to make sure banks are complying with a long list of regulations. The examiners came to Perkins last week. And the team from Kansas City deemed a Bible verse of the day, crosses on the teller’s counter and buttons that say “Merry Christmas, God With Us.” were inappropriate. The Bible verse of the day on the bank’s Internet site also had to be taken down.

“I don’t think there should be a problem with them displaying whatever religious symbols they want to display,” said Amy Weierman, a Perkins resident.

Specifically, the feds believed, the symbols violated the discouragement clause of Regulation B of the bank regulations. According to the clause, “…the use of words, symbols, models and other forms of communication … express, imply or suggest a discriminatory preference or policy of exclusion.”

The feds interpret that to mean, for example, a Jew or Muslin or atheist may be offended and believe they may be discriminated against at this bank. It is an appearance of discrimination.

But customers Eyewitness News 5 talked to said they aren’t buying it.

“This is just ridiculous,” said bank customer Jim Nyles. “This whole thing is just ridiculous. We all have regulatory bodies that govern us. But this is too much.”

“I think that’s absurd,” said Chelsi Holser, a bank customer. “I don’t agree with it at all. They are taking Christ out of Christmas and life.”

The bank is quietly fighting for a clearer interpretation of the clause. Officials have contacted their two U.S. legislators, Rep. Frank Lucas and Sen. Jim Inhoffe, and the Oklahoma Bankers Association to help.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Left: Can’t We All Just Get Along? Islam: No.

I can only plead “holiday hysteria”… or more accurately “Christmas confusion”… or perhaps “Yule whirl.” Yup, it’s got to be the Yule Whirl that caused me to miss this headline in my hometown paper, the L.A. Times, two weeks ago:

“Majority of Muslims want Islam in politics, poll says”

As in, they would like policy decisions to be influenced by their faith? The way Christians bring their worldviews to the political debate, injecting concepts like individual responsibility, natural rights, and yes, pro-life morality?

Well… no. More like this:

“According to the survey, majorities in Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan and Nigeria would favor changing current laws to allow stoning as a punishment for adultery, hand amputation for theft and death for those who convert from Islam to another religion. About 85% of Pakistani Muslims said they would support a law segregating men and women in the workplace.”

Oh.

The poll showed mixed reactions to terrorist groups like Hamas, Hezbollah and Al Qaeda, with about half of Nigerian respondents giving Al Qaeda a thumbs up. The other two groups got better numbers.

Let’s review. In seven countries with large Muslim populations, a significant percentage are “okay” with militant terror organizations — as long as they’re Islamist. And a majority look favorably on Islam’s growing role in politics.

If nothing else, this poll illuminates the deep and disturbed — one might even say schizophrenic — viewpoint of the Left, which would collectively wet itself if a poll showed that Christianity was having a growing role in politics, or more to the point, if Christians said they’d look favorably on that. Meantime, the Lefties continue defending the “religion of peace” that would KILL PEOPLE who convert to any other faith.

As Mark Steyn said in America Alone, honest Muslims want America to be a Muslim country, and some have admitted as much. NewsBusters blogger Lachlan Markey points out that those Muslims are known in the media as “moderates” — apparently simply because they don’t favor flying airplanes into buildings. But they do favor a wholesale takeover of the West:

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Death of Free Will

Something is drastically wrong with the present restructuring of education. I hope this article will persuade parents and traditional public school administrators and teachers to work together to stop the dismantling of what was once considered the finest educational system in the world. The traditional system’s successful administrative structure which allowed elected school boards (working with superintendents, principals, and teachers) to provide our children with an academic education, should not be changed to accommodate the needs of the corporate fascist/socialist (government/business) partnerships and tax-exempt foundations.

One must understand that the situation with low academic test scores and unacceptable behavior of students was deliberately created over a period of 80 years, starting in the 1930s with the Carnegie Corporation’s plan to use schools to bring about a Soviet-style (performance-based) planned economic system. See reference to Carnegie Corporation’s Conclusions and Recommendations for the Social Studies (1934) and Carnegie-Soviet Academy of Science Agreement (1985). The latter agreement was signed the same year Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev signed the U.S.-USSR Education Exchange Agreement. The first experiment with Outcomes/Performance-Based Education (the restructuring system being implemented today) was Carnegie Corporation’s “Eight Year Study” (1933-1941).

[…]

Solution—the following government agencies which control local education must be abolished:

U.S. Department of Education, its laboratories and centers, and all federally funded state departments of education. Also, legislation must be passed prohibiting outside meddling in state or local education matters by corporations and tax exempt foundations. Such legislation would prevent international, national or corporate entities from administering attitudinal assessments and collecting private data on students, their families, educators and/or members of small businesses.

It is doubtful that major conservative groups would help in this endeavor. Our best hope is to enlist the help of traditional teachers and administrators, and small business owners, who would have to go up against their prospective organization leadership. It might work. It’s worth a try.

This article is written for the benefit of parents, our children, and the teachers of our children; it explains the following:

Link 1: Re-inventing Schools Coalition

Link 2: Back to Basics Reform or. . .OBE . . .Skinnerian International Curriculum and the deliberate dumbing down of America

Link 3: Jed Brown on Behavioral Conditioning

Link 4: Educators Push Back Against Obama’s “Business Model” for School Reform (If a link becomes broken, please do a Google search for the title.)

The last nail of so-called school reform is being struck in the coffin of traditional American education which made our nation the envy of the Free World and which produced famous scientists, engineers, mathematicians, writers, artists, musicians, doctors, etc.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why It’s Natural for Girls to Play With Dolls and Boys to Love Guns

Girls play with dolls because they’re programmed to, not because of any sexual stereotyping, new research suggests.

Young chimps in the wild play play boy and girl games, much like their human counterparts, scientists found.

Although both male and female chimpanzees play with sticks, girl chimps treat sticks like dolls copying their mothers as they care for infants.

The findings suggest girls play more with dolls than boys not because of sex-stereotyped socialization but because of ‘biological predilections.’

Richard Wrangham of Harvard University said: ‘This is the first evidence of an animal species in the wild in which object play differs between males and females.’

Earlier studies of captive monkeys had also suggested a biological influence on toy choice.

When juvenile monkeys are offered sex-stereotyped human toys, females gravitate toward dolls, whereas males are more apt to play with ‘boys’ toys’ such as trucks.

The findings were the result of 14 years of observation of the Kanyawara chimpanzee community in Kibale National Park, Uganda.

It is inbuilt for girls to want to play with toys like dolls (picture posed by models)

It found that chimpanzees use sticks in four main ways, as probes to investigate holes potentially containing water or honey, as props or weapons in aggressive encounters, during solitary or social play, and in a behaviour the researchers refer to as stick-carrying.

Mr Wrangham said: ‘We thought that if the sticks are being treated like dolls, females would carry sticks more than males do and should stop carrying sticks when they have their own babies.

‘We now know that both of these points are correct.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

General


UN Subterfuge… The Global Warming Hoax

For 30 years the UN has fomented worldwide hysteria based upon the premise of global destruction by CO2.

After schooling in the Environmental Sciences, and cleaning up toxic waste sites for an environmental agency, my hobby became global warming. At first it was interesting because the prevailing theory was always changing, but as new theories were advanced, they relied more on data adjustments and political strategy, than science. Today, Americans perceive global warming as a low priority item, and have turned their attention to our economic and security concerns. But big government agencies (UN and US) and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) continue to quietly expand UN influence, by teaching their insidious Marxist policies to the bureaucratic, naive, and idiotic.

[…]

The science of global warming has been unraveling for years, but one of the most glaring revelations came in 2007, when a UK High Court judge considered the science behind the 2006 Academy Award winning movie “Inconvenient Truth.” The judge ruled the movie contained nine significant errors and ruled it was a “political” movie, not a science movie.

Through the serendipity of Climategate, we discovered that although Russian weather stations cover most of Russia: “the Hadley Center had used data submitted by only 25% of such stations in its reports.” Then came the discovery that famed UK global warming scientist Professor Phil Jones moved weather stations in China. As the scientific methods of global warming scientists were aired, the number of skeptics increased, and one petition now has over 31,000 signatures.

But while the world was debating, the UN was infiltrating! The UN has been quietly training local governments and universities on UN sustainability policies and organizing techniques since 1990. Their plans are in Chapter 28 of Agenda 21, which advises: “Local authority programmes, policies, laws and regulations to achieve Agenda 21 objectives would be assessed and modified, based on local programmes adopted.” This chapter is a primer on how to infiltrate the US at every level, and in every organization.

Summary

For 30 years UN scientists contorted scientific theories, data, and “hockey sticks” to cobble their science together. The current status of global warming can be summarized with the Jeffersonian maxim: “It is error alone which needs the support of government. Truth can stand by itself.” It is now clear that global warming was an epic scam. Please consider:

1. Why reduce CO2 emissions to 1990 levels as called for in the Kyoto Treaty? Which scientists determined the 1990 CO2 levels would save the planet? Actually, the 1990 level was negotiated by bureaucrats, and despite their assertion that CO2 is harmful, they exempted two of the biggest CO2 emitters, China and India. In 2007, Newsweek columnist Fareed Zakaria discovered: “These two countries (China and India) are currently building 650 coal-fired power plants. The combined CO2 emissions of these new plants is five times the total savings of the Kyoto accords-that is, if the Kyoto targets were being adhered to by western countries, which they are not.” (Quoted in Climate Change and Presidential Policy, p4.)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101220

Financial Crisis
» Europe Turns Against Germany
» UK: CBI Interest Rate Forecast: 3m Home Owners Could Struggle to Pay Mortgage
» UK: House Prices ‘To Drop Seven Per Cent Next Year’ — Telegraph
» Unpopular Germany Faces ‘Unpleasant’ Years Ahead
 
USA
» Big Brother Tightens Choke Hold on Internet
» Frank Gaffney: Just Say NO to New START
» Justice Department Files Religious Discrimination Lawsuit Against Berkeley School District in Illinois
» King Abdullah Mulls Hospital Site for Ground Zero Mosque
» NYC Mayor: King’s Radical Islam Hearings Not Right
» Obama Adopts U.N. Manifesto on Rights of Indigenous Peoples
» Poll Suggests Even ‘Moderate’ Muslims Have Extreme Beliefs
» Senate Republicans Join Democrats to Pass Food “Safety” Bill
» The FCC’s Threat to Internet Freedom
» The Great Islamophobic Crusade
» The Interstate Commerce Lie
» The Lakin Legacy & the Right-Left Hypocrisy
» Thomas Jefferson First Fought Muslim Terrorists
» TSA Comes to D.C.’s Bus Stops
» TSA Needs to Link Groping Policy to Underwear Bomber
 
Canada
» Honour Killings in Canada: New Term, Old Idea
» More Than 100 Arab Christians in Canada Named on Al Qaida-Affiliated Website.
 
Europe and the EU
» 32% of British Muslim Students Support Killing for Islam; 40% Want Sharia Law
» Anti-Terror Police Arrest 12 in UK Raids
» Disputed Elections in Belarus
» France: Nicolas Sarkozy to Target Muslim Prayers
» Germany: WikiLeaks Cable Embarrasses Left Leader
» Germany: Leftists Called Upon to Attack Tourism
» Germany: Life Without Islam Means Road to Hell?
» Greece: Laos: Germany’s War Debt is 162 Bln Euros
» Italy: Prosecutors Request 16.5 Year Jail Term for Thyssenkrupp Steelworks CEO
» Italy: Ivorian Gets Final Conviction for Meredith Murder
» More Problems in Europe, Snowfall in France
» Netherlands: Political Heavyweights Linked With Gulen Movement
» Netherlands: MP to Lead PVV Provincial Election Campaign in Noord-Holland
» Swedish Fatwa Council Condemns Bomb Attack
» UK: 12 Men Arrested in Anti-Terror Raids
» UK: Anti-Terror Police Arrest 12 People in Nationwide Raids
» UK: Anti-Terror Squad Arrest 12 Men ‘Planning UK Terror Attack’: Christmas Plot at Advanced Stage, Say Police
» UK: Former Birmingham Judge Who Called Muslim Colleague ‘Tent Head’ Fined £10,000
» UK: Harry Potter Star ‘Beaten After Meeting Non-Muslim Man’
» UK: Hackers Steal English Defence League Membership List
» UK: Harry Potter Actress Was ‘Beaten and Branded a Prostitute by Her Family After Dating Man Who Was Not a Muslim’
» UK: Mastermind of £800,000 People Trafficking Ring Which Helped More Than 100 Asylum Seekers Sneak Into Britain Could be Freed Within Months
» UK: Stockholm Bomber’s Mosque Website Carries Links to Extremist Preacher
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: Organ Trafficking; Press, Money in Accounts in Europe
» Terrorism: 6 Bosnian Muslims Indicted
 
North Africa
» Egypt Attempts to Convict Christian to Justify Muslim Riots
» Gaddafi Family Tensions Keep Son in Check
» Study: Good EU-Algiers Relations for 8 Out of 10
» The Tragedy of Algeria’s ‘Disappeared’
» WikiLeaks: Spain for Pro-Morocco Solution in W. Sahara
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Far Right Courts Israel in Anti-Islam Drive
» Gaza: Freedom Flotilla; Spain, Memorial for Turkish Victims
» Police Investigating Death of U.S. Tourist in Mysterious Attack
 
Middle East
» America and Israel Haters Relying on Anti-Turkish Lobbies
» Iran: Christians Jailed for Three Months Over Evangelizing Activities
» Saudi Scholar Proposes “Terror Allowance”
» Stakelbeck: Fmr. CIA Spy: Iran Will Use Nukes Against Israel, West
» Syria Increases Duty on Luxury Vehicles
» The Ethnic Cleansing of Iran’s Arabs
» UK: The Observer: Stockholm Bomber’s Mosque Website Carries Links to Banned Preacher
» Yemen Gov’t Accused of Killing Coffee Production
 
Russia
» Interfax-Religion (1)
» Interfax-Religion (2)
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: British Soldier Takes a Bullet in the Head From a Taliban Sniper to Protect Child
» Al Qaeda Militant Killed in Afghanistan Was Amnesty, Cageprisoners, Guardian, Indie Pin Up
» Bangladeshi ‘Stepson Affair’ Woman Dies After Caning
» Malaysia Arrests 200 for Following Shia Islam
» Pakistan: Bishop Denounces Rape of 9-Year-Old Catholic Girl
» U.S. Seeks to Expand Ground Raids Into Pakistan Against Militants
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Sudan Leader Vows to Bolster Islamic Law in North
 
Immigration
» Migrant Crisis in Greece Strains EU Open Borders
» Sweden Deporting Christian Refugees From Muslim Countries
» Turkish ‘Guest Workers’ of Germany: The Changing Facts
 
Culture Wars
» Gay Rights Campaigners Furious as UN Drops Condemnation of ‘Sexual Orientation’ Killings After Pressure From Arab and African Nations
» Germany: Kauder: Gays Have No Right to Children
» One Battle Won, Gay Rights Activists Shift Sights
» Totalitarianism and Education
» UK: Football Clubs’ Fury at ‘Sickening’ Plan for Minute’s Silence as Mark of Respect to Paedophile Who Killed Himself
» Virginian: Bar Gays From National Guard
 
General
» Climate Change CO2 Corruption Caravan Continues at Cancun, Commercially: You Must Pay for Your Sins
» Is Night Falling on Classic Solar Panels?

Financial Crisis


Europe Turns Against Germany

Germany’s controversial approach to fighting the euro crisis has split the European Union. Some countries are complaining about Berlin’s rigid course, while others accuse Chancellor Merkel of betraying the European project. The only thing they can agree on is that the EU needs Germany as a motor if it is to survive. By SPIEGEL Staff

Cooking is an art. François Vatel, a famous chef at the court of Louis XIV, was so distraught over his inability to serve a sufficiently delicious meal to the king that he committed suicide. At last week’s European Union summit in Brussels, the European leaders in attendance ruled out such risks from the start, by choosing in advance from a list of top chefs who had bid for the contract.

The menu that was served last Thursday in the European Council building on Schuman Square in Brussels had a distinctly Mediterranean flavor. It included gazpacho of red beets with king crab, sole Provencal with a tangy pea puree and, for dessert, Mallorcan pastries with passion fruit, all prepared by German Michelin-starred chef Gerhard Schwaiger, manager of the luxury restaurant “Tristan” on the Mediterranean resort island of Mallorca.

It was undoubtedly a coincidence, but the Germans also dominated the stage politically in Brussels, once again. The 26 other heads of state and government gave in to German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s demand to amend the EU’s Lisbon Treaty to include a permanent crisis fund, known as the stability mechanism, for the euro zone starting in 2013. Also at the chancellor’s request, they inserted a passage stating that the stability mechanism is only “to be activated if indispensable to safeguard the stability of the euro area as a whole.” The group also approved Germany’s demand that private lenders be involved in the event of a government bankruptcy.

“We came to an agreement,” a clearly pleased Merkel announced. “It was a good day for Europe.” The other summit participants had no choice but to make similar statements.

Simmering Conflict

This summit was supposed to send out signals of calm, levelheadedness and solidarity, if only to reassure the financial markets, but the unity was little more than a show. The conflict continued to simmer behind the scenes, especially the dispute over common euro-zone bonds. Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker campaigned for the idea once again, and he was backed by many of the attendees. But Merkel was quick to object, arguing that a system of euro bonds would reward spendthrift governments and penalize disciplined countries like Germany.

In short, nothing was resolved at the summit. The more the euro crisis expands into an existential crisis for the European Union, the more critical are other member states about Germany, the largest economy on the continent and the fourth largest worldwide. “This is all about Germany, and it’s all about the end of the German appetite for writing checks to the periphery of Europe,” said Harvard University historian Niall Ferguson in a recent CNN interview. British historian Timothy Garton Ash complains of a lack of vision. “It is much clearer today what Germany wants from Europe than what it wants for Europe,” he wrote in an op-ed for the Guardian.

Both comments imply that Germany is no longer the locomotive of European integration that it once was. In the last few decades, more and more countries joined the unification process, because they saw it as a road to common prosperity in peace and freedom…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: CBI Interest Rate Forecast: 3m Home Owners Could Struggle to Pay Mortgage

The CBI predicted that higher-than-expected inflation would force the Bank of England to raise rates as early as the Spring and that rates could rise by 2.25 percentage points — to almost six times the current rate — within two years. With mortgage rates set to follow, this could have dire consequences for the 7m home owners who currently have variable-rate home loans. According to the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML), about 2.9m home owners would have mortgages that are no longer deemed “affordable” according to guidelines set down by the City watchdog, the Financial Services Authority. Even if rate rises were more modest (between 1 and 2 percentage points), an estimated 1.6m mortgages would be deemed “unaffordable” according to the FSA guidelines. An interest rate rise of 2 percentage points would push up the cost of a £150,000 interest-only mortgage by £250 a month.

The usual advice for those worried about rate rises is to move to a fixed-rate deal, where the mortgage payment is guaranteed not to rise for a set period — usually two or five years. But with house prices sliding downwards, some home owners will find it difficult to secure one of these deals, because they don’t have enough equity in their home. The cheapest fixed-rate deals are currently available only to those with at least 40pc equity in their home. Those with less than 10pc equity are unlikely to be able to remortgage at all. According to the CML, nearly half a million mortgages have been granted since the start of 2007 to home owners with less than a 10pc deposit. Given that prices have fallen since then, it is likely that far more home owners will now have less than 10pc equity in their home, so will struggle to remortgage. It is feared that a perfect storm of rising interest rates, falling house prices and widespread job cuts in the public sector could lead to a rise in repossessions next year, as some families find themselves unable to meet mortgage repayments but unable either to remortgage or to downsize in order to clear their debts.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: House Prices ‘To Drop Seven Per Cent Next Year’ — Telegraph

Mortgage lending has seen a steep drop of 10 per cent during the past year as home buyers struggle to find affordable deals. Lenders have kept a tight rein on who they will lend to amid rising unemployment and fears that borrowers will default on their repayments. Figures from the Bank of England showed that only 45,000 mortgages were approved for house purchase by the major banks during November. The figure was slightly up on the 44,000 approvals seen in October and September, but it was still 26 per cent lower than November last year. The Trends in Lending report showed that advances for house purchase remained subdued at £5.6 billion.Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight, said: “This evidence of low — but possibly stabilising — housing market activity reinforces our belief that house prices will not crash but will trend down gradually to lose around 10 per cent from their peak 2010 levels by the end of 2011. “Given that house prices have already fallen by some 3 per cent overall in recent months, we believe that house prices will fall by around 7 per cent in 2011.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Unpopular Germany Faces ‘Unpleasant’ Years Ahead

Ahead of a crucial EU summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been attacked from all sides. While many in the European Union are berating Berlin for its seeming lack of solidarity, opposition leaders at home are accusing her of dithering and populism. German commentators warn of a rough road ahead.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel heads to the European Union summit on Thursday and Friday knowing that her country’s popularity in the rest of the EU is at its lowest ebb in decades. Berlin’s opposition to a number of proposals for dealing with the euro crisis, from Eurobonds to an increase in the euro zone’s bailout fund, has left many other member states questioning Germany’s solidarity with its struggling neighbors.

Berlin is seen as insisting on economic prudence and savings measures at a time when it is enjoying the benefits of an export boom while its indebted EU partners struggle to deal with spiralling debt crises. And some see Merkel’s insistence on a permanent crisis mechanism, which will be discussed at the summit, as having precipitated the need for the recent Irish bailout.

Yet Merkel is struggling to find a balance between meeting Germany’s commitments to its European partners and not antagonizing taxpayers at home who are loath to pay for what they see as the more profligate ways of some euro-zone states. Meanwhile she is also coming in for sharp criticism from the opposition at home over her handling of the crisis.

In a speech to the Bundestag on Wednesday, Merkel attempted to present herself as a good European on the eve of the summit. She declared that “nobody in Europe will be abandoned,” adding that “Europe only succeeds if we work together.” However opposition leaders lashed out at the chancellor, accusing her of dithering and lacking European solidarity.

Jürgen Trittin, one of the leaders of the Green’s parliamentary group, said Merkel was regarded as a “Teutonic savings-monster” throughout the euro zone. He accused her of being disorientated and of pandering to the popular press. He also blasted Merkel for having “swept a sensible idea off the table” when she rejected the Eurobonds suggestion.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier, parliamentary leader of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), attacked Merkel for not comprehending the seriousness of the crisis. Steinmeier, who had been foreign minister and deputy chancellor in the previous “grand coalition” between the SPD and Merkel’s Christian Democrats, reiterated the points he made Wednesday in an opinion piece he wrote for the Financial Times with former SPD Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück. In the op-ed, the politicians demanded a “more radical, targeted effort to end the current uncertainty” and they called for a partial restructuring of the debts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal, guarantees for the bonds of stable countries, and the limited introduction of pan-European bonds.

The German press on Thursday take another look at the euro crisis and the uncomfortable position that Germany now finds itself in.

The center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung writes:…

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

USA


Big Brother Tightens Choke Hold on Internet

U.N., FCC intensify efforts to regulate electronic speech

The United Nations is now joining the Obama administration and Democratic commissioners on the FCC in an attempt to regulate the Internet, Jerome Corsi’s Red Alert reports.

“The U.N. is reacting to concerns of member governments, including the United States, that the Internet has made companies like WikiLeaks possible, while the FCC is more concerned about conservative news outlets on the Internet that are increasingly undermining government attempts to control the news through sympathetic mainstream media outlets,” Corsi wrote.

“What is at stake is the future of electronic free-speech rights, as governments around the world realize how much less control government authorities have with a robust and critical press able to operate freely on the Internet.”

[…]

“Obviously, the U.N. is uncomfortable with anything like the Internet that the globalists cannot control,” Corsi wrote.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: Just Say NO to New START

The 111th Congress has been discredited by its arrogant disregard for the public and repudiated at the polls. President Obama and his allies in the Senate are, nonetheless, trying to use the lame duck session to get a “Zombie Senate” to foist on the American people right before Christmas a dangerous “New START” nuclear arms treaty with Russia. There are compelling reasons why the handful of Republican Senators who will decide whether this treaty is approved in its present form — under artificially constrained circumstances that allow minimal opportunity for informed debate — should just say “No.” Some of the most compelling include:

The treaty would leave the Russians with thousands more nuclear weapons than the United States when their ten-to-one advantage in “tactical” arms is factored in. Moreover, the Kremlin’s tactical weapons are mostly modern. Ours are, on average, over thirty-years old; some actually rely on vacuum tubes. Theirs are deployed forward near our allies and, in some cases, are being moved still closer in order to intimidate America’s friends. Meanwhile, our tactical bombs, artillery shells, etc. are no longer deployed aboard Navy ships and many of them are kept in the United States, and therefore are of limited, if any, deterrent value…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Justice Department Files Religious Discrimination Lawsuit Against Berkeley School District in Illinois

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department today announced it has filed a lawsuit against Berkeley School District, Berkeley, Ill., alleging that the school district violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by failing to reasonably accommodate the religious practices of Safoorah Khan, a Muslim teacher at McArthur Middle School.

The government’s complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois in Chicago, alleges that Ms. Khan requested an unpaid leave of absence in December 2008 to perform Hajj, a pilgrimage required by her religion. According to the complaint, Berkeley School District denied Ms. Khan’s request because the purpose of her leave was not related to her professional duties nor was it leave for any of the specific purposes set forth in the Professional Negotiations Agreement between the district and the teachers’ union. The United States further alleges that, because Berkeley School District denied her a religious accommodation, the district compelled Ms. Khan to choose between her job and her religious beliefs, and thus forced her discharge.

The lawsuit is based on a charge of discrimination filed by Ms. Khan with the Chicago District Office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). After investigating Ms. Khan’s charge, finding reasonable cause to believe that Berkeley School District had discriminated against Ms. Khan, and unsuccessfully attempting to conciliate the matter, the EEOC referred the charge to the Department of Justice. More information about the EEOC is available on its website at www.eeoc.gov.

In the lawsuit, the United States seeks an order requiring Berkeley School District to adopt a policy designed to reasonably accommodate the religious observances, practices and beliefs of employees and prospective employees. In addition, the United States seeks back pay, compensatory damages and reinstatement for Ms. Khan.

“Employees should not have to choose between their religious practice and their livelihood,” said Thomas Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. “Federal law prohibits employers from treating employees and applicants less favorably because of their religion, and requires employers to make reasonable accommodations for the religious beliefs and practices of their employees.”

“The EEOC is committed to ensuring that individuals are protected from religious discrimination at work,” said Jacqueline A. Berrien, Chair of the EEOC. “We are pleased to foster this important collaboration with the Department of Justice to enforce the laws that ensure our workplaces are free of bias.”

This is the first lawsuit brought by the Department of Justice as a result of a pilot project designed to ensure vigorous enforcement of Title VII against state and local governmental employers by enhancing cooperation between the EEOC and the Civil Rights Division.

The filing of the lawsuit reflects the Civil Right’s Divisions ongoing commitment to actively enforce federal employment discrimination laws. Additional information about the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice is available on its website at www.usdoj.gov/crt.

           — Hat tip: Freyja [Return to headlines]



King Abdullah Mulls Hospital Site for Ground Zero Mosque

King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, in an effort to quiet criticism of Muslims in the U.S., is quietly looking into moving the ground zero mosque to a less controversial Manhattan location, according to news reports Sunday.

New York City attorney Dudley Gaffin has contacted officials about the Saudi royal family’s interest in moving the mosque from its site, two blocks from the former World Trade Center and within the damage zone on Sept. 11, 2001, to the shuttered St. Vincent’s hospital campus in the West Village, the New York Post and other news organizations reported Sunday.

[…]

[Links to original stories are at the URL]

[Return to headlines]



NYC Mayor: King’s Radical Islam Hearings Not Right

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg says a New York congressman’s planned hearings on radical Islam are not appropriate.

Rep. Peter King said in an opinion piece in Sunday’s Newsday that he intends to “break down the wall of political correctness” in the debate about what he calls Islamic radicalization.

Bloomberg was asked Monday about King’s plans.

The mayor said he does not agree with King and said the hearings are not appropriate.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Obama Adopts U.N. Manifesto on Rights of Indigenous Peoples

President Obama announced Thursday that the U.S. would reverse the position of the Bush administration and become the last nation to drop its opposition to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Mr. Obama made the announcement to enthusiastic applause at the second White House Tribal Nations Conference, a gathering attended by representatives of the nation’s 565 recognized American Indian tribes.

[…]

John R. Bolton, a U.N. ambassador under President George W. Bush, called the announcement “exactly the kind of mushy, feel-good multilateralist gesture one would expect from President Obama.”

Objections to the declaration include its potential to conflict with U.S. law, its failure to define exactly who indigenous peoples are, and its support for tribes seeking claims on lands occupied hundreds of years ago…

[…]

[Return to headlines]



Poll Suggests Even ‘Moderate’ Muslims Have Extreme Beliefs

In his seminal book “America Alone”, Mark Steyn offered this definition of a “moderate Muslim”:

He’s a Muslim who wants stoning for adultery to be introduced in Liverpool, but he’s a “moderate” because he can’t be bothered flying a plane into a skyscraper to get it.

Ibn Warraq observed a similar trend: “There may be moderate Muslims, but Islam itself is not moderate.”

The word “moderate,” when used to describe Muslims, most often refers to the means by which they hope to achieve very extreme ends. Fundamentalist Islam is not moderate, though its followers may opt for moderate means of its imposition — i.e. something short of the indiscriminate slaughter of innocents.

But the means don’t make the ends any less extreme. And so it is a bit puzzling when pundits refer to people who want adulterers stoned as “moderates.” A refusal to take part in or condone terrorism doesn’t make medieval (literally) religious practices any less extreme.

So when Americans are told that Islam is not on a collision course with western civilization, since most Muslims are moderates, they rightly have some reservations, given the horrific practices many “moderate” Muslims apparently endorse.

Observe: according to the Pew Research Center, the Los Angeles Times reported earlier this month (shockingly, to little media fanfare), “A majority of Muslims around the world welcome a significant role for Islam in their countries’ political life.” And what would that “significant role” look like? Hint: it would not look “moderate”:

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Senate Republicans Join Democrats to Pass Food “Safety” Bill

The Democrats are at it again, this time under the cover of Sunday Night.

The infamous food “safety” bill that health freedom activists and their allies assumed was out for the session, has come blazing back to life from its near-death state late Sunday, thanks to a sell-out by Senate Republicans.

That’s right. S. 510, the Food Safety Modernization Act was stuck into a shell bill and passed unanimously just before the Senate adjourned for the day.

As reported by the Washington Post: “After a weekend of negotiations, tense strategy sessions and several premature predictions about the bill’s demise, [newly re-elected and confident] Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid, D-Nev., reached a deal with Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., that the GOP would not filibuster. [added]

“Without notice and in a matter of minutes Sunday evening, the Senate approved the bill by unanimous consent, sending it to the House, where passage is expected. President Obama has said he would sign the legislation, which would give the government far-reaching authority to set and enforce safety standards for farmers and food processors.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The FCC’s Threat to Internet Freedom

‘Net neutrality’ sounds nice, but the Web is working fine now. The new rules will inhibit investment, deter innovation and create a billable-hours bonanza for lawyers.

Tomorrow morning the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will mark the winter solstice by taking an unprecedented step to expand government’s reach into the Internet by attempting to regulate its inner workings. In doing so, the agency will circumvent Congress and disregard a recent court ruling.

How did the FCC get here?

For years, proponents of so-called “net neutrality” have been calling for strong regulation of broadband “on-ramps” to the Internet, like those provided by your local cable or phone companies. Rules are needed, the argument goes, to ensure that the Internet remains open and free, and to discourage broadband providers from thwarting consumer demand. That sounds good if you say it fast.

Nothing is broken that needs fixing, however. The Internet has been open and freedom-enhancing since it was spun off from a government research project in the early 1990s. Its nature as a diffuse and dynamic global network of networks defies top-down authority. Ample laws to protect consumers already exist. Furthermore, the Obama Justice Department and the European Commission both decided this year that net-neutrality regulation was unnecessary and might deter investment in next-generation Internet technology and infrastructure.

Analysts and broadband companies of all sizes have told the FCC that new rules are likely to have the perverse effect of inhibiting capital investment, deterring innovation, raising operating costs, and ultimately increasing consumer prices. Others maintain that the new rules will kill jobs. By moving forward with Internet rules anyway, the FCC is not living up to its promise of being “data driven” in its pursuit of mandates—i.e., listening to the needs of the market.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Great Islamophobic Crusade

Nine years after 9/11, hysteria about Muslims in American life has gripped the country.

With it has gone an outburst of arson attacks on mosques, campaigns to stop their construction, and the branding of the Muslim-American community, overwhelmingly moderate, as a hotbed of potential terrorist recruits. The frenzy has raged from rural Tennessee to New York City, while in Oklahoma, voters even overwhelmingly approved a ballot measure banning the implementation of Sharia law in American courts (not that such a prospect existed). This campaign of Islamophobia wounded President Obama politically, as one out of five Americans have bought into a sustained chorus of false rumors about his secret Muslim faith. And it may have tainted views of Muslims in general; an August 2010 Pew Research Center poll revealed that, among Americans, the favorability rating of Muslims had dropped by 11 points since 2005.

Erupting so many years after the September 11th trauma, this spasm of anti-Muslim bigotry might seem oddly timed and unexpectedly spontaneous. But think again: it’s the fruit of an organized, long-term campaign by a tight confederation of right-wing activists and operatives who first focused on Islamophobia soon after the September 11th attacks, but only attained critical mass during the Obama era. It was then that embittered conservative forces, voted out of power in 2008, sought with remarkable success to leverage cultural resentment into political and partisan gain.

This network is obsessively fixated on the supposed spread of Muslim influence in America. Its apparatus spans continents, extending from Tea Party activists here to the European far right. It brings together in common cause right-wing ultra-Zionists, Christian evangelicals, and racist British soccer hooligans. It reflects an aggressively pro-Israel sensibility, with its key figures venerating the Jewish state as a Middle Eastern Fort Apache on the front lines of the Global War on Terror and urging the U.S. and various European powers to emulate its heavy-handed methods.

Little of recent American Islamophobia (with a strong emphasis on the “phobia”) is sheer happenstance. Years before Tea Party shock troops massed for angry protests outside the proposed site of an Islamic community center in lower Manhattan, representatives of the Israel lobby and the Jewish-American establishment launched a campaign against pro-Palestinian campus activism that would prove a seedbed for everything to come. That campaign quickly — and perhaps predictably — morphed into a series of crusades against mosques and Islamic schools which, in turn, attracted an assortment of shady but exceptionally energetic militants into the network’s ranks.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Interstate Commerce Lie

The federal government was not designed to be a bureaucracy that had, for the most part, any direct effect on the populace of the country. In fact, the only power granted by the Constitution to the federal government lay in ensuring that government did not trespass against the citizens. It was the responsibility of the individual states to deal with the needs of the people. Federal legislative control was designed only to have jurisdiction within the District of Columbia and the areas ceded by the states to the federal government for forts, (and other federal sites as needed) or to make laws dealing with interstate commerce or dealing with foreign nations. Since the federal government was created, it has slowly and methodically grown in size and scope until it has permeated every aspect of our lives. Thomas Jefferson stated: “Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to take everything you have … The course of history shows that as a government grows, liberty decreases.” I believe the current federal position towards its citizens has proven this axiom to be all too true.

From the writings of the founding fathers, we know that the federal government’s powers, defined by the constitution, were to be limited and general and were not to be used against the citizens of the several states. James Madison, in Federalist 45 said, “The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined . . . to be exercised principally on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce.” Notice that all of these items deal with generalities of government and with national and foreign issues, not individual issues.

One premise I want to point out is that no authority/power can be legally granted to any office of the federal government that cannot be tied directly to the U.S. Constitution. Any law, power, or authority that cannot be tied directly to the Constitution is automatically reserved to the states or to the people, and the federal government is prohibited to exercise outside of this restriction. Secondly, it is the responsibility of the states and the people to keep watch and to correct the government if it steps outside of its authority.

[…]

The duty of government, in a republic, is the protection of the rights of its citizenry. The authority given to the central government is designed to give them the power they need to protect the nation from harm, ensure citizen’s rights are protected, and to ensure equitable trade between the states. To regulate interstate commerce has little to do with legislation and everything to do with open and free trade.

The federal government, over the years, has turned and twisted the meaning of “interstate commerce” and “general welfare” to fit their agenda and skirt around the Constitution to fit whatever agenda they desire. Nearly every federal NON-DOD agency has been created based upon the commerce and welfare clauses — FCC, DEA, FTC, DOE’s (Education and Energy), USDA, DOHHS, FDA, NIH, HUD, DOL, DOT (one of the few valid agencies), and many more.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Lakin Legacy & the Right-Left Hypocrisy

Now here’s an interesting lesson into the act of civil disobedience. Bomb the Pentagon, lead a domestic terrorist group that was responsible for 30 bombings, destruction of property and deaths, and suggest that you cannot rule out committing additional bombings, you become a folk hero of the radical left, a close confidant of a sitting president, and hold a position as a professor in higher academia.

Alternatively, give your country nearly 18 years of unblemished military service as a high ranking military officer until you request proof that the orders you are given are, in fact, made by someone with the ultimate authority to do so, you are stripped of your military rank, your liberties, your income, your pension, your freedom and are sentenced to Leavenworth.

Welcome to the new paradigm of civil disobedience, Chicago style, and where self-proclaimed conservative warriors are more AWOL than Lt. Col. Lakin on the issue of Obama’s Constitutional eligibility to hold office.

The Washington Examiner published a powerful article by columnist Diana West today about Lt. Col. Terry Lakin, the army surgeon who attempted to verify the Constitutional legitimacy of the deployment orders he received. For his efforts, however questionable in both tactic and venue, this highly decorated military leader was sentenced to serve time in Leavenworth. As Ms. West so eloquently concluded, the guilty verdict against Lt. Col. Lakin settles nothing, except, perhaps, that such challenges within the ranks will not be tolerated.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Thomas Jefferson First Fought Muslim Terrorists

In the earliest days of our Republic, without a formal declaration of war from Congress, Thomas Jefferson created the United States Navy and Marines and went to war against Muslim terrorists who were attacking American vessels, enslaving American seamen, and holding those seamen and American property hostage until ransom was paid. Our history thus provides a clear, illustrative example of how the President as Commander in Chief may direct the American military to destroy terrorists intent on taking American lives and property.

[…]

From 1785 to 1800, our country possessed a woefully inadequate military capability. During that time it was the policy of the United States to pay ransom to the leaders of Tripoli, Tunis, and Algiers in response to obtain the release of merchantmen and their property victimized by terrorist acts. Pirate ships from those countries operated on the Barbary Coast, capturing merchant ships, enslaving their crews, and then demanding ransom for their release.

In March 1785 Thomas Jefferson and John Adams met with Tripoli’s Ambassador Sidi Haji Abdul Rahman Adja. They asked the Ambassador why his nation waged war on American shipping. In a response that could have been given by Osama bin Laden, the Ambassador stated: “It was written in the Qu’ran that all nations which had not acknowledged the Prophet [Mohammed] were sinners, whom it was the right and duty of the faithful to plunder and enslave, and that every Muslim who was slain in this warfare was sure to go to paradise . . .”

In 1800, the U.S. paid the terrorists’ ransom, amounting to 20% of the U.S. government’s purse for that year. Thomas Jefferson was an outspoken critic of the payments and persuaded George Washington that it would be better to build an American Navy and Marine Corps than to suffer this humiliation. Following his 1801 inauguration, President Jefferson refused the ransom demands. He commissioned a group of frigates to go to the Mediterranean and defend America’s interests. He informed Congress of his actions but did not seek, and was not given, a formal declaration of war. Congress did authorize Jefferson “to cause to be done all such . . . acts of . . . hostility as the State of war will justify.” The USS Enterprise defeated the fourteen gun Tripoli in the first major engagement called for by Jefferson in August of 1801.

[…]

In a final engagement in April and May 1805, U.S. Marines led by General William Eaton sacked the Tripolitan city of Derma. The American conquest of that town is praised in the Marines’ Hymn: “. . . to the shores of Tripoli.” By employing the best military armaments the United States could marshal at the time, Jefferson achieved an end to the terrorist menace and a return to secure passage for our vessels in the Mediterranean. He created by his actions a precedent for all future chief executives, ensuring that America could promptly and with overwhelming force destroy any who would harm innocent Americans anywhere in the world.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



TSA Comes to D.C.’s Bus Stops

The security theater once exclusive to America’s airports is now playing at a local Metro station. Washington’s Metro Transit Police Department (MTPD) on Thursday announced new search policies developed in conjunction with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA). “It is important to know that implementation of random bag inspection is not a reaction to any specific threats toward the Metro system,” MTPD Chief Michael A. Taborn said in his announcement.

[…]

[Return to headlines]



TSA Needs to Link Groping Policy to Underwear Bomber

First the government said underwear bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was not a terrorist. Now bureaucrats say he is. Abdulmutallab’s shifting status says a lot about the politics of terrorism in the Obama administration…

[…]

[Be sure to click on URL to see pretty picture of Umar. He is linked in the caption to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula]

[Return to headlines]

Canada


Honour Killings in Canada: New Term, Old Idea

Canada has seen a number of high profile incidents involving the murder of a daughter or a sister by a male family member in South Asian or Middle Eastern communities. The term honour killing has been used to designate this particular phenomenon but just how widespread is this problem and is this problem only particular to those communities?

Aqsa Parvez On December 10, 2007 16 year old Aqsa Parvez was murdered by her brother with her father complicit. Both eventually pleaded guilty to second degree murder and were sentenced to life imprisonment with no eligibility for parole until 2028. Why did these two gentlemen do such a heinous act? To save family pride. The father felt he had to save his family from the embarrassment of his daughter.

According to the story, the family moved from Pakistan in 2002 and there started a clash of cultures between traditional Pakistan and modern Canada. Mr. Parvez imposed strict rules following a customary Muslim style of life which included women being subservient and dressing modestly in conventional clothes and a hijab. Aqsa rebelled demanding more freedom to dress in a “Western fashion”, not to wear the hijab and to have the same freedoms as other girls at school. Eventually the clash of the cultures turned into a clash between father and daughter and Mr. Parvez’s perception that he had lost control of the situation and his daughter.

According to a CBC article, Aqsa told a counsellor at her school in September 2007 that she was afraid her father wanted to kill her. That is a very strong statement to make. While the school arranged for her to live in a shelter, she only stayed 3 days before returning home. The conflict did not stop and finally on December 10, the father decided to put an end to his problem.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



More Than 100 Arab Christians in Canada Named on Al Qaida-Affiliated Website.

More than 100 Canadian-Arab Christians are listed on an al-Qaida affiliated website, apparently targeted because of their alleged role in attempting to convert Muslims. Some of those named say concerned Canadian intelligence officials have contacted them. The Shumukh-al-Islam website, often considered to be al-Qaida’s mouth piece, listed pictures, addresses and cell phone numbers of Coptic Christians, predominantly Egyptian-Canadians, who have been vocal about their opposition to Islam. In a forum on the website, one member named Son of a Sharp Sword, says “We are going to return back to Islam and all of the Mujahedeen (holy warriors) will cut off their heads.” Three pages of the fundamentalist, Arabic-language website titled “Complete information on Coptics” sets to “identify and name all of the Coptics throughout the world who hope to defame Islam,” The website calls the Coptic Christians living abroad “dogs in diaspora,” a derogatory reference in Arabic. Among those named on the Shumukh-al-Islam website is Samuel Tawadrus, a Coptic Egyptian living in Quebec. “This is a direct threat against our lives,” Tawadrus said in an interview. “They are trying to inform each other in hopes that someone can carry out this threat. They could be in Egypt and they could be here. Our names and our pictures are listed.” Tawadrus’s picture and cell phone number were listed on the site. One of the prominent figures listed on the website is Salim Nagieb, who helped establish a Coptic organization in Canada. Nagieb is described on the website as opposing Islamic Shariah and converting Muslims to Christianity. His picture, career background and cell phone number are listed on the website. But he said in an interview he won’t be frightened. “I only fear God,” said Nagieb when reached by phone. “These websites mean nothing any more.” Coptic Christians are predominantly a part of the Orthodox Church. Coptics are synonymous with Egypt and make up the largest Christian community in the Middle East. Sherif Mansour said he found out he was named on the web site when intelligence officials called him. “They asked me, ‘are you afraid?’ I said ‘Should I be?’“ said Mansour, who has run a business in Quebec for the past 22 years since emigrating from Egypt. Mansour laughed at the threat, but said he recognizes the seriousness of the matter.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


32% of British Muslim Students Support Killing for Islam; 40% Want Sharia Law

32% of British Muslim students support killing for Islam; 40% want Sharia Law. If the way young Muslims in Britain are feeling is any indication for America’s own Muslim community, then America better beware. According to a new survey done at 30 universities in Britain, the young Muslim student body in that country is extremely radicalized. The poll asked 600 Muslim students and 800 of their non-Muslim peers about politically touchy subjects like killing in the name of Islam and Sharia Law—and the results were like night and day between the two demographics. While hardly anyone in the non-Muslim sample accepted killing in the name of religion, basically one-third of all Muslim students in Britain supported this.

This frightening confirmation of the deadly and violent extremism in the young Muslims of Britain is also an indication of the utter failure of British society to both integrate as well as to better police their Muslim communities. The word “Londonistan” is often disparagingly used to symbolize the permissible Islamic extremism that goes down in Britain —with the once-proud but now impotent Brits basically turning a blind eye. In fact, because of this widespread radicalization problem in British universities among Muslims, said universities are actually becoming a training ground for terrorists like the Christmas bomber from last year.

In an ironic twist, this survey and its shocking poll results were made available only through the Wikileaks leaking of Julian Assange. The poll was revealed as part of a secret, diplomatic cable that emerged from the US Embassy in London.

Other results in the pro-Islamist survey results are also troublesome. For instance, more than half of all British Muslim students insist on being represented by a political party that is Islam-based. The clear-cut, overwhelming theme in this poll data from this leaked cable relates to the fact that many Muslims even in so-called civilized countries like Britain still want to relapse to the Middle Ages (or earlier, even) by making Islam central in all aspects of their true-believing lives.

If this doesn’t either stun you or make you react with a shudder at the reality of this massive and widespread, Islamic radicalism, then this statistic will.Muslims in Britain are the biggest non-Christian demographic in that country, and their growth rate (having a lot of babies, yes, they are) is staggering. Additionally, they are also profiled to be largely destitute, unskilled and uneducated—a perfect recipe for radicalism and hate of the West.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Anti-Terror Police Arrest 12 in UK Raids

Fear of Christmas bombing behind 5am raids to detain men aged 17-28 and searches of properties in four cities

Counter-terrorism detectives today arrested 12 people amid fears of a Christmas bombing attack in the UK.

The men, aged between 17 and 28, were held in Birmingham, Cardiff, London and Stoke-on-Trent on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in the UK, police said.

Searches at several properties began after the arrests, with detectives and forensic experts looking for any scientific evidence of materials that could be used to make explosives.

The counter-terrorism operation targeting some of those arrested had been under way for some time, and is described as “significant”. At least some of those arrested are believed to have been under surveillance.

The raids were launched “to take action in order to ensure public safety”, the country’s leading anti-terrorism officer, Assistant Commissioner John Yates, of the Metropolitan police, said.

“This is a large-scale, pre-planned and intelligence-led operation involving several forces,” Yates said. “The operation is in its early stages, so we are unable to go into detail at this time about the suspected offences.”

The home secretary, Theresa May, said: “I have been kept fully informed about the police operation that has resulted in 12 arrests. For obvious reasons it is not appropriate for me to comment further at this early stage of what could be a complex and lengthy investigation.”

“We know we face a real and serious threat from terrorism and I would like to thank the police and security service for working to keep our country safe.”

The closeness of Christmas appears to have been a factor, but it is not clear whether investigators were nervous because of any specific intelligence that an attack was imminent, or whether the “landmark” date made them anxious.

Last year, al-Qaida attempted a Christmas day attack on a plane travelling to Detroit in the US.

The arrests followed a long term undercover investigation led by MI5, according to counter-terrorism officials.

Those arrested were alleged to be involved in a serious plot, according to officials, indicating this was more than an operation designed only to disrupt or warn off suspects. Well-placed officials described the investigation as “significant”. Sources pointed to the balance MI5 and the police have to make between the potential danger to the public and a need to get sufficient intelligence and evidence to stand up in court. Also taken into account were the resources taken up in an investigation involving tracking the movements of 12 people.

Of those arrested today, five — aged 23, 23, 25, 26 and 28 — are from Cardiff, while three, aged 17, 20 and 28, are from London.

Four of the men — two 26-year-olds, a 19-year-old and a 25-year-old — are from Stoke. All 12 were arrested under the 2000 Terrorism Act. A number of the men are Bangladeshi. Intelligence was being gathered on the men until the arrests were made at 5am. Police said counter-terror officers were unarmed when they detained them…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Disputed Elections in Belarus

Europe’s Last Dictatorship Shows Violent Side

Officially, Belarus dictator Alexander Lukashenko won re-election with almost 80 percent of the vote on Sunday. The opposition, though, is accusing his government of massive fraud. Protesters in Minsk were savagely beaten and at least four opposition candidates have been arrested.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Nicolas Sarkozy to Target Muslim Prayers

NICOLAS Sarkozy will take another lurch to the Right with a speech on New Year’s Eve calling Muslim prayers in the street “unacceptable”.

After his expulsions of gypsies and a crackdown on immigrant crime, the French President will warn that the overflow of Muslim faithful on to the streets at prayer time when mosques are packed to capacity risks undermining the French secular tradition separating state and religion.

He will doubtless be accused of pandering to the far Right: the issue of Muslim prayers in the street has been brought to the fore by Marine Le Pen, the charismatic new figurehead of the National Front, who compared it to the wartime occupation of France.

Her words provoked uproar on the Left, whose commentators took them as evidence that far from being the gentler face of the far Right, Ms Le Pen, 42, is no different from Jean-Marie, 82, her father, who has been accused of racism and Holocaust denial.

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According to his aide, Mr Sarkozy agrees with the junior Le Pen that the street cannot be allowed to become “an extension of the mosque” as it does in some parts of Paris, which are closed to traffic because of the overflow of the faithful. Local authorities have declined to intervene, despite public complaints, because they are afraid of sparking riots.

“People overreacted to Marine Le Pen’s comments,” said the aide, referring to the furore in which she was accused of rabble-rousing racism. “She is right: this phenomenon is unacceptable.”

The tall, blonde Ms Le Pen is expected to succeed her father as head of the National Front at a party congress next month.

Her advance in the opinion polls reflects a trend all over Europe, where far-Right parties are benefiting from anti-immigrant sentiment and economic fears. As a more moderate voice than her father, Ms Le Pen is widely considered to be more effective and the nightmare scenario for Mr Sarkozy is that he might be knocked out of the race during the first round of the presidential election in 2012. The run-off would then be staged between the two first-round winners: Ms Le Pen and a Socialist candidate…

           — Hat tip: GB [Return to headlines]



Germany: WikiLeaks Cable Embarrasses Left Leader

The Left party’s parliamentary leader Gregor Gysi was left with some explaining to do after an American diplomatic cable revealed he apparently told US Ambassador Philip Murphy that his party’s opposition to NATO was only for show.

According to news magazine Der Spiegel, Gysi told Murphy that The Left party’s official policy on NATO — that it should be abolished and replaced by a new security alliance including Russia — was only a ruse to prevent a more dangerous policy — Germany’s withdrawal from the alliance — from gaining ground in the party.

Gysi was reportedly in “a sociable and chatty mood” when he made the claim, saying that The Left’s official policy was unrealistic anyway, as the dissolution of NATO would require the agreement of the US, France and Britain.

Moderates in The Left party now fear that Gysi’s loose talk might lead party extremists to renew calls for Germany to leave NATO.

Gysi himself said he cannot remember what was said during his conversation with Murphy, but suggested there may have been translation difficulties, since “the conversation was in German.”

But Gysi vehemently denied another accusation in the leaked cable: that he boasted he alone was responsible for The Left party’s recent success in Germany. “That is definitely wrong,” he said.

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



Germany: Leftists Called Upon to Attack Tourism

Left-wing extremists are being urged to launch a 2011 campaign against Berlin’s tourism boom by attacking hotels and tourist buses, as well as targeting visitors for petty theft, media reported Monday.

The latest edition of the left-wing radical newspaper Interim contains a “proposal for an anti-tourism campaign 2011,” daily Der Tagesspiegel reported.

The campaign would include “swiping wallets and phones from tables in restaurants, setting fire to cars, attacking hotels, creating rubbish piles, throwing things at tourist buses.”

The author of the statement in the paper argues that tourism is fuelling “gentrification,” which is a growing complaint among the city’s left-wing radicals, who argue that rising affluence can push poorer people out of districts in which they have lived for years.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Germany: Life Without Islam Means Road to Hell?

German Islamists predicted hellish torment for the German Chancellor if she does not accept Islam. Is Angela Merkel threatened only by Muslim hell or is she a candidate to hell from a Christian perspective as well? And what is hell? Hieromonk Nikanor (Lepeshev), a teacher of the Khabarovsk Theological Seminary, talked about it with Pravda.ru.

If you die without accepting Islam, you will go to hell forever and will be there to suffer torments worse than you can imagine, says a video message of a radical Muslim association, The Invitation to Paradise to Angela Merkel and the heads of security agencies in Germany, quoted by Blagovest-info with a reference to Spiegel magazine.

The members of the Islamist group believe that Islam is not just the only way to ensure that the soul gets a prosperous fate after death, but the only proper form of government. Employees of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (the German intelligence services engaged in surveillance of extremist groups in Germany) consider that the leader of The Invitation to Paradise Pierre Vogel promotes the idea of jihad through his radical sermons. German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere does not rule out that in the future the activities of the association The Invitation to Paradise may be outlawed.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Greece: Laos: Germany’s War Debt is 162 Bln Euros

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, DECEMBER 14 — According to Costis Aivaliotis, spokesman of Laos, a small far-right Greek party, Germany’s war debt to Greece totals 162 billion euros. The problem of compensating war damage by Germany has always remained open for the government, said Finance Undersecretary Filippos Sahinidis in Parliament, answering a parliamentary question from the Laos spokesman, without specifying if or when the Greek government will undertake a concrete initiative in this direction. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Prosecutors Request 16.5 Year Jail Term for Thyssenkrupp Steelworks CEO

Turin, 14 Dec. (AKI) — At a landmark trial in the northern city of Turin, prosecutors on Tuesday requested Thyssenkrupp steelworks’ CEO in Italy, Harald Espenhahn, be jailed for 16 and a half years over the deaths of seven workers in a fire at the company’s Turin plant in 2007.

Espenhahn, is charged with the equivalent of murder — the first such case to be brought in Italy.

Public prosecutor Raffaele Guariniello asked for Espenhahn be sentenced to 16.5 years in jail for “voluntary homicide with possible intent”.

Espenhahn’s lawyer Ezio Audisio called the sentence requested by Guariniello “excessive and absurd.”

Espenhahn is one of six executives on trial over the deadly blaze.

Prosecutors asked for jail terms of 13.5 years for four other managers charged with manslaughter, and nine years for a fifth manager.

He also asked the court to fine Thyssenkrupp 1.5 million euros, ban it from advertising its products for a year and exclude it from all tax breaks and subsidies.

The tragedy at the German steelmaker’s Turin factory prompted widespread calls in Italy for improved workplace safety.

One worker died immediately in the fire, while the other six died later in the hospital from their burns.

Some of the victims’ relatives, who attended Tuesday’s packed hearing, said prosecutors should have asked for life sentences for the defendants.

The German multinational has denies that it failed to keep adequate fire-fighting systems in place at the plant.

Relatives of the seven workers reportedly reached a compensation deal with Thyssenkrupp in June 2009 worth a total 12.97 million euros.

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



Italy: Ivorian Gets Final Conviction for Meredith Murder

Guede ruling raises pressure on Knox, Sollecito legal teams

(ANSA) — Rome, December 17 — An Ivory Coast native has become the first of three defendants to receive a final conviction for the 2007 murder of British exchange student Meredith Kercher in Perugia.

Rudy Guede, 23, saw a 16-year term confirmed at his second and final appeal, at the supreme court of Cassation, on Thursday evening.

The high court rejected Guede’s contention there was insufficient forensic evidence against him, saying “conspicuous traces” of his DNA had been found on Kercher’s body.

Guede had 14 years knocked off his original 30-year sentence by an appeals court last year.

The other two persons convicted of the murder are American student Amanda Knox and her Italian ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito.

Last month Knox’s and Sollecito’s first appeal began in Perugia against 26-year and 25-year sentences respectively.

Legal experts said the Guede verdict would increase the pressure on Knox’s and Sollecito’s legal teams who are also arguing that forensic evidence against them presented at the first trial was weak.

Guede opted for a fast-track procedure to avoid being tried alongside Knox and Sollecito over fears that their defence teams would try to blame him for the murder.

He was accused of trying to rape Kercher while Knox and Sollecito allegedly held her down before the British student’s throat was cut.

Guede said that he met Kercher on the night of her murder, November 1, 2007.

He said he and Kercher had spent a quarter of an hour together at her house, but not had sex, before he went to the bathroom and allegedly heard Knox return and start arguing about money.

He said he then started listening to music on his I-pod but then heard a “piercing scream”.

Guede said he was attacked by a male figure he could not identify who tried to stab him, and then fled the house.

Afterwards, he claims to have returned to Kercher’s bedroom and tried to stop the blood from the knife wound in her throat.

Guede then said he went into a “state of shock” and fled the country. He was arrested in Germany a few days after the murder.

Police said they were led to him by a bloody handprint found on a pillow beneath Kercher’s body, which Guede says he left while trying to stem her bleeding.

Investigators later found traces of his DNA on Kercher’s body and a bloody footprint in the hallway matching his shoe size.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



More Problems in Europe, Snowfall in France

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 20 — The wave of bad weather which is still hitting central Europe is giving rise to serious inconveniences for transport. In France, where snow continues to fall, 21 departments in the north and central part of the country, including that of Paris, are in a state of alert due to snowfall and ice, and have called a halt to the circulation of heavy transport vehicles.

In the capital’s airports, Roissy-Charles de Gaulle and Orly, the general director’s office of the Civil Aviation has asked companies to call off 30% of the day’s flights to facilitate the clearing of the runways and the aircraft of snow and ice.

Problems are also seen in the Lyon airport, where yesterday over 2,000 passengers were stuck.

Extensive delays are also being seen for trains, which across the entire French network have had to reduce their speed to 170 KM/H. Also halted for a number of house was the section between Paris and Caen in Lower Normandy due to problems with electricity supply.

There are also problems today at Rome’s Fiumicino airport, where some flights for northern Europe have been cancelled due to the snow which for days has been paralysing the airports of Germany, France and Great Britain. In Fiumicino between the hours of 7am and 2pm, there have been two flights for London cancelled already and two others which were to have arrived, as well as two flights from Frankfurt and two — one arrival and one departure — for Paris. Other flights, both coming from and going to these destinations have been delayed.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Political Heavyweights Linked With Gulen Movement

AMSTERDAM, 21/12/10 — Alexander Rinnooy Kan and Agnes Jongerius have resigned from an advisory council of a Turkish organisation following media reports showing that it has links with the controversial Fethullah Gulen movement.

Rinnooy Kan has stepped down from the committee of recommendation of the Turkish-Dutch youth boarding school De Witte Tulp. He is thereby following the example of FNV chairwoman Jongerius who already departed last month, civil servants journal Binnenlands Bestuur reports.

The same journal last month published an article showing that De Witte Tulp had links with the Islamic Gulen movement. This movement of preacher Fethullah Gulen says it works in the Netherlands for the development of Turkish youth. But according to a number of experts, this is only a front for the disintegrative policy of Islamisation for which Gulen is allegedly aiming.

Rinnooy Kan is chairman of the Socio-Economic Council (SER) A survey by De Volkskrant selected him last week as the second most powerful person in the Netherlands. Jongerious ended up seventh on the list. She is chairwoman of the FNV union federation.

According to Binnenlands Bestuur, the Gulen movement abhors homosexuality and puts men above women. Although he has resigned as advisor to De Witte Tulp, Rinnooy Kan is continuing to link his name with the Science Festival organised annually by De Witte Tulp in Amsterdam’s Nemo science centre.

Integration Minister Piet Hein Donner has meanwhile promised the Lower House to look once again at whether government subsidies go to organisations linked with the Gulen movement. He does not consider further investigation of the movement itself necessary because freedom of religion would in any case make a ban impossible.

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



Netherlands: MP to Lead PVV Provincial Election Campaign in Noord-Holland

MP Hero Brinkman is to lead the provincial election campaign in Noord-Holland for the anti-Islam PVV.

Brinkman told reporters it is possible to combine the two functions by being well organised.

Top of the party’s plans for the province are a ban on Islamic headscarves for civil servants and an end to provincial council subsidies for integration projects.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Swedish Fatwa Council Condemns Bomb Attack

The Swedish Fatwa Council (Svenska Fatwarådet) condemned on Sunday the recent suicide bombing in central Stockholm, while the Swedish Security Service (Säpo) has confirmed that it believes the attacker was acting alone.

A number of imams issued a fatwa, calling the attack in central Stockholm on December 11th “deplorable” and “reprehensible.”

Moderate Muslims reject all forms of extremism and fundamentalist interpretations of Islamic teachings, laws and practices. Destruction, the spread of fear, terror and killings have nothing to do with Islam, the imams wrote on Sunday in the fatwa.

“Muslim institutions around the world have already written about this for a long time. In Sweden, we don’t accept terrorism and refuse violence,” Mahmoud Khalfi, the spokesman for religious affairs of the Islamic Association in Sweden (Islamiska Förbundet i Sverige), told The Local on Monday.

Separately, the Swedish Security Service (Säkerhetspolisen, Säpo) announced on Sunday that there are still no indications that the suicide bomber, widely believed to be Tranäs native Taimour Abdulwahab, worked with any accomplices in the attack.

On Sunday, Säpo announced that it had no new information with which to proceed with the investigation of the suicide attack.

“So far, there is nothing to suggest he had an accomplice, but we are working with an open mind,” Säpo press secretary Sara Kvarnström said on Sunday.

In addition, it is also unclear when the analyses and investigations of the crime scenes and the findings will be completed.

The stream of tips from the public has also waned, while the wave of false rumours and warnings of new bombings that have flourished on Facebook and spread by SMS appears to have declined.

“It is not a big problem,” said Säpo spokeswoman Ulrika Hjerpe.

The police will continue to enhance its presence on the streets and in public areas throughout the country.

“We want to be seen. Not because there is an increased risk, but because there are many who are worried,” said Hjerpe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: 12 Men Arrested in Anti-Terror Raids

Twelve men have been arrested during a major anti-terrorist operation, West Midlands Police said.

The men — five from Cardiff, four from Stoke-on-Trent and three from London — were detained on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in the UK.

The suspects, aged between 17 and 28, were detained by unarmed officers about 0500 GMT.

Officers are now conducting searches at the men’s homes and other addresses.

West Midlands Police said in a statement: “All were arrested at or near their home addresses, with the exception of one suspect from Stoke who was at a domestic property in Birmingham.

“Searches are now being conducted at the home addresses, plus the address in Birmingham and another residence in London.

“The suspects will be held at police stations in central London, the North West and the West Midlands.”

Unarmed officers

Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner John Yates, national lead for counter-terrorism policing, said it was a “large-scale, pre-planned, intelligence-led” operation involving several forces.

“The operation is in its early stages so we are unable to go into detail at this time about the suspected offences,” he said.

“However, I believe it was necessary at this time to take action in order to ensure public safety.”

The BBC’s Danny Shaw said counter-terrorism sources had described the operation as significant and it was related to an investigation into al-Qaeda-inspired terrorism.

“The suspects are believed to have been involved in a plot against targets in the UK,” he said. “This is not believed to have been a potential plot of a Mumbai-style attack, but a plot involving explosives or bombs.”

Our home affairs correspondent said the officers who arrested the men were unarmed, suggesting the police felt there was no serious threat against them.

He added that it was probably not an imminent plot and some of the suspects were from Bangladesh.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Anti-Terror Police Arrest 12 People in Nationwide Raids

The men — five from Cardiff, four from Stoke and three from London — were detained on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in Britain. Aged between 17 and 28, the suspects were detained at approximately 5am. Police believe the plotters were planning to set off a number of bombs in “multiple locations”, according to reports. Theresa May, the Home Secretary, was fully briefed on the raids before they took place. This afternoon, standing outside New Scotland Yard, Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner John Yates said it was “absolutely vital” that the public remained vigilant. Mr Yates said: “We are also searching a large number of premises and I expect that these searches will take some time to complete. “The operation is in its early stages so I am unable to go into any detail at this time as I do not wish to say anything that may prejudice any future legal proceedings. “However, what I would say is that with the current threat level in the UK at severe and with the information we have, I believe today’s arrests were absolutely necessary in order to keep the public safe.” All the arrested men were held at or near their home addresses, with the exception of one suspect from Stoke who was at a domestic property in Birmingham. It is understood that the raids were carried out by unarmed police, indicating that they did not expect to meet violent resistance. Searches are now being conducted at the home addresses, plus the address in Birmingham and another residence in London. The suspects will be held at police stations in Central London, the North West and the West Midlands. Home Secretary Theresa May said the UK faces “a real and serious threat from terrorism” and thanked the police and security service for keeping the country safe. “I have been kept fully informed about the police operation that has resulted in 12 arrests,” she said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Anti-Terror Squad Arrest 12 Men ‘Planning UK Terror Attack’: Christmas Plot at Advanced Stage, Say Police

Twelve men were arrested early this morning in a major national counter-terrorism operation, police said today.

The men — five from Cardiff, four from Stoke-on-Trent and three from London — were detained on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in the UK.

The suspects, aged between 17 and 28, were detained by unarmed officers at approximately 5am.

It is understood that the plans for the alleged attacks were at an advanced stage and involved ‘multiple’ locations.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Former Birmingham Judge Who Called Muslim Colleague ‘Tent Head’ Fined £10,000

A FORMER judge has been fined £10,000 by a solicitors’ watchdog after labelling a female Muslim colleague a ‘tent head’. Stephen Jones also called legal assistant Saleca Faisal-Parkar “Mother Teresa” in emails to colleagues at their Warwickshire law firm, Shakespeare Putsnam. And the mum-of-one was labelled ‘lazy’ by the high-flying solicitor, who was also a deputy district judge. Mrs Faisal-Parker, from Great Barr, Birmingham, received a £75,000 payout two years ago following an employment tribunal. She had claimed discrimination on the grounds of her race and sex, religious beliefs and pregnancy. Now Mr Jones has been slapped with a £10,000 fine by the Solicitor Disciplinary Tribunal over the allegations, as well as being ordered to pay £8,000 costs. “The outcome of the hearing was that Mr Jones was told to pay a total of £18,000,” said a spokesman for the watchdog. “This was a fine of £10,000 and £8,000 costs.” Mr Jones had resigned as a district judge and as a member of the Solicitors’ Disciplinary Panel after the case in 2008.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Harry Potter Star ‘Beaten After Meeting Non-Muslim Man’

Victim Afshan Azad, 22, played Padma Patil, a classmate of the teenage wizard, in the blockbuster Hollywood films based on the children’s books by JK Rowling. She was assaulted and branded a “prostitute” after meeting a young Hindu man, a relationship which brought anger from her father, Abul Azad, 53, and brother, Ashraf, 28, Manchester Crown Court heard. The frightened actress later fled through her bedroom window after threats were made to kill her. But despite attempts to get her to come to court for the trial of her father and brother, Miss Azad would not attend voluntarily, the court was told. Both men were charged with making threats to kill her and her brother was also charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm on his sister. Instead of both going on trial today, the prosecution decided to accept a guilty plea of assault by her brother, and both men were formally found not guilty of making threats to kill. Her father accepted to be bound over to keep the peace for 12 months. Miss Azad’s character was a witch who was in the same year as Harry Potter, played by Daniel Radcliffe, at Hogwarts School Of Witchcraft And Wizardry. She first appeared as her character, the identical twin sister of Parvati Patil, in Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire She also starred in Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows, the final film in the saga. Richard Vardon QC, prosecuting, told the court: “The incident took place on Saturday 21st of May at the home address of the family on Beresford Road in Longsight, Manchester. “The prosecution allegation in essence is she was the victim of a wholly unnecessary and unpleasant assault by her brother. “The reason for the assault, apparently her association with a Hindu young man, that apparently being disapproved of by her family who are Muslim. “Specifically she spoke not only of assault but also threats to kill, made jointly by her father and brother.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Hackers Steal English Defence League Membership List

A controversial anti-Islamist group has told its members to be “vigilant” after their details leaked online.

Hundreds of names and addresses linked to the English Defence League have been circulated on the web after hackers broke in to one of the organisation’s websites.

In a warning to members, the group said it feared the potential for reprisals.

Those affected should “remain extra vigilant where their home and personal safety is concerned,” it said.

The security breach began last weekend, when a clothing website linked to the organisation was accessed by hackers.

The attackers, who claimed to be part of a group called the “Mujahideen Hacking Unit”, obtained lists of those who had recently bought items from the site or donated money to the group.

The EDL has risen to prominence in the last year by staging a number of protests against what it calls the “Islamification” of Britain. While it says it is not racist or anti-Muslim, opponents such as United Against Fascism say the group’s agenda is blatantly Islamophobic.

The case has been referred to the police, but in a statement the EDL apologised to members concerned about their safety.

“We don’t anticipate any problems as these types of data theft are usually committed to cause annoyance rather than having any other ulterior motive,” the group said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Harry Potter Actress Was ‘Beaten and Branded a Prostitute by Her Family After Dating Man Who Was Not a Muslim’

A Harry Potter actress was beaten, called a ‘slag’ and threatened with death by members of her family after she met a young man who was not a Muslim, a court heard today.

Victim Afshan Azad, 22, played Padma Patil, a classmate of the teenage wizard, in the blockbuster Hollywood films based on the children’s books by JK Rowling.

She was assaulted and branded a ‘prostitute’ after meeting a young Hindu man, a relationship which brought anger from her father, Abul Azad, 53, and brother, Ashraf, 28, Manchester Crown Court heard.

The frightened star, who has featured in four of the popular films, later fled through her bedroom window after threats were made to kill her.

But despite attempts to get her to come to court for the trial of her father and brother, Miss Azad, who is believed to be living with friends in London, would not attend voluntarily, the court was told.

Both men were charged with making threats to kill her and her brother was also charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm on his sister.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Mastermind of £800,000 People Trafficking Ring Which Helped More Than 100 Asylum Seekers Sneak Into Britain Could be Freed Within Months

The mastermind behind an £800,000 people trafficking ring which helped more than 100 asylum seekers sneak into Britain could be freed within months.

Iranian-born Ferzad Pezeshk, 39, arranged fake passports and flight tickets for fellow countrymen and Afghans and wired funds around the globe.

His gang charged between £5,000 and £12,000 to smuggle people out of their homelands, offering scheduled stop-offs at hotels in the Arab Emirates, Turkey, Italy, Greece, Norway, France and Sweden.

He was jailed today for five years but he is likely to only serve only half the term — minus the 794 days he has already served on remand — meaning he could be freed in four months.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Stockholm Bomber’s Mosque Website Carries Links to Extremist Preacher

Luton Islamic Centre site’s links to speeches by Bilal Philips, who was barred from Britain by home secretary in July for his views

The website of the British mosque where the Stockholm bomber worshipped carries links to comments used to justify suicide attacks, and material expounding antisemitism and homophobia. Preachers at the Luton Islamic Centre told last week how they had tackled Taimour Abdulwahab al-Abdaly, 28, the suicide bomber who blew himself up in Stockholm last weekend, over his extremist views.

However, the centre’s website carries a link to a lecture by Dr Bilal Philips, a Muslim preacher who was barred from entering Britain by the home secretary in July because of his extremist views. Philips’s speech includes a passage during which he says that a person who kills him or herself is motivated by different instincts to those of a suicide bomber. “When you look at the mind of the suicide bomber, it’s a different intention altogether,” he says. Suicide is generally considered to be against Islamic law.

Philips added that the suicide bomber had made a military decision based on the defences of the enemy. He says: “The [enemy] is either too heavily armed, or they don’t have the type of equipment that can deal with it, so the only other option they have is to try to get some people amongst them and then explode the charges that they have to try to destroy the equipment and to save the lives of their comrades. “So this is not really considered to be suicide in the true sense. This is a military action and human lives are sacrificed in that military action. This is really the bottom line for it and that’s how we should look at it.”

Abdaly, who showed up at the Luton mosque in 2007, blew himself up in a busy shopping street in Stockholm last Saturday after sending an email urging Muslims to avenge the deaths of civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan. Swedish police are investigating the theory that one of several devices that he was carrying went off prematurely and are also exploring the possibility that he was part of a wider cell. Qadeer Baksh, chairman of the Luton Islamic Centre, said Philips had made some “errors” in his speech. “He’s talking about a military operation; he’s made an error by calling it suicide bombing. He’s talking about troops, not innocent people,” he said.Baksh added that it was also wrong to encourage suicide. “The enemy have to kill him, he cannot kill himself by his own hands. That is an error. He’s called it suicide bombing but it’s not suicide bombing, it’s a military tactic. I will definitely take [the website link] down immediately. I’m glad you brought that to my attention,” he added.

However Haras Rafiq, director of Centri, an organisation that specialises in countering extremism, said: “I do not blame the Luton Islamic Centre for the terrorist attacks in Stockholm but how on earth were they going to prevent al-Abdaly from blowing himself up when messages on their own website justify the concept of suicide bombing as an operational military tactic?” Iraqi-born Abdaly appeared at the Luton mosque during Ramadan in 2006 or 2007 and was confronted by mosque organisers including Baksh who believed they had talked Abdaly round to a more moderate position. Abdaly, who was a student at the University of Bedfordshire in Luton between 2001 and 2004 and continued to live in the town after graduating, is believed to have proposed a “physical jihad”.

Revelations that the mosque’s website carried inflammatory statements from Philips will foster fresh speculation over where Abdaly was initially radicalised. Critics have also questioned why the mosque did not inform police of its concerns about his radical beliefs, raising new questions about the effectiveness of the government’s Prevent counter-terror strategy, which is supposed to engage communities and identify potential extremists. The mosque defended its position by saying Muslims with extreme views like Abdaly can change to become “good balanced Muslims”

[…]

Philips, who says he opposes al-Qaida, was banned by Theresa May from entering Britain on the grounds that his presence was “not conducive to the common good”. His previous speeches include claims that there is no such thing as rape in marriage and that the death penalty is an option for punishing homosexuals and adulterers. The preacher was banned from Australia in 2007 over his “support for extremist Islamic positions” and has, in the past, admitted he is on the US blacklist that bans extremists.

Other contentious material found on the Luton Islamic Centre’s site includes one publication on its website last week called “gay history and gay pride” that expounded homophobic views such as “sodomy is one of the most repulsive acts, even observed among beasts”, and said homosexuals should be executed. Another was called “the prophesy of the utter destruction of the yahood [Jews] will only occur at the hands of the true worshippers of Allaah” in which Jews who try to make peace are portrayed as deceivers.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: Organ Trafficking; Press, Money in Accounts in Europe

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, DECEMBER 17 — The money earned from organ trafficking in Kosovo at the end of 1990s, which a report by the Council of Europe attributes to, amongst others, current premier, Hashim Thaci, was deposited in bank accounts in Switzerland, Germany, Albania and other European countries, which could serve as evidence against Thaci. This is what has been reported by Belgrade daily newspaper Blic. The newspaper reports that these accounts have been traced thanks to work both by the team of investigators from Serbia’s Office of the War Crimes Prosecutor and by the American FBI, working to investigate the financing of extremist Islamic groups after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US.

The accounts are held in the names of individuals, but also humanitarian organisations, used as a front to cover up criminal activity. In his report presented yesterday in Paris, the Council of Europe investigator, Dick Marty, states that Kosovar Premier Hashim Thaci — former leader of the Kosovo Liberation Army (UCK) in the 1990s — was head of a criminal organisation that, in addition to trafficking human organs, also smuggled drugs and weapons. Thaci has totally rejected the accusations.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Terrorism: 6 Bosnian Muslims Indicted

(ANSAmed) — SARAJEVO, DECEMBER 17 — The Bosnian prosecutor’s office today officially charged six Bosnian Muslims with the attack, on June 27 of this year, on the police station in Bugojno, central Bosnia, killing a police agent and injuring five of them. The news was reported by the public prosecutor’s office in Sarajevo. According to the investigators, Haris Causevic (26 years old), Adnan Haracic (23), Naser Palislamovic (36), and their accomplices Emin Osmanagic (27), Haris Spago (40) and Nedzad Kesko (37), are members of a small but active group of Wahhabis, who profess a radical Islam, of Saudi origins. According to the prosecution, the attackers knew that there would be many policemen in the station on the moment of the attack due to security preparations for the visit of thousands of people to the Muslim sanctuary of Ajvatovica in the nearby village of Prusac. The visit and celebration are unacceptable for the Wahhabi movement. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt Attempts to Convict Christian to Justify Muslim Riots

by Mary Abdelmassih

(AINA) — The high profile criminal trial of 21-year-old Christian Copt Girgis Baroumi, accused of sexually assaulting a Muslim girl, is viewed by the Coptic community as an example of how the Egyptian government, using all its organs, including the Attorney General, Interior Minister and Parliament Speaker, has conspired to use him as a scapegoat to justify deadly Muslim assaults on Christians.

Girgis Baroumi, a traveling poultry vendor, is believed to have been framed by State Security (AINA 1-28-2010) in order to use the crime as a pretext for the 3-day rampage by Muslim mobs on Christians in Farshout in November 2009 (AINA 11-22-2009), and most importantly to depict the Christmas Eve Massacre of six Copts in Nag Hammadi in January 2010 as an honor crime rather than a sectarian one.

The criminal court in Qena witnessed on December 13 another stormy session when Baroumi’s defense team withdrew from the trial to protest the court’s rejection of several requests made to the court over the year, which are vital to prove the defendant’s innocence. “This decision was taken in view of these and other requests made at previous sessions, which indicated the lack of a fair and just trial for the accused,” said Dr. Chafik, one of the team attorneys who withdrew from the case. “The direction of the court towards the case is not inclined towards Baroumi’s innocence but have closely associated it with the crime of Nag Hammadi..”

Although the defense team withdrew from the trial the court insisted the defense present its case, so four of the attorneys present withdrew in protest and three remained to plead. “If they all withdrew as intended, the court would appoint other lawyers who might damage the case,” said defense attorney George Sobhy.

The Defense had requested an independent medical examination of the defendant, a certificate from the conscription department with the results of his medical examination which led to his rejection from conscription and a survey by court of the crime scene.

All three requests were rejected by the court. “To us it feels like the case is taking a religious orientation and the court plans to hand down a guilty verdict, despite the lack of any evidence, material or otherwise, to convict him,” said defense attorney Dr. Siham Abdel-Malak.

Dr. Chafik expressed concern regarding the prosecutor using inflammatory religious language during the proceedings. “The prosecutor accused Baroumi of being the cause of the sectarian strife which took place in Farshout in November 2009, as well as the death of the Copts on Coptic Christmas Eve [Nag Hammadi Massacre] in January 2010, as we predicted all along that he would.”

He said the prosecutor cited a more recent case of Al-Nawahed village, “saying that those who cause sectarian strife ought to be killed or crucified — invoking Sharia Hirabah Penalty. These discriminatory religious expressions in punishment, as well as religious discrimination in criminal proceedings, require us to take a stance, in order to combat religious discrimination in criminal justice.”

Attorney Dr. Hanna Hanna said “The prosecutor’s statements included some Islamic terms that are far away from the terms of criminal law.”

Sobhy believes there are certain forces at play to get Baroumi convicted.. “If the court does not change its attitude, we expect Girgis Baroumi to be given the maximum penalty.”

           — Hat tip: Mary Abdelmassih [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Family Tensions Keep Son in Check

A few days ago Saif al-Islam, son and heir apparent of Libyan leader Muammer Gaddafi, issued a curious statement which seemed designed to set the record straight. “Several press reports have suggested that I’ve been involved in a power struggle with my brothers behind the scenes… There is nothing of the sort,” he said. “I have an excellent relationship with my family.”

He went on to clarify that he and the secretary-general of Libya’s council of ministers were not “two faces of the same coin” — in other words Saif had nothing to do with the running of the Libyan government. Nor was he the owner of a media group that has been the target of a recent security clampdown, but merely a “supporter”, he insisted.

And finally, and also contrary to press reports, Saif had not recently bought an expensive home in London. “Like any visitor, I stay in hotels when in London, and I can only imagine that such unsubstantiated rumours are designed to imply profligate or wasteful spending habits.”

When someone goes into such great detail to explain himself the suspicion is that he must be in serious trouble. But then Saif’s statement came two days after a shock announcement from the charity he has used as a platform to advocate more liberal policies. The Gaddafi International Charity and Development Foundation said it was giving up the promotion of human rights and political reform to focus on helping the poor in Africa.

Reading the dynamics of the opaque, erratic Libyan regime, let alone the rivalries within the Gaddafi family, is a difficult task. Yet last week most observers reached the same conclusion. The Gaddafi Foundation’s declaration, they reckoned, was a big setback for Saif and a victory for the conservatives around his father, including his brother Mutassim, the security man who is believed to be harbouring his own succession ambitions.

There have been indications in recent months that Saif’s wings are being clipped, as the Gaddafi Foundation’s monitoring of human rights has become increasingly uncomfortable for Libya’s security forces. Some of the journalists in the media group that Saif now says he only “supports” have been arrested and a newspaper he also “supports” has been closed down.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Study: Good EU-Algiers Relations for 8 Out of 10

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 14 — Eight algerians out of ten believe the EU has good relations with Algeria. This is one of the results of a study, promoted by the EU-funded Opinion Polling and Research (OPPOL) project, under the 2007-2010 ENPI regional information and communication programme. It is carried out across the countries benefiting from the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI).

Thus, according to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), only a minority of opinion leaders feel the EU¿s involvement in Algeria is appropriate (46%, compared to 63% of the general public), while only a small majority (56%) believe Algeria has benefited from EU policies in the country ¿ a stark contrast to the 82% average across the Mediterranean partner countries, and below the 61% among the general public. There is also scepticism regarding the EU¿s promotion of democracy through its cooperation activities, with only 45% of opinion leaders subscribing to the view, compared to 59% of the general public. All agree, however, that they want more EU involvement in the country, with priorities on economic development, the environment and education. Opinion leaders in particular also feel the EU can bring peace and stability to the country (70%) and the wider region (80%).(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Tragedy of Algeria’s ‘Disappeared’

They are all over the wall of Naseera Dutour’s office, in their hundreds, in their thousands. There are cemeteries of them, bearded, clean shaven, the youth and the elderly of Algeria, veiled women, a smiling girl with a ribbon in her hair, in colour for the most part; the bloodbath of the 1990s was a post-technicolor age so the blood came bright red and soaked right through the great revolution that finally conquered French colonial power.

There’s a powerful irony that Naseera’s cramped offices — “SOS Disparu”, it’s called, in conscious imitation of the searches for the “disappeared” of Chile and Argentina — should be on the ground floor of an old pied noir apartment, beyond a carved wooden door and patterned tiles, at No.3 rue Ghar Djebilet, just off Didouch Mourad St. Didouch, too, was a martyr — of the first revolution, the one we were supposed to remember in Algiers this month — rather than all those faces on Naseera’s walls. For Naseera, too, has a martyr to mourn.

No talk at Algeria’s anti-colonialism conference of the 6,000 men and women who died under torture at the hands of the Algerian police and army and hooded security men in the 1990s. For across at Sidi Fredj — yes, just up the coast where the French landed in 1830 — le pouvoir was parading a clutch of ancient ex-presidents from the mystical lands of the anti-colonial struggle, to remind us of Algeria’s primary role in the battle against world imperialism. There was old Ahmed Ben Bella — more white-haired skeleton than Algeria’s first leader, coup-ed out of power in 1965 (although they didn’t mention that). There was poor old Dr Kenneth Kaunda, who mercilessly tried to sing a song under the wondrous eyes of Thabo Mbeki. And then there were the Vietnamese whose victory at Dien Bien Phu taught the FLN (National Liberation Front) that they could beat the French here, which they did in 1962 at a cost of, say, one and a half million “martyrs”.

In theory, this was all staged to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the UN General Assembly’s Resolution 1514, which demanded the right of independence to all colonised people (special emphasis in Algiers, of course, on the Palestinians and the Sahrawi refugees). But the real reason le pouvoir — “the authorities” — gathered these elderly ex-presidents in Algeria was to build a new foundation — wood or concrete I haven’t yet decided — over the mass graves of the 250,000 “martyrs” of another conflict, the barbarous civil war of 1990-98, if indeed it has yet ended. Le pouvoir has invented a wonderful new expression for this bloodbath. It’s called Algeria’s “National Tragedy”, as if the government’s suspension of elections and the brutal, family-slaughtering, throat-cutting war with the savage Islamists of the Armed Islamic Group, the GIA, was a Shakespearean play, Othello perhaps, or Hamlet in which, I suppose, Ben Bella stares at his own skull. More like Titus Andronicus, if you ask me.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks: Spain for Pro-Morocco Solution in W. Sahara

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, DECEMBER 14 — Since the beginning, the Spanish government has supported the proposal to make the Western Sahara an autonomous region of Morocco, according to diplomatic documents from US Embassies in Madrid, Rabat and Paris, revealed by WikiLeaks and published today by El Pais.

In 2006, the then Foreign Minister, Miguel Angel Moratinos, proposed in one of the diplomatic communications, not to talk about the sovereignty and the independence of the Western Sahara, but to work on the theory of a “regionalisation, autonomy and self-government”. Moratinos proposed “a solution similar to the one that Spain gave to Catalonia,” and Foreign Ministry officials also considered the independence of the region to be an unrealistic solution.

This is a position that contradicts the line of equidistance supported by Madrid with regard to the self-determination in the Western Sahara, also in light of the recent events in Laayoune, with the forced dismantling of the Saharawi camp by Moroccan security forces, which was never condemned by the Spanish socialist government.

In February 2007, when Morocco officially presented its proposal of autonomy for the area, quoting the Spanish and German models, Moratinos hoped that it would be more generous. Rabat’s proposal certainly did not thrill the Spanish diplomatic service. The political advisor for the Spanish Embassy in the Moroccan capital invited his colleagues in France, the US, the UK and Germany to a meeting to assess Morocco’s new step. “Our Spanish host was not happy,” said the US Embassy’s political advisor, Craig Karp.

According to the documents, Madrid considered France’s excessively pro-Moroccan position to be an obstacle to the agreement. On the other hand, Madrid’s position caused tension with Algeria, a historic ally of the Saharawi cause. In relation to the 20% increase in the price of gas exported by Algeria to Spain, in March 2007, the US Ambassador Eduardo Aguirre said that “many consider this to be connected to Zapatero’s comments in Morocco.”(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Far Right Courts Israel in Anti-Islam Drive

Far-right political parties in Europe are stepping up their anti-Muslim rhetoric and forging ties across borders, even going so far as to visit Israel to hail the Jewish state as a bulwark against militant Islam.

National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen has shocked the French political elite in recent days by comparing Muslims who pray outside crowded mosques — a common sight during the holy month of Ramadan — to the World War Two Nazi occupation.

Oskar Freysinger, a champion of the Swiss ban on minarets, warned a far-right meeting in Paris on Saturday against “the demographic, sociological and psychological Islamization of Europe”. German and Belgian activists also addressed the crowd.

Geert Wilders, whose populist far-right party supports the Dutch minority government, told Reuters last week he was organising an “international freedom alliance” to link grass-roots groups active in “the fight against Islam”.

Earlier this month, Wilders visited Israel and backed its West Bank settlements, saying Palestinians there should move to Jordan. Like-minded German, Austrian, Belgian, Swedish and other far-rightists were on their own Israel tour at the same time.

“Our culture is based on Christianity, Judaism and humanism and (the Israelis) are fighting our fight,” Wilders told Reuters in Amsterdam last week. “If Jerusalem falls, Amsterdam and New York will be next.”

While he seeks anti-Muslim allies abroad, Wilders said some older far-right parties such as France’s National Front or the British National Party were “blunt racist parties I don’t care for” and he would avoid cooperating with them.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Gaza: Freedom Flotilla; Spain, Memorial for Turkish Victims

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, DECEMBER 20 — A monument was unveiled in the Spanish capital Madrid to commemorate nine Turkish activists killed by Israeli commandos in the May 31 raid on Gaza-Bound aid ship Mavi Marmara, as Anatolia news agency reports.

The monument, designed by sculptors Roxanne Robinson and Arevalo Beteta, was erected at the Palestine Park in Leganes near Madrid at the initiatives of three Spanish activists supported by several non-governmental organizations.

Spanish activists plan to send two aid ships to Gaza this spring. Turkish Ambassador to Spain Ender Arat, Palestinian Ambassador to Spain Moussa Odeh, Mayor of Leganes Rafael Gomez Montaya and representatives from Turkish humanitarian aid organization IHH attended a ceremony held to unveil the monument on Friday.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Police Investigating Death of U.S. Tourist in Mysterious Attack

Israeli authorities are investigating a strange and violent incident that left one woman dead and another injured this weekend. Many people are convinced this was a terrorist attack; other people say things don’t add up. Police are investigating all options.

[…]

Police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld said the motives behind the incident were not yet clear — it may have been a terrorist attack. Regardless of the motive, a very serious incident occurred in a typically calm area. A woman has been murdered, and “we’re not taking any chances,” Rosenfeld said. The investigation was assigned to the Jerusalem police special task force and continues on two levels, the spokesman said, both operational and intelligence.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


America and Israel Haters Relying on Anti-Turkish Lobbies

The “Armenian genocide season” opened relatively early this year. Clearly the “conjuncture” is considered “uniquely ripe” by anti-Turkish activists. There are also fresh opportunities for increased cooperation against Turkey among Washington’s highly active Armenian, Kurdish, Israeli and Syriac lobbies.

In the meantime, the worsening of Turkish-Israeli ties has driven a wedge between Ankara and the Obama administration. Both sides are trying to be polite about this but the damage is showing. It is also clear that Turkey can not rely on the Republicans in Congress, as it did before, given the unquestioning support they provide to Israel.

Driven mostly by constituency considerations, Republican congressmen are said to be “out to get Turkey” this time for a host of reasons, not just to do with Israel. These naturally include the Erdogan government’s stance on Iran and Syria, as well as its cozying up to radical groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

Put briefly, Turkey is not considered a reliable ally anymore in the United States Congress. In the meantime it is no surprise that the Israeli lobby in America should be out to punish Turkey for its stand on the brutalizing of Palestinians by the IDF in Gaza under the guise of retaliation.

Turkey’s apparently rock-solid demand for an apology and compensation from Israel for its the murder of nine Turkish activists on the Mavi Marmara ship, on the other hand, only fuels the growing animosity towards Ankara. What obviously increases the anger of Israelis and members of the Israeli lobby is that their nemesis, namely Prime Minister Erdogan, is so popular around the world.

It is no surprise that those contributing to Time Magazine’s “Man of the Year” poll this year should have put Erdogan in second position after Julian Assange. (He was in fact in first position before Assange overtook him with his arrest in the United Kingdom).

The fact that Time, in what many see as a “rabbit out of the hat trick,” actually selected Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, who was in 10th position in the magazine’s own public poll, as “Man of the Year” does not belie Erdogan’s international popularity.

If we go back to the Armenian issue, it is clear from the feverish activity among Armenian groups in the U.S. that they have high hopes for the passage of an Armenian genocide resolution in the U.S. Congress this time around. The advantages appear to be stacked on their behalf too.

There is nevertheless a very real possibility the “force majeure” will come into play again and prevent this happening — for the sake of “global strategic considerations” — despite all the anti-Turkish sentiment floating around in Washington. The mostly likely outcome is that the Armenians will be disappointed again.

It will, however, be a surprise for some to hear that there are quite a few people in Turkey who are rabidly anti-Israeli and anti-American, and who have little sympathy for Europe and the European Union, who actually want the genocide resolution to pass (preferably with the help of Israeli lobbies).

Their reasoning is a simple one. Such a development will spell the death knell for any hope whatsoever of a rapprochement with Israel — which they have never desired. It will also lead to the greatest crisis in Turkish-U.S. ties ever, which again will be highly welcomed by them since they see America as “the root of all evil,” which makes ties with Washington abhorrent to them anyway.

In other words, the Armenian and Israeli lobbies could be playing beautifully into the hands of those in this country who want to see Turkey move away from the West, and closer not just to the Islamic world but also to the powers currently on the ascendant, which Fareed Zakaria refers to as “The Rest,” as opposed to “The West.”

The fact Turkey is also a “rising” country makes those with anti-Western sentiments even more bullish. Firstly they believe there is nothing short of war that Armenians can do to get anything from Turkey, especially at a time when the country feels stronger and more assertive and influential in the world than at any time before.

The bottom line is that the orld is not what it was a decade or two ago. Neither, in particular, is the U.S. — nor is the West generally. New centers of political, military and economic influence are emerging fast. These provide new opportunities for Turkey, and Ankara’s reaching out to these countries is already fueling arguments about Turkey drifting away from the West.

It is also clear that Israel’s isolation will increase in such a world. It is already almost totally alone in the U.N. where it has only America’s blind support to rely on, no matter what it does. This automatically puts Turkey in a much better position internationally than Israel in terms of any cost-benefit analysis relating to foreign policy administration.

It seems that there will be much to mull over in Washington and Tel Aviv over the next weeks and month in terms of the “Turkey question.” It could be that we are heading for the kind of breakdown in ties that anti-Western elements in this country want.

But if a simple list were to be made of countries that stand to loose the most by Turkey’s drifting away from the West it might read as follows:

1- Israel

2- Armenia

3- The United States

4- The EU (although it is no country)

5- Turkey

Others may wish to change the order in the list and provide strong and convincing arguments in doing this. What appears common to all countries in the list however, is that they all stand to loose something if Turkey were to drift from he West and go with “The Rest,” that is, the majority of countries in the world.

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



Iran: Christians Jailed for Three Months Over Evangelizing Activities

A group of nine Christians arrested in Hamadan are in prison, after being held in isolation without specific charges. The media speak of “Christian Zionists.” Their main fault seems to be their success in conversions.

Tehran (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Nine Christians have been held in prison in Iran for three months without charges. On the day of their arrest, 19 September 2010, state television said: “A group of nine Christians have been arrested in Hamadan on charges of evangelization activities.” Local sources reported security forces statements, according to which the group’s purpose was to destroy the Islamic Republic of Iran. The text referred several times to the nine calling them “Christian Zionists.”

The names of four of them (five are of unknown identity) are Vahik Abrahamian his wife Sonia Keshish Avanessian (Armenian-Iranian), Arash Kermanjany and Arezou Teimour, Iranians who speak Farsi. The security forces according to the report broke into the house Abrahamian and arrested him together with his wife and two other Christian converts who were his guests. The house was searched, and officers seized various personal items. Later the group was taken to an unknown location.

Other Christian converts were arrested and interrogated in Karaj, Tehran and Hamadan, and some of them were released after having ensured they would stop all evangelization activities. The four arrested in Hamad instead have been imprisoned in the Hamadan prison, in the fourth section, and the women’s section. All were placed in isolation for forty days before being transferred to the Hamadan prison, and in that period could not be contacted by families. But in the meantime, the courts have not yet explained why they were imprisoned, or brought specific allegations against them.

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



Saudi Scholar Proposes “Terror Allowance”

A Saudi Muslim scholar has urged the Gulf Kingdom to introduce what he termed as terrorism allowance following a surge in threats against mosque preachers condemning terrorists, a Saudi newspaper reported on Monday.

The London-based Arabic language daily Alhayat quoted the unnamed scholar as saying he had received threats twice from unknown parties following his sermons at Friday open air prayers denouncing terrorism.

The paper said it talked to several scholars who said they had received threats because of their anti-terror sermons, requested by the government.

“Because of the efficient participation by the preachers in efforts to counter terrorism and combat the deviant groups, we propose that preachers are treated on par with other government sectors,” the preacher told the paper.

“We are asking for terror allowance because many of us have been subject to threats every time we touch on this sensitive issue.”

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck: Fmr. CIA Spy: Iran Will Use Nukes Against Israel, West

My recent interview with Reza Khalili, a former member of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards who worked undercover for the CIA, debuted last week on a special edition of the Stakelbeck on Terror show.

Today, a shorter version of the interview aired on CBN’s 700 Club program. In it, Khalili describes the “culture of martyrdom” and jihad that he was indoctrinated with on a daily basis as a member of the Guards.

He also reveals how Iran uses Western mosques to fund and plot terrorism, and says he has “no doubt” that Iran will use nuclear weapons against Israel and the West.

You can watch the story at the above link.

[Return to headlines]



Syria Increases Duty on Luxury Vehicles

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 15 — Syria has increased duties on the import of luxury cars. After the decree by the country’s President, duty on cars with engines of between 3,000 and 4,000 cubic centimetres now stand at 80% of the value at import, while the figure is at 100% for cars with engines above 4,000 cc.

Previously, according to a statement by the Italian Trade Commission in Damascus, the latter had been subject to a duty of 60%.

The order concerns vehicles that represent only 2.2% of the Syrian market, and aims to reduce fuel consumption, the Ministry of Finance says.

Meanwhile, there has been no change to duty on vehicles with small and medium-sized engines, with the figure remaining 40% for up to 1,600 cc and 60% for up to 3,000 cc. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Ethnic Cleansing of Iran’s Arabs

…a dirty little secret unknown to most of the world, is Iran’s ethnic cleansing of its own minority Arab population.

The ignorance and silence of the world—particularly that of the twenty two member League of Arab States—is absolutely blinding, appalling, and the epitome of hypocrisy. It is long overdue for the selective “poster child” of oppression (the “Palestinians”) to cease to exist, as the world’s cause célébre, and that if real peace is to come in the Middle East, then all Middle Eastern conflicts must be addressed. Whether it is the Arab-Israeli dispute, the Kurds, the Copts, the Maronites, Kashmir, or Iranian territorial designs and its nuclear program, all of these problems must be addressed equally. Regardless, this article would like to concentrate on the plight of the Arabs of Iran, a small quiet minority that has been oppressed for decades with no one to speak for them.

[…]

[Read the rest for a history lesson..]

[Return to headlines]



UK: The Observer: Stockholm Bomber’s Mosque Website Carries Links to Banned Preacher

[…]

I have no doubt that the Luton Islamic Centre sincerely oppose suicide bombing: on the theological grounds that suicide is always impermissible. However, there is only a hair’s breadth difference between extreme Salafi theology and Al Qaedaism. Support for terrorist attacks on civilians in Israel is near universal among Islamists and Salafis. So is support for attacks on troops (and often, Muslims who are opposed to Islamic states) in places like Iraq and Afghanistan.

That doesn’t mean that most Salafis are likely to become terrorists in this country — they’re evidently not. It is even possible that some individuals who might become terrorists are persuaded on theological grounds not to murder people. However, I doubt that a man who has already decided that the Saudi Monarchy is illegitimate that that they are apostates, will be persuaded to return to the straight and narrow by pro-Saudi quietist Salafis.

The policy of promoting Salafis as the front line of defence against Al Qaeda is a misguided one. I doubt it has any benefit at all. Thanks to their efforts, how many British citizens who might otherwise be moderate Liberals, Tories or Labour supporters have been diverted into dreams of the perfect Islamic state, where homosexuals will be killed and women beaten for being raped?

In our free country, Salafis should not be prevented from expressing extreme theological or political views, within the boundaries of the law. However, we should be challenging this politics: not praising or allying with it.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Yemen Gov’t Accused of Killing Coffee Production

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 15 — International experts in the sector, who have been meeting in Sanaa, have accused Yemen’s government of having destroyed coffee growing for which the country was once famed. As cited by the Al Jazeera website, the experts concerned are attendees at the Second International Conference on Natural Arabic Coffee.

Yemen lacks a clear strategy for saving coffee cultivation from demise. The experts’ accusation is that the industry is being administered by people who are ignorant of its importance as a source of hard currency. Coffee exportation in 2009 stood at 2,527 tonnes and had a total value of 1.548 billion Yemeni rials — equal to around 700 million dollars, which showed a decrease on the 3,534 tonnes and value of 2.618 billion rials in 2006.

According to Farouk Kasim, the General Director of Yemen’s Agriculture Ministry, this fall in exports is due to the reduction in the areas available and the increase in those used for growing khat (a stimulant) as well as to an increase in internal consumption and migration of young people into the cities, thus depriving farms of their workforces. But in the view of Imad Al Insy, General Secretary of Yemeni Farmers, the Agriculture Ministry is an old institution that isn’t up to the challenge of its task, where 75 percent of its personnel on have elementary school education. They can read and write but that’s about it. It is the Agricultural Ministry’s policy errors, Al Insy says, that are at the bottom of the increase in the price of Mocha (the top grade of Yemeni coffee produce) which now stands at 50 dollars a kilo on European markets. Mocha takes its name from the port from which it was shipped in the past.

Due to this corrupt and incompetent administration, says Imad Al Insy, coffee production in Yemen faces an uncertain future.

This is why he is calling for the establishment of an ad hoc Ministry, as has been done in Ethiopia. The other accusations levelled by Al Insy at the Ministry include wasting the few resources made available for coffee cultivation and constructing irrigation dams without first undertaking background studies and establishing an irrigation network.

According to Mansur Al Dhabibi, who teaches Agricultural Science at Sanaa University, the reasons behind the fall in coffee cultivation are to be found in its old plant stocks, lack of water (most of which goes to khat production) and erroneous farming techniques, apart from the lack of promotion for the product either at home or abroad.

The Sanaa conference has also addressed the problem of competition faced by Yemeni-produced coffee, with its markets under pressure from imported brands. Apart from the general economic damage, the abundance of imported coffee in its local markets discourages home-based cultivation, pushing farmers towards other products, says Yasin Al Timimi, Chair of the Consumer’s Association.

Yemen’s Prime Minister, Ali Mijwar, has rejected all of the accusations levelled at his government, affirming that coffee heads the list of the country’s priorities. “We shall continue to view the coffee plant as the national plant, symbolising our culture and our history” Mr Mijwar said. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Interfax-Religion (1)

Talgat Tajuddin, the chairman of the Central Religious Muslim Board, categorically disagrees with remarks by Ravil Gainutdin, the head of the Council of Muftis of Russia, that Islam is being suppressed in Russia.

“It is stupid and blasphemous to talk about suppression of Islam in Russia. What Gainutdin has said is just untrue,” Tajuddin told journalists.

“I have chaired the Central Religious Muslim Board for more than 30 years and can say how everything has changed in the past years. We, the Muslims of Russia, had only 94 mosques, and there were about 300 mosques in the entire USSR. Now there are more than 7,500 mosques here. This means more than seventy-fold growth. There used to be 16 mosques and there are 1,016 of them now in Bashkortostan alone. There were 15 mosques in Tatarstan and there are 1,300 now. What can you talk about here?” Tajuddin told journalists.

There are seven Islamic universities and dozens of madrasahs in Russia. Each mosque has a Sunday school teaching traditional Islam. With support from the presidential secretariat, the Fund in Support for Islamic Culture, Science, and Education has been set up, which provides enormous assistance to Muslims, Tajuddin said.

“By the way, the leader of one of them is [Alexey] Grishin mentioned by Gainutdin. He has been called an Islamophobe. I wish there were more such Islamophobes,” he said. “Gainutdin has never had a monopoly to speak on behalf of all Muslims in Russia. He often travels abroad and tries to speak on behalf of all of our Muslims, although he heads only a small amount of communities,” he said.

“Russia currently needs peace so much as never before. It is unacceptable to rock the boat in which the Most High has gathered us all. This is a sin and a crime in line with the law and the Sharia rule,” he added.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Interfax-Religion (2)

The head of a Russian Jewish association accused one of Russia’s top Muslim clerics of making offensive statements about Russia’s “native population.”

“The negative statements by mufti [Ravil] Gainutdin about the native population of Russia, which is forever drinking, and ‘hard-working migrants’ are, of course, unfair. We resolutely reject this. All nations have different kinds of people in them but one must by no means make any generalizations,” rabbi Zinovy Kogan, chairman of the Congress of Jewish Religious Organizations and Communities in Russia, told reporters.

“Today secular and religious leaders must be extremely careful in their formulations if they may damage ethnic peace in light of the latest events on Manezhnaya Square,” Kogan said in reference to a violent riot on the square, which lies next to the Kremlin, on December 11.

“In the Interreligious Council of Russia and at bilateral level, we have very good, productive relations with the Muslims,” he said.

On Thursday head of the Russian Council of Muftis Ravil Gainutdin argued at an Interreligious Council meeting that it is essential for Russia to have migrants, most of whom come from other parts of the former Soviet Union, mainly Central Asia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, and are often targeted in racist attacks.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: British Soldier Takes a Bullet in the Head From a Taliban Sniper to Protect Child

A British soldier who confronted a Taliban insurgent with a human shield was shot in the head after he refused to fire, for fear of hurting the small child.

Brave Lance Corporal Craig Murfitt demonstrated nerves of steel as he watched the sniper take aim and pull the trigger before he was sent flying to the ground.

Luckily Lance Corporal Murfitt’s [helmet] saved him and his refusal to fire saved the innocent child.

The 25-year-old father-of-one said: ‘I knew I could take him down but being a dad myself, I didn’t want to run the risk of killing a kid.’

[…]

‘Everything was quiet but then I spotted three men with a child on a compound roof, about 300 yards (275m) to the front of the vehicles.

‘Suddenly two of the men moved off, leaving one man with the child — it was a girl, no more than 10-years-old. At this point I realised something was wrong — the man picked up a rifle and moved behind the child, taking aim at me.

[…]

The soldier, known as Murf, could either protect himself and fire — which risked injuring the child — or hold off.

He decided to wait.

‘I knew I could take him down but, being a dad myself, I didn’t want to run the risk of killing a kid and undoing all the good work we’ve achieved,’ he said.

‘So I waited, hoping that the child would drop down and give me a clear shot,’ he said.

But the insurgent fired and struck Lance Corporal Murfitt on the left hand side of his Mark 7 Combat Helmet — a piece of kit already credited with saving lives.

The force of the bullet sent the serviceman, from Barnstaple in Devon, crashing to the floor.

‘I felt the dent in my helmet and said to the others, ‘I’ve been shot in the head but I’m fine’. I tried to stand up but I had disco legs and just had to sit down again for a bit,’ he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Al Qaeda Militant Killed in Afghanistan Was Amnesty, Cageprisoners, Guardian, Indie Pin Up

by Lucy Lips

Until last year, Mahmoud Abu Rideh was detained in 2001, and placed under a control order in 2005. This is why:

He arrived in Britain in January 1995 and claimed asylum, living off benefits with his wife and five children.

His asylum claim was initially refused because his story was not credible but he appealed and was granted refugee status in November 1998.

On December 19 2001 he was arrested under immigration rules which said he was “an active supporter of various international terrorist groups, including those with links to Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network.”

The central allegation was that he had been involved in fund raising and distribution of funds for terrorist groups with links to al-Qaeda as well as procuring false documents and facilitation of the travel for volunteers to training camps in Afghanistan.

Although he was living on benefits, he was said to have raised around £100,000 in just two years, using the Arab Bank in Park Lane to funnel his money to al-Qaeda…

[…]

During this eight year period, Abu Rideh was a poster boy for Amnesty, CagePrisoners and the Guardian.

Amnesty ran a campaign against the control order to which Abu Rideh was subject from 2005-9. You can read their output on this case here.

CagePrisoners, whose Director Moazzam Begg believes that “securing the release of Muslim prisoners” captured during jihad is “obligatory” on all Muslims, devoted significant campaigning resources towards this case.

[…]

The Guardian also lined up behind poor Abu Rideh. Here’s a nice friendly little piece entitled “A day in the life of a terror suspect”. And here’s a video of the man. There’s loads more.

The Indie also did what they could for the poor man. Here is a nice article by Fisk.

Abu Rideh was persuaded by the Government to leave the country, and go to Syria, on the understanding that he would not return to the United Kingdom. In effect, we exported a known Al Qaeda militant to another country. This really was the only choice left to the Government.

He did not stay in Syria. Instead, he travelled to Afghanistan, to join up with his Al Qaeda brothers.

Over the weekend, an “Arabic jihadi web forum associated with al-Qaeda reports that he has become a “martyr in Afghanistan” and was with a group of fighters when he died”.

As we speak, I expect that Moazzam Begg will be filing the papers in the High Court for a personal injuries claim on behalf of his old friend.

[…]

[Be sure to click on the URL. The post is rich with links which do not appear in this news feed item]

           — Hat tip: Derius [Return to headlines]



Bangladeshi ‘Stepson Affair’ Woman Dies After Caning

Two people have been arrested after the death of a Bangladeshi woman who was publicly caned for allegedly having an affair with her stepson, police say.

A group of village elders and clerics sentenced Sufia Begum under Sharia law to 40 lashes for adultery.

The 40-year-old died of her injuries almost a month after the beating in Rajshahi district, her family says.

Bangladesh banned such punishments in the name of religious edicts or fatwas by Muslim clergy earlier this year.

It is thought to be the first case of a fatality linked to a Sharia law punishment since the practice was outlawed.

Two people, including a woman who allegedly took part in the beating, have been arrested. Police say they are looking for four others.

“According to the information we’ve received, village elders tied 10 canes together and beat her four times,” Masud Parvez, an investigating police officer, told the BBC.

Ms Begum was admitted to a hospital in Rajshahi, a city in the district of the same name, with severe injuries a week after the beating, which took place on 12 November in a village in the north-west of the country.

It is not clear why it took so long to take her for medical treatment.

Doctors in Rajshahi recommended she be sent to the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka, for further treatment because her injuries were so severe.

But her brother told the BBC the family could not afford to take Ms Begum to Dhaka, and she died on 14 December.

“Her body was swollen and I couldn’t even recognise her,” said Ms Begum’s brother, Taimur Rahman.

Police say it has not yet been established clearly that she died from injuries caused by the caning.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Malaysia Arrests 200 for Following Shia Islam

More than 200 Muslim Shiites—including Iranians, Indonesians and Pakistanis—were detained in one of the biggest swoops on outlawed Muslim sects in Malaysia and may be charged with breaching Islamic laws, an official said Monday.

Government authorities in Muslim-majority Malaysia consider only the Sunni denomination to be legal. Sunni Islam is the world’s largest branch of the religion, followed by Shia Islam.

Islamic officials raided a shop house in the Gombak district in central Selangor state last week and arrested the group, who were allegedly followers of the outlawed Shia sect, said Nurhamizah Othman, a public relations officer at the Selangor Islamic Religious Department.

It was the largest swoop of outlawed groups in recent months, the department director, Muhammad Khusrin Munawi, told state media. He said the Shia doctrine is a threat to national security because it permits the killing of Muslims from other sects who are regarded as infidels.

Ms. Nurhamizah confirmed the comments.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Bishop Denounces Rape of 9-Year-Old Catholic Girl

Bishop Joseph Coutts of Faisalabad has condemned the rape of a 9-year-old Catholic girl by a Muslim man.

“The incident is terrifying,” he said. “I met the victims and I expressed my regret to them. I believe we must consider a pastoral and legal strategy, in an effort to stem the phenomenon of the abuse of Christian girl.”

“Such incidents occur frequently,” a local source told the Fides news agency. “Christian girls are considered goods to be damaged at leisure. Abusing them is a right. According to the community’s mentality it is not even a crime. Muslims regard them as spoils of war.”

While the man who raped the girl has been arrested, “the family is terrified because the village is mainly Muslim,” Fides reports.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



U.S. Seeks to Expand Ground Raids Into Pakistan Against Militants

Senior American military commanders in Afghanistan are pushing for an expanded campaign of Special Operations ground raids across the border into Pakistan’s tribal areas, a risky strategy reflecting the growing frustration with Pakistan’s efforts to root out militants there.

The proposal, described by American officials in Washington and Afghanistan, would escalate military activities inside Pakistan, where the movement of American forces has been largely prohibited because of fears of provoking a backlash.

The plan has not yet been approved, but military and political leaders say a renewed sense of urgency has taken hold, as the deadline approaches for the Obama administration to begin withdrawing its forces from Afghanistan.

[Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Sudan Leader Vows to Bolster Islamic Law in North

Sudan’s president has vowed to more deeply entrench strict Islamic Sharia law in the northern half of his country if the predominantly animist and Christian south votes to secede in a Jan. 9 referendum. President Omar al-Bashir’s comments on Sunday appear to reflect his anger at the strong likelihood that the south will vote overwhelmingly in favor of independence from the mainly Arab and Muslim north in the long-awaited referendum. The vote is a key provision agreed on in the 2005 peace accord that officially ended more than two decades of north-south civil war. Al-Bashir will meet the leaders of Sudan’s two most powerful neighbors — Egypt and Libya — in the capital Khartoum Tuesday to discuss the future of his country ahead of the referendum. Al-Bashir is wanted on an international indictment for war crimes in the western Sudanese region of Darfur. With only three weeks left before the vote, al-Bashir appears to be resigned to the secession of the south and also prepared to do away with key provisions of the 2005 peace accord that recognizes Sudan’s ethnic, religious and linguistic diversity. The secession of the south, he said, would be like “losing a part of the homeland, but it will not be the end of the world.” “If the south breaks away, God forbid, the constitution will be amended to have Sharia (Islamic law) as the main source of legislation, Islam the official religion of the state and Arabic the state’s main language,” said al-Bashir, who came to office in a 1989 military coup backed by Islamists. A full-fledged implementation of Sharia law in northern Sudan could create a new point of friction between south and north because hundreds of thousands of non-Muslim southerners live in the north and many of them were expected to stay there even if the south breaks away. Currently, non-Muslims are exempt from harsh, prescribed Sharia punishments.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Migrant Crisis in Greece Strains EU Open Borders

Concern over the fate of asylum seekers in Greece has prompted several European Union countries to suspend co-operation with it on migration issues, exposing cracks in the bloc’s wider border-free travel arrangements.

For several months, Greece has faced an unprecedented influx of refugees coming from Asia and Africa via Turkey, as migrants have found a weak link into the EU.

The crisis prompted a rare humanitarian crisis within the EU, which was partly relieved when the European Commission, the EU’s executive, agreed to co-ordinate emergency border patrols in October, the first time it made such an intervention.

But beyond the immediate humanitarian problem, the situation has frayed co-operation on migration matters between the EU’s 27 countries, and triggered the shelving of an agreement seen as a pre-requisite to continued border-free travel within the bloc.

The Schengen pact that abolished internal borders in 1995 stands as one of the achievements of European integration, but it rests on other agreements that are now being strained by the Greek situation, diplomats say.

Specifically, a handful of countries including the UK and Sweden have suspended the implementation of the Dublin convention, which allows EU authorities to send back migrants seeking refuge to the EU country in which they first set foot. The entire convention could be struck down by European courts in 2011 as rulings are made on challenges made on human rights grounds.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Sweden Deporting Christian Refugees From Muslim Countries

Just last week a terrorist explosion tore through Sweden’s capital city Stockholm. Luckily the only person killed was the Muslim terrorist. In Sweden, certain Muslim immigrant neighborhoods are considered “no go” by Swedish police as the Muslim newcomers have established their own societies while living off generous Swedish welfare. In Malmo and certain other regions in Sweden police and other political figures are quiet about violence by Swedish Muslims against Swedish Jews or else they join the leftists blaming the Jewish victims.

Well actually Swedish authorities are responding to this Muslim violence in Sweden — they are deporting Iraqi Christians fleeing their 2000 year homeland seeking refuge in Sweden because of murderous attacks against them by Iraqi Muslims in Iraq. Sweden’s migration minister has refused to respond to concerns from the United Nations and the Council of Europe about Sweden’s decision to resume the deportation of Iraqis. (snip) [T]he European Court of Human Rights is currently “inundated” with cases dealing with Iraqis in Sweden. He urged Sweden to give the court more time to review the cases before resuming the deportation of Iraqis. “It might transpire that requests of some of the returnees have not yet been dealt by the Court,” he concluded,” he said. For these Christians, returning to Iraq might be a death sentence; just last month 52 Iraqi Christians were slaughtered in a Catholic church in Baghdad.

As Barry Rubin and others, such as Joel Sprayregan here at American Thinker have commented, all over the Muslim world Christians and other religious minorities are persecuted and attacked yet there are few world wide complaints.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Turkish ‘Guest Workers’ of Germany: The Changing Facts

At the end of World War II, Germany was in a great mess. Fire bombs and air raids had almost completely destroyed the country. The population of Cologne, Germany’s fourth largest city, was reduced from 768,000 to less than 250,000. The same happened in many other German cities in the last two years of the war. Germany’s postcard-picture castles and great cathedrals turned to ruins, while thousands of Germans were displaced. Industrial output was at a standstill, and Germany’s currency was practically worthless. There was a little hope for improvement.

However, after the war, Germany began impressive economic redevelopment. The years after 1950s are known as the beginning of the “German miracle” in modern economic history. In parallel with the economic growth, Germany’s demand for more labor was gradually increased. The shortages of local labor force constituted the ground for labor recruitment agreements between Germany and its neighboring countries, including Italy, Spain, Greece, Yugoslavia and Turkey.

Turkish ‘guest-workers’

The labor recruitment agreement between Turkey and West Germany was signed in October 1961. Following the agreement, thousands of Turks applied for working licenses in Germany and passed a medical fitness test before the arduous journey. Turks boarded special trains in Ankara and Istanbul and were taken to Germany. The workers arrived in Munich and were then distributed among the country’s industrial zones. From 1961 up to 1973, about 650,000 people from Turkey went to Germany. For many years, Germany considered them as “guest workers” and expected that they would return home one day. However, many of them did not only come to work and many decided to stay in Germany, raise a family or bring their family to the Federal Republic. As a consequence, many people with Turkish origin are nowadays living as the second and third generation in Germany.

As a novel development, however, one can observe that more and more especially young and well-educated people, often academics, with a so-called “Turkish background,” have now decided to migrate to Turkey. They were born in Germany, grew up there, ran through the German educational system and are what some people call “integrated” into German society; nevertheless, they have decided to return to their ancestors’ country of origin. So the question that German society and politicians should ask themselves is what makes them want to leave Germany and return to Turkey?

This question is of special relevance; because, in contrast to other German emigrants, they are choosing to leave for their parent’s motherland and do not necessarily migrate due to the curiosity for an unknown way of life. According to a study from the Turkish Academics and Students in Germany, or TASD, 42 percent of the interviewees said they were choosing to go Turkey because they didn’t “feel at home” in Germany. A remarkable majority also questioned the effectiveness of the German government’s integration policy. Other “push-factors” are a group-related discrimination in areas such as job-seeking and flat-hunting, the law for foreigners and visa requirements for Turkish vacationers.

Making sense of it all

Germany should consider this emigration as a loss and evidence of its own incapacity. As the current coalition government highlights that problems of integration are particularly caused by a lack of education, the country needs “mediators” — possibly composed of those that don’t want to live any longer in Germany — between “the Germans” and “the Turks.”…

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

Culture Wars


Gay Rights Campaigners Furious as UN Drops Condemnation of ‘Sexual Orientation’ Killings After Pressure From Arab and African Nations

A culture war has broken out at the United Nations over whether gays should be singled out for the same protections as other minorities whose lives are threatened.

The battle will come to a head tomorrow when the General Assembly votes to renew its routine condemnation of the unjustified killing of various categories of vulnerable people.

It specifies killings for racial, national, ethnic, religious and linguistic reasons and includes refugees, indigenous people and other groups.

But the resolution, because of a change promoted by Arab and African nations and approved at committee level, has dropped ‘sexual orientation’ and replaces it with ‘discriminatory reasons on any basis’.

The U.S. government says it is ‘incensed’ at the change, as are gay rights campaigners.

‘Even if those countries do not support gay rights, you would think they would support our right not to be killed,’ said Jessica Stern of the New York-based International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission.

Stern said gay people all over the world are frequent targets of violence because of their sexual orientation.

Authorities in Jamaica are investigating a possible hate crime in the slaying earlier this month of a man who belonged to the sole gay rights group in the conservative, largely Christian nation.

And Uganda, currently among 76 countries that criminalise homosexuality, is debating whether to join the five other countries in the world that consider it a capital crime.

The General Assembly is set for a final vote tomorrow on its biennial resolution condemning extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary killings — without the reference to sexual orientation for the first time since 1999.

U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice has said she was ‘incensed’ the reference was removed and the U.S. will move to restore it.

The battle over those two words underscores the historic split over gay rights among UN members and their diverse religious and cultural sensibilities. Activists say gay and lesbian issues got only minimal attention at the UN a decade ago.

‘There has been slow, but steady progress on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights at the U.N.,’ Stern said.

Stern cited as progress Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s ‘landmark’ speech during a gay rights forum at the UN headquarters on December 10, calling for an end to laws around the world that make it a crime to be homosexual.

But as gay rights gain more acceptance in the UN system, some member states are pushing back, said Mark Bromley, of the Washington-based Council for Global Equality, which aims to advance gay rights in American foreign policy.

‘I think some states are uncomfortable and they are organising to limit engagement on the issue,’ he said.

‘We are seeing a backlash,’ agreed Stern.

‘This is an illustration of the tensions around culture at the United Nations, and how power plays out and alliances are made.’

The Republic of Benin, acting on behalf of African countries, introduced the amendment deleting the specific reference to sexual orientation at a November 16 General Assembly committee meeting.

Benin, a largely Christian country of eight million with a sizable Muslim population, argued that ‘sexual orientation had no legal foundation in any international human rights instruments’.

Morocco asserted that such selectivity ‘accommodated particular interests and groups over others’ and urged all UN member states ‘to devote special attention to the protection of the family as the natural and fundamental unit of society’.

Western nations opposed the move to delete the mention of sexual orientation.

Britain called it ‘an affront to human dignity’, and France and Norway said the move was ‘regrettable’.

Sweden said the change amounted to ‘looking the other way’ when people are killed for being gay.

The amendment narrowly passed 79-70, with 17 abstentions. The so-called Third Committee, which deals with human rights issues and includes all 192 UN member states, then approved the entire resolution on all unjustified killings for discriminatory reasons 165-0, with ten abstentions.

General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding, but rather reflect the views of the majority of the world’s nations.

Mark Kornblau, spokesman for the U.S. mission to the United Nations, said the U.S. will introduce an amendment next week to restore the previous language including the phrase ‘sexual orientation’ because ‘this is an issue that is important to us’.

‘We’ve also been doing a great deal of lobbying’ to get the restoration of the phrase approved,’ Kornblau said.

Gay rights and human rights activists also have lobbied missions to the UN in New York in recent days, urging delegations that abstained on the amendment to help restore the mention of sexual orientation.

‘We only need a few more countries and we can change this vote around,’ said Boris O. Dittrich, who directs the programme on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights for the international advocacy group Human Rights Watch.

But gaining the world’s support for gay rights will take far longer.

More than two-thirds of UN members, many of them Muslim nations, are refusing to sign a separate statement condemning human rights violations based on sexual orientation and gender identity, especially with regard to the application of the death penalty and extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions.

Under the Bush administration in 2008, the U.S. refused to join all other Western nations in signing that declaration, arguing that the broad framing of the language in the statement might conflict with U.S. laws.

After President Barack Obama took office, the U.S.last year joined other member states to support the declaration, saying it found that the language did not conflict with American laws. Sixty-eight of the UN’s members have now signed the declaration. That leaves 124 countries that have not.

           — Hat tip: bewick [Return to headlines]



Germany: Kauder: Gays Have No Right to Children

Volker Kauder, the parliamentary leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats, said on Monday that homosexual couples had no right to have children.

“This has to be accepted, even if it’s difficult for those affected,” Kauder told the daily Berliner Zeitung. “I don’t think children wish to be raised by homosexual couples.”

He said the question of children’s well-being should come before the desires of adults to become parents.

“It’s not about whether the adults want to live as a happy family,” he said. “There’s no right to have a child.”

Germany introduced “registered partnerships” for same-sex couples in 2001, but stopped short of granting them the full rights and privileges afforded to married heterosexual couples.

Homosexuals can legally adopt the children of their partners, but adopting an unrelated child as a couple is not currently allowed.

Germany’s highest court ruled in August the unequal treatment of straight and gay partners when it comes to taxes and exemptions is unconstitutional.

Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Scharrenberger said at the time that Merkel’s centre-right coalition would work towards ironing out remaining disadvantages for same-sex registered couples. But Kauder’s most recent comments highlight the ongoing discrepancy between the Christian Democrats and their junior coalition partners the Free Democrats on gay issues.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



One Battle Won, Gay Rights Activists Shift Sights

WASHINGTON — As gay people around the country reveled on Sunday in the historic Senate vote to repeal “don’t ask, don’t tell,” a liberal media watchdog group said it planned to announce on Monday that it was setting up a “communications war room for gay equality” in an effort to win the movement’s next and biggest battle: for a right to same-sex marriage.

The new group, Equality Matters, grew out of Media Matters, an organization backed by wealthy liberal donors — including prominent gay philanthropists — that has staked its claim in Washington punditry with aggressive attacks on Fox News and conservative commentators like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck.

It will be run by Richard Socarides, a former domestic policy adviser to President Bill Clinton who has been deeply critical of President Obama’s record on gay rights. A well-known gay journalist, Kerry Eleveld, the Washington correspondent for The Advocate, will leave that magazine in January to edit the new group’s Web site, equalitymatters.org, which is to go online Monday morning.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Totalitarianism and Education

Between the ages of 16 and 19, virtually all Norwegians attend upper secondary school — an optional, three-year add-on to 13 years of compulsory elementary education. Most opt for public schools over private ones, and a goodly chunk of that group chooses a course plan whose emphasis is on history, social science, and the humanities. As our educators admit, though, Norwegian students would be remiss to expect to actually learn anything about those subjects. This is not an accident caused by the quality of the school system, which the international body PISA has repeatedly found to be among the worst in the developed world — it is a consequence of design. The bureaucrats and intellectuals who create the curriculum for Norway’s State schools, most of whom attended university during the 1960s and 1970s and partook of that era’s student radicalism, agree that the goal of education is not the transmission of knowledge, but the propagation of soixante-huitardisme, relativism, and a bellyfeel hatred of white Europeans.

For influential Norwegian pedagogue Harald F. Skram, for instance, the belief that history constitutes “an objective account of what happened in the past” and the rejection of cultural relativism are both earmarks of low academic historical competence, while “an awareness of how history can be used politically” is a sign of high competence. Harald Syse, writing in the renowned quarterly Prosa, assures us that “it’s been a long time since historical education has had as its only goal to communicate the truth about the past.” (Syse’s piece examines whether a set of newly released history textbooks sufficiently emphasize the oppression of minority groups by ethnic Norwegians, as a State edict has recently required.) Facts, to Syse, are of secondary or tertiary value, subservient to the need for “a broad education in democracy.” In other words: Schools are not to transmit knowledge, which can be inconvenient and unpleasant and is at any rate a mere social construction of late-capitalist phallogocentrism. No, they should instead turn their students into docile paragons of “tolerance” and “open-mindedness,” “tolerance” and “open-mindedness” being acquired mostly through the memorization of a few thought-terminating cliches and the unquestioning acceptance of Cultural Marxism and the therapeutic welfare state. Like all totalitarian institutions, the Norwegian establishment starts its indoctrination as early as possible — even kindergarteners are made to sing songs about the horrors of racism and the need for world government.

Is the agenda of the curriculum reflected in practice? Here I want to resort to my own experiences. My upper secondary school should, by all accounts, be a bastion of conservative fuddy-duddiness. The municipality in which it is situated is one of the wealthiest in the country, regularly giving record electoral percentages to the center-right Conservative Party during general elections; the school’s history goes back to the mid-19th century, and it had a Latin course until less than a decade ago; the faculty consists largely of people who have been with the school for decades, and has shown reluctance towards the use in the classroom of such modern luxuries as laptop computers or the Internet. By rights, they ought to also be at least somewhat reluctant to let go of the apparently outdated notion that the goal of education is to transmit knowledge, not to indoctrinate politically correct bromides. But even this conservative gerontocracy (I use the expression fondly) seems happy to lend a leftward slant to any available subject, as my own fairly recent experiences will demonstrate.

I have heard a history teacher describe Stalinist Russia as a basically benevolent and prosperous society with a few minor problems. I have looked through a school library for a biography of Mao Zedong, only to find it populated exclusively by hagiographies written by 70s radicals. I have had philosophy teachers who have never heard of Friedrich Hayek. I have been told that dialectical materialism is an indisputable fact in which all historians believe. I have, as mentioned, read course plans which openly instruct teachers to fail students who affirm the existence of human nature or objective truth, and to give good grades to those who regard history as a political tool of the ruling classes…

           — Hat tip: AA [Return to headlines]



UK: Football Clubs’ Fury at ‘Sickening’ Plan for Minute’s Silence as Mark of Respect to Paedophile Who Killed Himself

Plans to honour a former football boss found dead following a conviction for sexually abusing boys were scrapped after clubs threatened a boycott.

League officials sparked outrage when they called for a minute’s silence at matches as a mark of respect for Ray Barnes, the former head of the Hampshire FA.

Barnes was found dead after apparently jumping from a multi-storey car park outside a shopping centre last Tuesday.

The minute’s silence had been due to take place at Wessex League football matches across Hampshire on Saturday, but the games were called off due to bad weather.

League chairman Bob Purkiss last night admitted the proposed silence — which he wanted to stage for Mr Barnes’ family — had ‘not been appreciated by many’ and confirmed it would now be dropped.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Virginian: Bar Gays From National Guard

Responding to the federal repeal of the military policy banning open gays from serving in the armed forces, a state lawmaker in Virginia plans to fight back with legislation that bars “active homosexuals” from serving in the Virginia National Guard.

Delegate Robert G. Marshall said the Constitution reserves states with the authority to do so and that he’ll introduce a bill in the state General Assembly next year that ensures the “the effect of the 1994 federal law banning active homosexuals from America’s military forces will apply to the Virginia National Guard.”

“With the repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell,’ President Obama seeks to pay back his homosexual political supporters,” the Prince William County Republican said, echoing a sentiment shared by many of the repeal’s most ardent opponents. “This policy will weaken military recruitment and retention, and will increase pressure for a military draft.”

[…]

[Return to headlines]

General


Climate Change CO2 Corruption Caravan Continues at Cancun, Commercially: You Must Pay for Your Sins

Fraud: wrongful or criminal deception intended to result in financial or personal gain. Fraud: intentional perversion of truth in order to induce another to part with something of value or to surrender a legal right.

A British Gas advertisement says, “The future of Britain’s low carbon energy supply is in safe hands.” ExxonMobil’s advertisement says “we remove CO2 from natural gas by first freezing, then melting it. The captured CO2 may then be safely stored, so it won’t enter the atmosphere, reducing greenhouse gas emissions.” How much energy does that take? It means the product costs more and profits increase because the taxpayer subsidizes CO2 injection to increase oil recovery.

The Cancun Climate Conference and most national policies confirm equalization of wealth as the real objective. Everything is based on falsified evidence and completely unnecessary. If a private citizen practiced such deception it would constitute fraud. Despite evidence of manipulated data, corrupted science, false claims, and failed predictions the nonsense continues.

[…]

Everything done by the IPCC was designed to prove CO2 was the problem so they created new falsities or doctored evidence to that end. As Princeton Physicist Robert Austin said about Climategate, “I view it as science fraud, pure and simple…” but Climategate was just a continuation.

[…]

They’ve done everything to prove CO2 causes warming and climate change, but failed. It is a disgraceful scientific chronicle. I challenge anyone to produce a single real, not computer generated, record that shows a CO2 increase preceding a temperature increase.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Is Night Falling on Classic Solar Panels?

SOLAR cells that work at night. It sounds like an oxymoron, but a new breed of nanoscale light-sensitive antennas could soon make this possible, heralding a novel form of renewable energy that avoids many of the problems that beset solar cells. The key to these new devices is their ability to harvest infrared (IR) radiation, says Steven Novack, one of the pioneers of the technology at the US Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory in Idaho Falls.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101219

Financial Crisis
» “Italy Not at Risk” — Juncker
» Germany: Unloved Euro Considered Too Valuable to Ditch
» Greece: The Country in Revolt, Church Takes a Stand
» IMF Ultimatum to Greece, Rich Must Pay Taxes Too
» Ireland’s UK Property Empire Unwinds as it Sells London Assets
» The Value for Money of the UK’s £26 Million MEPs
» UK: Government Admits Queen’s Head Could be Lost From Stamps
» WPP’s Sir Martin Sorrell Says UK Austerity Programme is ‘The Envy of Washington’
 
USA
» NY Rep. King: I’ll Hold Hearings on Radical Islam
 
Europe and the EU
» Ashton Picks Finn to be EU ‘Spymaster’
» Beware Europe: “Threat From Islamic Terrorists Will Grow and Escalate in 2011” — Dr. Rohan Gunaratna
» Final Seconds of the Stockholm Bomber: CCTV Video Shows How Close Killer Came to Murdering Hundreds of Festive Shoppers
» Germany: Unions Call for End to Private Health Insurance
» Italy: ‘Only Virile Boss’ Is Berlusconi Anagram
» Italy: Berlusconi Says He Has Lured 8 More Lawmakers to Govt
» More German Catholics Leave Scandal-Plagued Flock
» Netherlands’ Biggest Mosque Opened
» Netherlands: Hofstad Group Was a Terrorist Organisation, Says Appeal Court
» Sweden Attack Shows More Needed to Combat Extremism: UK PM
» Sweden Bomber’s Father-in-Law ‘Not Sad’ For Death
» UK: Hit-Run Killer ‘Has No Pity’
» UK: Muslim and Jewish Groups Object to Labelling of Ritually Slaughtered Meat
» UK: RAF Commander: Our Air Force Will be Little Better Than Belgium’s
» UK: Swine Flu: Half of Worst Afflicted Were Previously in Good Health
» UK: Temperatures Set to Hit Record Low of -26C in England as Forecasters Predict Freezing Countdown to Christmas
» UK: US Embassy Cables Detail the Radical Muslim Problem
» UK: Why Are 36% of Our Universities Training Muslim Terrorists?
» University Under Fire as a ‘Hotbed of Extremism’
» US Pressured Italy to Influence Judiciary
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: Was Europe Blind?
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Opinion Leader for EU Greater Economic Role, Study
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» British Woman Played Dead to Escape Being Stabbed as Knifemen Pounced on Forest Hiking Trip and Killed Her Friend
» No Renting Houses to Arabs: 55% of Israelis Agree With the Rabbis
» PNA: 80% for EU Projects, From Education to Healthcare
» US Woman’s Body Found in Jerusalem-Beit Shemesh Area
 
Middle East
» Five Iraqi Christians Seeking Asylum Returned From Stockholm. UN Protest
» From the Bosphorus: Straight — Turkey’s Enlightened Shiite Example
» Inside Yemen: Britain’s Woman on the Frontline of the New War on Terror
» Saudi Ordered to Deport Foreign Wife
» Saudi Warns Public Against New Year Celebration
» Stockholm Bomber: Banned Extremists Recruit Near Taimur Abdulwahab Al-Abdaly’s Luton Home
» The Kurdish Question in Washington and Gülen Factor
» Turkish Diplomat Appointed to Key UN Post
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan Attacks Target Army Bases, Killing 13
» Deadly Kabul Attack is First in Capital for Months
» Indonesia: West Java District Bans Migrant Workers
» Pakistan: China is a More Reliable Trading Partner Than the US, Economist Says
» Religious Attack in Pakistan. Six Dead in the Shiite Festival of Ashura
» Tanks ‘Needed to Fight Taliban’
 
Far East
» Chinese Military Complete Highway for Troop Movements to India
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Sharia Law to be Tightened if Sudan Splits — President
» Somali Islamist Groups to Join Forces: Spokesman
 
Immigration
» Ailing Greece Struggles With a Flood of Illegal Immigrants
» Gulf: Record Number of Immigrants, Over 15 Mln
 
General
» Microwave Radiation Map Hints at Other Universes
» The Cultural Genome: Google Books Reveals Traces of Fame, Censorship and Changing Languages
» The Muslim Brotherhood: Should We Engage?
» The Search for Extraterrestrial Life: ‘Are We All Martians?’

Financial Crisis


“Italy Not at Risk” — Juncker

“Despite the debt, considerable efforts have been made on public accounts”. Berlusconi goes to Council of Europe

MILAN — There is “no reason” for any risk involving Italy. “Particularly now that the prospect of a government crisis has receded”. Eurogroup chair Jean-Claude Juncker is adamant, as he told the Corriere della Sera in an interview. “From the political and financial points of view, I can see no reason why Italy should be penalised by the markets. Particularly now that the prospect of a government crisis has receded”. Mr Juncker added: “Parliament has approved a financial package worth €24 billion with considerable savings. And even though debt is 118% of GDP for 2010, considerable efforts have been made to put public accounts in order”.

DEBT — The Luxembourg premier explained the decisions he expected from the Council of Europe: “It will be concentrating mainly on the decision to modify the Treaty in terms of the Eurozone. It will say that Euroland is a permanent anti-crisis mechanism guaranteeing the stability of the European financial system. And that using this mechanism means that countries utilising it after 2013 will be subject to clear and very strict conditions, similar to those now imposed on Greece and Ireland. Finance ministers will then be tasked with working out the details of the state-saving mechanism to be decided at the Council of Europe meeting in about six months’ time”.

BERLUSCONI — In the meantime, Silvio Berlusconi will return to the European stage in Brussels on Thursday, buoyed by the confidence vote in the Chamber of Deputies. He will find a more relaxed atmosphere, pointed out sources at the Prime Minister’s Office, after most of the rejigging of the Lisbon Treaty to cope with crises was done at November’s summit and by finance ministers. Italy, however, is cautious, sending out signals on the eve of the meeting that it is ready to say no to the reform if there are any last-minute surprises: in other words, if no account is taken of all the “relevant factors” affecting public debt, including private borrowing, which in Italy is markedly lower than elsewhere

BELGIUM — Finally Belgium, which has been struggling with a serious political crisis for some time, had to assuage the markets with the announcement by finance minister Didier Reynders just before the Council of Europe meeting that a €2 billion financial package is slated for 2011.

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

16 dicembre 2010

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



Germany: Unloved Euro Considered Too Valuable to Ditch

The crisis rattling the euro has shaken Germans’ confidence in the currency but despite the grumbling, the advantages for the world’s number two exporter far outweigh the downsides, analysts and politicians say.

At the end of June, with a fiscal crisis in Greece hammering the 16-country eurozone, a poll showed most Germans wanted to scrap the euro and bring back the beloved Deutsche mark, the emblem of their post-war economic might.

A more recent survey suggested the anti-euro faction had dropped to 36 percent, still a high proportion for Europe’s biggest economy and founding member of the European Union.

“The euro has never really been loved in Germany,” said Frank Engels, an economist at Barclays Capital, recalling it was dubbed the “teuro,” a play on the German word for “expensive,” in response to perceived rising prices.

Many Germans believe that Berlin is bailing out other eurozone nations seen as profligate at a time when Germany itself is undergoing painful austerity measures.

“More and more Germans fear they are going to have to pay for mistakes made by other countries in the euro area,” said Martin Koopmann, a political scientist.

And daily Bild, the country’s largest paper, has often railed against Germany putting its hand in its pocket, recently asking: “Are we going to have to pay for the whole of Europe?”

A former head of the German employers’ federation, Hans-Olaf Henkel, argued in a recent book “Save our money — Germany is being sold out” that the eurozone should be split between a richer north and poorer south.

However, for now at least, such voices are on the margins, although Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble this month warned of “the danger of an anti-euro party,” which does not yet exist.

For Engels, the advantages of the euro for Germany’s exports are clear. The common currency has “enormously lowered” the costs of trading with its main partners, the analyst said.

If the Deutsche mark were still in existence, its value would likely have soared against the currencies of other eurozone countries because it would have been seen as a “safe haven” bet on the foreign exchange markets.

But this in turn would have harmed exports, credited with pulling the German economy out of a deep recession suffered in 2009.

Conscious of growing anti-euro sentiment, German politicians have pulled out all the stops to convince their citizens of the currency’s advantages — and the dangers inherent in a possible collapse.

“If the euro fails, then Europe fails,” Chancellor Angela Merkel told parliament at the height of the crisis.

But the message is not getting through, argues Koopmann. “We need politicians who can get across the positive aspects of the euro, while explaining why, in times of crisis, you have to pay the price.”

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



Greece: The Country in Revolt, Church Takes a Stand

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 17 — During two days of total media blackout, Greece’s Orthodox Church has taken a position on the austerity measures introduced by the government, which are giving rise to country-wide protests, especially violent in Athens. The big squeeze in which Greece currently finds itself consists on one side of the imperative that it stays within the parameters laid down by the EU and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as conditions for economic aid and on the other side by the increasingly widespread dissatisfaction of the country’s populace with austerity measures that are making their difficult daily lives even tougher.

Yesterday’s general strike by transport workers — affecting both urban transportation and railways — brought the country to a standstill and today threatens to be no better as the sector will be observing a further four-hour stay away from work. The outlook for the coming days is similar.

And now workers in the press and other media have decided to abstain from work, leading to a total media blackout with not even internet news bulletins being updated. On top of this come announced protest demonstrations by the student movement and hospital medics in Attica, who have decided to go on strike.

But today’s main story is the hard line being taken by the Greek Orthodox Church, which has called Greece an “occupied” country, referring to the measures imposed by the IMF and the European Union, which de facto place Greece’s independence in the hands of others. This attack from the Orthodox Synod — the text of which was distributed throughout the country’s churches during Sunday services — strikes at the heart of the country’s political leadership. This goes both for the present leadership under the Pasok socialists and that which preceded it — the conservatives of Nia Dimocratia. Both groupings are interested in nothing but power, “not knowing how to speak the language of truth”.

The Church went even further, accusing the country’s political classes of not having rebelled at the very tough measures being imposed, but instead of having submitted to the creditors, thus leading to the imposition of “radical changes which would have caused Greece to rebel just a short time before, but which have now triggered hardly any reaction at all”.

The Synod also points out how many economists are viewing the present global crisis as no more than “an artificial and provoked crisis aimed at placing control of global finance in the hands of non-philanthropic forces”. The Church attacks the country once again for having lived “irresponsibly” as a consumer and drifting away from the “truth of its situation”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF Ultimatum to Greece, Rich Must Pay Taxes Too

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Greece still has a long road ahead before it can emerge from the financial crisis. The road includes not only austerity measures, but also the need to convince those who kept faith with the country — chiefly the International Monetary Fund — with loans over which guarantees are claimed.

Greece was parlaysed today by a public transport strike, while there were violent clashes in the centre of Athens yesterday that have left the IMF concerned.

In New York today, the head of the IMF’s external relations, Caroline Atkinson, laid out the Fund’s position on the anti-crisis measures adopted by the government of Prime Minister Papandreou, saying that “there should be an equal distribution of burdens, and the rich must pay their taxes”.

Confirmation of the country’s enormous difficulties came in the latest estimates on unemployment, which rose to a new high of 12.4% in the third quarter of the year, a 3.1% increase compared to the equivalent period of 2009.

To tackle the figures and to reform the job market, the government intends to accelerate the programme of privatisations in order to gain income of more than 7 billion euros by 2013, a sum that will help to reduce budget deficit, as Greece’s creditors have requested.

The sectors subject to privatisation range from the water industry to mining, and will concern the Mont Parnes Casino and horse racing. The plan also foresees the sale of 11 regional airport and the development of 850 tourism ports.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Ireland’s UK Property Empire Unwinds as it Sells London Assets

It was the heady days of July 2007 — the last moments of the pre-credit crisis era and the first of Gordon Brown’s leadership — when Irish tycoon Derek Quinlan and joint venture partner Glenn Maud announced a property deal that would rock the City. Quinlan and Maud revealed they had won the race to buy the Citigroup tower at Canary Wharf from Royal Bank of Scotland for £1bn. The deal was the second biggest ever in the UK, behind only the sale of HSBC’s headquarters a few weeks earlier. It confirmed the Celtic Tiger’s increasing prominence in the key central London commercial property market. Two-and-a-half-years on, however, and the tiger is whimpering. The Citigroup deal was the peak of Ireland’s influence, and it is a peak that is unlikely to be revisited for years, if not decades, to come. Following the EU’s €85bn (£72bn) bail-out of Ireland last month, industry sources are preparing for Ireland’s London empire to start unwinding. The collapse of the global credit markets and Ireland’s economy had a heavy impact on property investors whose growth to prominence was fuelled by a debt surge supported by the country’s hungry banks. Property loans to the tune of €90bn are now being taken under the control — at times with opposition — of the Irish government’s National Asset Management Agency, which was set up to work-out distressed debt. NAMA was created in 2009 but has only become fully operational this year, collecting business plans from its main debtors in order to determine a strategy for the loans.

The task facing the organisation appears monumental, with 69pc of the loans linked to non-income-producing land and development sites, according to research seen by The Sunday Telegraph. NAMA has a stated aim of reducing the loanbook by 25pc over the next three years and also has €5bn to invest in its assets, but the unwinding process could take a decade. How Nama behaves is key to London and the UK, because 30pc of its assets are in Britain. One executive at a leading British property company who met with NAMA directors recently says it is “preparing to act” and has a “clarity of purpose” that puts it ahead of British banks in the unwinding process. The EU bail-out, the source said, provides NAMA with headroom and flexibility, and the fact the loans were bought at such a sharp discount — an average of 58pc for the first tranche — means it does not have to worry about suffering writedowns by agreeing disposals below the book value of properties.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Value for Money of the UK’s £26 Million MEPs

The cost goes toward the salaries, pensions and expenses of the 72 elected UK representatives and their staff. It will rise still further next year after MEPs controversially voted themselves a backdated pay rise and expenses hike last week. Almost all of the UK’s MEPs are better-paid than their Westminster counterparts, with basic salaries of around £79,600. In addition they are able to claim hundreds of thousands of pounds in expenses without providing receipts. The total bill includes £2.5 million in office costs expenses, £2.1 million in travel expenses and £2 million in subsistence allowance, which can be spent on hotels, taxis and meals while staying in Brussels or Strasbourg, the cities where the parliament is jointly based. The cost of the politicians — an average of £370,000 for each MEP every year — was revealed as part of a groundbreaking “value for money” investigation which looked at how hard each MEP worked relative to the amount they claimed in expenses.

The resulting league table exposed wide variations in the “value” provided by the politicians. At the very bottom of the table was James Elles, a Conservative MEP for the South East, who claimed £113,000 on travel, office and living allowances in a year — putting him among the 10 highest UK claimants — while taking part in less than 80 per cent of the parliament’s plenary sessions, where he delivered only three speeches in 18 months. Meanwhile his fellow Conservative Charles Tannock, a representative for London, emerged as the best-value MEP. He had a near-perfect attendance record while posing 189 questions to the European Commission and giving 96 speeches — and his travel and office expenses claims were below-average.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Government Admits Queen’s Head Could be Lost From Stamps

Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, said discussions were taking place after he admitted that there was no specific clause in the Postal Services Bill, setting out the terms of privatisation, which forces any new owner to keep the Queen’s head. An image of the monarch’s head has been on British postage stamps since they were invented in 1840. The draft legislation already contained provisions requiring a future private operator to get Royal approval before issuing new postage stamps bearing Her Majesty’s image — but no clause obliging them to use it in the first place. It is understood that no one believed that a new owner would want to drop the image, so felt it was not necessary to specify that the Queen’s head should remain. The Government is currently pushing through its plans to sell off up to 80 per cent of Royal Mail, either to a private operator or on the London Stock Exchange, most likely sometime in 2012. It keen to make the business — burdened with a vast pension deficit and declining postal revenues — as attractive as possible to any buyer.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WPP’s Sir Martin Sorrell Says UK Austerity Programme is ‘The Envy of Washington’

In recent decades, a visit to America might have left a British chief executive boarding their return flight to Heathrow feeling a touch of envy. The country’s effective copyright on the word “entrepreneur” turned it into the world’s biggest economy. However, Sir Martin Sorrell, founder of WPP, the world’s largest advertising company, wasn’t feeling too down as he left New York after a visit to the US this month. With 2011 coming into focus, “for the first time in a long time you can feel bullish about the UK in the medium-term”, Sir Martin believes. “What the UK is doing is the envy of people in Washington.” He’s talking, of course, about David Cameron’s austerity programme, promised before the general election as a revolt by bond investors over UK debt loomed, and outlined in October’s Budget. “The Coalition’s economic policy has a lot going for it,” Sir Martin said. “They’ve done the tough stuff and they’re dealing with the deficit.”The tough stuff is far less swingeing than the medicine voters in Ireland, Greece and Portugal are being forced to stomach. Once inflation is factored in, spending in the UK is set to decline by about 3.7pc over the next four years to £671bn. The cuts, though, are real enough and, as the protests over the increase in university tuition fees showed, will not be easy to deliver. The programme has been enough to win the backing of much of UK plc, which, with the public sector having to find reverse gear for the first time in more than a decade, will be tasked with fuelling the recovery next year. Sir Martin’s support echoes that of Justin King, the chief executive of supermarket Sainsbury, Sir Stuart Rose, the outgoing chairman of Marks & Spencer, and retail entrepreneur Sir Philip Green, who was hired to help find savings across Whitehall’s shambolic procurement processes. The backing comes with a price. The WPP boss says that lower corporate and income taxes will eventually be needed to support the recovery. “In the medium term you chop the tax rates — both personal and corporate — and you lay the emphasis on the strategic development of the country,” he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


NY Rep. King: I’ll Hold Hearings on Radical Islam

The incoming chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security said Sunday that he will hold hearings on the “radicalization of the American Muslim community.”

In an op-ed piece in Newsday, Rep. Peter King said such hearings are critical because al-Qaida “is recruiting Muslims living legally in the United States — homegrown terrorists who have managed to stay under the anti-terror radar screen.”

The Long Island Republican said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press that the Muslim community “does not cooperate with law enforcement to anywhere near the extent that they should.”

“With al-Qaida trying to recruit from within their community it’s important that they cooperate,” King said.

A spokesman for the Washington, D.C.-based Council on American-Islamic Relations said he fears King’s hearings will become an anti-Muslim witch hunt.

“We’re concerned that it’ll become a new McCarthy-type hearing,” said the spokesman, Ibrahim Hooper.

Hooper said members of the Muslim community helped foil several recent terrorist plots by cooperating with law enforcement. And he questioned King’s assertion that law-enforcement officials have complained about a lack of cooperation from Muslim leaders.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Ashton Picks Finn to be EU ‘Spymaster’

Ilkka Salmi, the 42-year-old head of the Finnish security service, the Suojelupoliisin, has been appointed as the new director of the EU’s intelligence-sharing bureau, the Joint Situation Centre.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Beware Europe: “Threat From Islamic Terrorists Will Grow and Escalate in 2011” — Dr. Rohan Gunaratna

“The terrorist threat to Europe from al Qaeda, its associated groups and homegrown cells will grow and escalate in 2011,” warns Dr. Rohan Gunaratna, the head of a large anti-terrorism research center in Singapore.

When Asian Tribune contacted Dr. Rohan Gunaratna, he in a cautionary note said that, “With the release of key Al Qaeda leaders in exchange of an Iranian diplomat kidnapped by Taliban, the threat to the west especially to Europe will grow in the coming months”.

He further cautioned that “The attack in Stockholm is the beginning of a series of attacks the terrorists are planning in Scandinavia.

Dr. Rohan Gunaratna pointed out, “At this point of time, there is significant propaganda activity and fund raising for terrorist groups, both Muslim and non Muslim groups, such as PKK and LTTE.

The Singapore based internationally renowned terrorism expert made these observation when commenting on the recent bombing in Sweden and also about the suicide bomber said to be one Taymour Abdulwahab, an Arab initially from Iraq, who exploded two bombs recently in the capital of Sweden, who was trained in the United Kingdom.

The terrorist threat to Europe from Al Qaeda, its associated groups and homegrown cells will grow and escalate in 2011. With the release of key Al Qaeda leaders in exchange of an Iranian diplomat kidnapped by Taliban, the threat to the west especially to Europe will grow in the coming months. Subsequently British Prime Minister David Cameron in a statement in the floor of the House Commons, lamented, “Britain has not done enough to counter Islamic extremism.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Final Seconds of the Stockholm Bomber: CCTV Video Shows How Close Killer Came to Murdering Hundreds of Festive Shoppers

Dramatic footage of what are thought to be the final moments of the Swedish suicide bomber has emerged, showing how he was moments from killing and injuring hundreds of Christmas shoppers.

The film, from a CCTV camera only yards from where British-educated Taimour Abdulwahab Al-Abdaly detonated his home-made device, shows a man wearing a backpack walking down one of Stockholm’s busiest shopping streets surrounded by dozens of members of the public.

The man appears to rummage inside his coat, possibly trying to detonate the bomb. He then quickly changes direction, walking back through the shoppers and down a quiet side street.

Four minutes later a huge explosion erupts from the same side street, tearing across the left side of the screen and sending passers-by running amid billowing grey smoke.

Abdulwahab, 28, killed himself and injured two members of the public. Had he successfully detonated the device earlier, police believe he could have killed or injured hundreds of innocent shoppers.

Peter Jonsson, a security expert and former employee of the Swedish intelligence service Saepo, said: ‘The footage shows a very focused individual, walking on a very deliberate line who was not out for Christmas shopping. ‘It looks as if his equipment malfunctions in the crowd and he went back to the quiet side street to go and check on it. Obviously he would not do this on an open street where people would panic.

‘In the footage it looks like he is doing something with his left hand in front of the jacket.

‘With his right hand side, just before he cuts the corner, you can see an antenna and that could be the walkie-talkie that was pictured on the floor after the explosion — he was either talking to an accomplice, or this may have been rigged to detonate the bombs.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Germany: Unions Call for End to Private Health Insurance

Germany’s trade unions are calling for the abolition of private health insurance and for all workers — including public servants and the self-employed — to be gradually brought into a consolidated public system.

According to a report in daily Berliner Zeitung, the Confederation of German Trade Unions (DGB) has calculated that the overhaul would shave 2.5 percentage points from the 15.5 percent of gross income that workers are set to pay from next year for statutory health insurance.

The paper reported Monday that a DGB health insurance reform committee would recommend gradually bringing public servants and self-employed people into the state system, to which the overwhelming majority of Germans already belong.

It would also call for high income-earners to pay a higher share and for people’s investment and rental incomes to be taken into account when calculating their insurance premiums.

The committee was due to release its recommendations on Monday, the paper wrote.

Among other things, it will call for the abolition of private health insurance. In 2008, an estimated 8.6 million people had this type of coverage. From a set future date, all people born in Germany or taking up a job in Germany should be covered only by statutory health insurance.

Furthermore, the income rate at which contributions are capped should be raised from the present €3,750 per month to €5,500. Incomes above the new limit should be slapped with a surcharge of about three percent.

The commission also called for parity to be re-established between workers and employers, meaning that the recently introduced additional contribution of 0.9 percent for workers be scrapped.

Workers’ contribution rates, instead of rising from the current 7.9 percent to 8.2 percent next year, would instead drop to 7.75 percent. The employer’s contribution, meanwhile, would rise from the present 7 percent to 7.75 percent, instead of rising only to 7.3 percent as is currently planned.

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



Italy: ‘Only Virile Boss’ Is Berlusconi Anagram

Premier in buoyant mood at Brussels caucus meeting

(ANSA) — Brussels, December 17 — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi said Friday he had found out the anagram of his name was “unico boss virile” or “only virile boss”.

The fun-loving premier announced the news to cheers from the youth section of the European People’s Party caucus here.

Berlusconi has traded on a playboy image throughout his political career and has come through a series of sex scandals unscathed, boasting that he loves pretty girls and has never paid for sex.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Says He Has Lured 8 More Lawmakers to Govt

Premier seeking more solid majority after confidence scare

(ANSA) — Brussels, December 17 — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi said Friday he had lured eight more lawmakers to the government fold as he seeks to build a more solid majority after narrowly surviving a confidence vote in parliament.

Berlusconi won Tuesday’s vote in the Lower House by a margin of three after members of House Speaker Gianfranco Fini’s new Future and Freedom for Italy (FLI) party, which split from the premier’s People of Freedom (PdL) party to set up the showdown, broke ranks and backed the government.

The premier was also able to benefit from one defection from the Democratic Party (PD), the largest centre-left opposition party, and two from Italy of Values (IdV), another opposition party.

“We won by three votes but last night I regained eight more,” Berlusconi told the youth section of the European People’s Party caucus.

“I spent the whole night meeting them, when I’d have preferred to meet beautiful girls,” quipped the premier, who often delights in his playboy image and was in Brussels for a European summit.

Earlier this week Berlusconi said he was targeting individual members of parliament, after being rebuffed by a partner in a previous government, the centrist Catholic UDC.

The UDC has said it will remain in opposition with the FLI, with whom it aims to build a ‘third pole’ in the centre ground of Italian politics.

Berlusconi blasted Fini and UDC leader Pier Ferdinando Casini as “disastrous” and said they should have stayed in his centre-right alliance. He reiterated that he was confident he would have a working majority for the rest of the government’s term, which should run until 2013.

Despite Berlusconi’s optimism, most observers think a spring election is in the offing, with March 27 being repeated as a likely date.

The Northern League, Berlusconi’s key ally, is keen on a snap vote, but intends to wait at least until a cherished fiscal federalist project is passed in January to leave more tax revenue in the richer north of Italy, analysts say.

On Friday the premier also rejected renewed claims from the PD and IdV that he had ‘bought’ MPs in order to win the confidence vote, an allegation prosecutors in Rome are investigating after IdV leader Antonio Di Pietro made a formal complaint.

“There was no transfer market for MPs and nothing was offered, I didn’t offer government positions,” he said, adding that it was normal for MPs to be tempted away from the UDC’s and FLI’s “wagon heading left”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



More German Catholics Leave Scandal-Plagued Flock

Tens of thousands of German Catholics cancelled their church membership in 2010 — considerably more than in 2009 — taking their automatic tax donations with them. The recent abuse scandals motivated many church-leavers.

Thousands more German Catholics have left their church this year than in 2009, with the recent string of sexual abuse revelations and other public scandals apparently motivating many people’s decisions.

Recent studies by the Frankfurter Rundschau daily and the dpa news agency concur that the country’s Catholic churches have lost considerably more members in 2010 than in recent years.

The Bavarian diocese of Augsburg, where Bishop Walter Mixa was forced to stand down in April over physical abuse and embezzlement accusations, recorded some of the worst figures: As of mid-December, 11,351 believers had left the church, compared to 6,953 in 2009.

In the south-western Rottenburg-Stuttgart diocese, 17,169 Catholics had left the church as of mid-November, almost seven thousand more than in 2009.

Trier, Wuerzburg, Osnabrueck and Bamberg all recorded significant increases in departures in 2010, with many disgruntled Catholics apparently seeking new homes with other Christian denominations.

Membership means money

Early indications suggest that the prime mover for people leaving their congregation was the series of sex abuse scandals that have rocked the Catholic Church, and the church’s handling of them…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands’ Biggest Mosque Opened

ROTTERDAM, 18/12/10 — After a construction period of over seven years, the biggest mosque in the Netherlands was opened Friday. The Essalam mosque in Rotterdam offers space for 1,500 Muslims.

The mosque was officially opened by Mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb and Alderman Hamit Karakus. They, respectively Moroccan and Turkish, are Muslims themselves. Among the invited guests were the ambassadors of Dubai and Morocco.

The new mosque, built in a traditional style with 50 metre high minarets, is the biggest Islamic house of prayer in the Netherlands and one of the biggest in Western Europe. A substantial portion of the money for the mosque has come from a Sheik in Dubai, who also has placed his followers on the mosque management board.

Much opposition to the building existed in the years past, among others among the local population. Construction was halted for months several times.

Rotterdam city council threatened to withdraw the building permit, mainly under pressure from Liveable Rotterdam, the biggest party among white Rotterdammers. As well, a portion of the Moroccan Muslims who would make use of the mosque did not want the intervention from Dubai.

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



Netherlands: Hofstad Group Was a Terrorist Organisation, Says Appeal Court

The group of young men who became known as the Hofstad group had formed an organisation which aimed to carry out terrorist attacks, the Amsterdam appeal court ruled on Friday.

The seven defendants were sentenced to jail terms of between 15 months and 13 years. The longest sentence went to Muslim convert Jason Walters, who has an American father and Dutch mother.

He was earlier sentenced to 15 years for five counts of attempted murder after throwing a handgrenade at police during his arrest in 2004.

Young

Walters, who has since renounced Islam, was 19 at the time of his arrest. The appeal court said it had taken his youth into account in reducing his sentence.

The seven are part of a loose grouping of young Muslims which police named the Hofstad group. It is said to include Mohammed Bouyeri who murdered film maker Theo van Gogh in 2004.

Friday’s verdict is the latest in a long legal process against the group. They were first found guilty of membership of a terrorist organisation but then found not guilty on appeal.

However in February the high court ordered a retrial, saying the definitions for the ‘existence and structure of a criminal or terrorist organisation’ used by the first appeal court were ‘too strict’ .

The public prosecution department welcomed Friday’s verdict but are now preparing for the case to be referred back to the High Court, the Telegraaf reports.

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



Sweden Attack Shows More Needed to Combat Extremism: UK PM

UK Prime Minister David Cameron admitted on Wednesday that his country has not invested enough in fighting domestic Islamic extremism and vowed to do more in light of reports that a Swedish suicide bomber lived and studied northwest of London.

“I think if we’re frank on both sides of the House [of Commons], we have not done enough to deal with the promotion of extremist Islamism in our own country,” he told lawmakers, referring to all political parties.

News that a suicide bomber who attacked a busy shopping street in Stockholm on Saturday had studied and lived in Britain has raised fresh soul-searching here about how to combat radicalism, five years after four home-grown bombers attacked the London transport system in 2005, killing 52 people.

“Whether it’s making sure that imams coming over to this country can speak English properly, whether it’s making sure we deradicalise our universities, I think we do have to take a range of further steps and I’m going to be working hard to make sure that we do this,” Cameron said.

“Yes, we have got to have the policing in place, yes we’ve got to make sure we invest in our intelligence services, yes we’ve got to cooperate with other countries. But we’ve also got to ask why it is that so many young men in our own country get radicalised in this completely unacceptable way,” he added.

The man responsible for Sweden’s first-ever suicide bombing is believed to have been Taymour Abdulwahab, who until recently had lived in Luton, northwest of London.

He was carrying a cocktail of explosives, but succeeded in killing only himself accidentally on Saturday afternoon near a busy Stockholm pedestrian shopping area.

The man killed himself before he could carry out what, according to the lead prosecutor on the case, appears to have been a mission to murder “as many people as possible.” Two others were injured when his car exploded nearby minutes earlier.

Media described the man as an Iraqi-born Swede, although Swedish security service Säpo did not confirm his country of origin, only saying he was from the Middle East and became a Swedish citizen in 1992.

Abdulwahab left the small Swedish town of Tranås three hours southwest of Stockholm in 2001 to study in the British city of Luton. He had been living there with his wife and three children until only weeks before the attack.

The chairman of a mosque in Luton where he used to worship said he had stormed out in 2007 after a series of confrontations over his extremist opinions and had not been seen since.

An Islamist website, Shumukh al-Islam, posted a purported will by Abdulwahab in which said he was fulfilling a threat by Al-Qaeda in Iraq to attack Sweden.

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



Sweden Bomber’s Father-in-Law ‘Not Sad’ For Death

The father-in-law of the man believed to have carried out Sweden’s first suicide bombing on Saturday revealed on Friday that he is “not sad” about his death, adding that the man did not divulge his plans to family members.

“We did not know and were not aware of his criminal plans. We feel no sorrow. We are not sad about his death. Quite the opposite,” Ali Thwany wrote in a statement to several media outlets, including the Expressen daily, which published it on its website.

Thwany’s son-in-law, Taimour Abdulwahab, is strongly believed to have been Saturday’s bomber, although police have yet to officially identify the man who first blew up his car and later himself near a crowded pedestrian street in central Stockholm.

He was carrying a cocktail of explosives and police suspect he may have left the crowd of Christmas shoppers due to a problem with the bombs when he mistakenly set off a small charge while standing in an empty side-street.

The bomber was the only person to die, but two people were slightly injured when his car exploded minutes earlier about 300 metres away.

“My daughter Mona has been tricked into living with him. She did not know her husband was a criminal, or about his hidden and open intentions. I count his departure as the door to freedom for my daughter. Now she can be free from the brainwashing of terrorism,” Thwany wrote.

Reports have said Abdulwahab arrived in Sweden as a child from Iraq and could have become radicalised in Britain, where he attended university and lived for the last few years with his wife Mona and three children.

“With his action, he denies all the good he has received from Sweden, Sweden which took us in [and] has given us what no Arab or Muslim country has given us,” Thwany lamented.

“We distance ourselves from him, and we have no connection to him in any way. Everything that has happened, he is personally responsible for,” he said, stressing though that “an unknown group has brainwashed him and tricked into this.”

Investigators are busy seeking to determine whether the bomber, whom they suspect aimed “to kill as many people as possible,” had accomplices.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Hit-Run Killer ‘Has No Pity’

HIT-AND-RUN killer Aso Mohammed Ibrahim knows enough English to work the UK legal system. Yet the failed asylum seeker refuses to say “sorry” to the heartbroken father of the girl he left for dead. Paul Houston, 41, says Ibrahim has never shown an “ounce of remorse” over the crash that killed his daughter Amy, 12. Mr Houston, of Darwen, Lancashire, has fought a seven-year legal battle to have Ibrahim, 33, deported but two senior immigration judges last week ruled he could stay as he had a right to a family life with his British wife and two children. The UK Border Agency has said it would appeal against the ruling. Ibrahim, of Blackburn, was jailed for four months over Amy’s death. He also has a string of criminal convictions. Questions have now emerged about Ibrahim’s true identity. A Border Agency source said last night: “We have doubts Ibrahim is this man’s real name.”

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim and Jewish Groups Object to Labelling of Ritually Slaughtered Meat

About 10 million turkeys are expected to be eaten in the UK over Christmas with most people unaware of how the bird on their plate was killed. All that could change under proposed EU legislation that would require the labelling of unstunned halal and kosher meat, to the chagrin of Muslim and Jewish groups.

All meat and meat products “derived from animals that have not been stunned prior to slaughter ie have been ritually slaughtered,” would have to be specified as such under amendment 205 to the EU food information regulations.

The stated aim is to allow consumers to make an informed choice, consistent with their ethical concerns, but opponents argue it is discriminatory.

“If you are only labelling meat provided for Muslims and Jews you are discriminating against Muslims and Jews,” said Shimon Cohen, campaign director for Shechita UK.

“There is no conclusive evidence to show our method of animal slaughter is anything but humane.”

Cohen said many more animals are “mis-stunned” and thereby suffer “excruciating pain” than are slaughtered under the shechita slaughter method, from which kosher meat is obtained.

Opponents fear labelling would cut demand for ritually slaughtered meat, causing producers to pull out and forcing prices higher for remaining consumers.

Compassion in World Farming (CIWF), which lobbied for the amendment, cited a report by the UK Farm Animal Welfare Council which found that cutting the throat without stunning induced “significant pain and distress” to make its case.

“We don’t have a problem with religious slaughter, we have a problem with any kind of slaughter that is inhumane,” said Phil Brooke, welfare development manager at CIWF. “While it’s allowed we think that any products that come from an unstunned animal should be labelled as such.”

Emotions among Jews and Muslims have been inflamed by far-right groups such as the British National Party and English Defence League whipping up opposition to halal meat — the former describes it as a “barbaric and disgusting Islamic tradition” — while not targeting kosher meat.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: RAF Commander: Our Air Force Will be Little Better Than Belgium’s

Air Vice-Marshal Greg Bagwell, commander of the RAF’s No 1 Group, which controls all Britain’s fast jet combat aircraft, said that Britain was likely to end up with only six fighter and bomber squadrons, half its current number. He warned: “That might not be quite enough.” Air Vice-Marshal Bagwell’s remarks, in a briefing last week to Defense News, a trade journal, are among the most outspoken by any senior RAF commander. He warned that even the reductions that have been publicly announced — from 12 fast-jet squadrons to eight — would leave the RAF only “just about” able to do its current tasks, with no leeway for the unexpected. “Am I happy to be down at that number [eight squadrons] next April? No, it worries the hell out of me,” he said. “I can just about do Operation Herrick [Afghanistan], and the QRAs [air defence operations]. Can I do other things? Yes, but it is at risk.”

In the medium-term, over the next seven to 10 years, Air Vice-Marshal Bagwell said, the RAF “will be a six-squadron world; that’s what’s on the books”. He said he expected there to be five squadrons of Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft and just one of the Harrier’s long-term replacement, the Joint Strike Fighter. “I expect a single [JSF] squadron in 2020 and that’s it,” he said. Asked whether this left the RAF on the same level as Belgium, he replied: “I think we’re slightly above Belgium, and we are not a Belgium-minded country.” He added: “I might, over the next few years, argue that that might not be quite enough.” As recently as the 1990s the RAF had 30 front-line fast-jet squadrons. Air Vice-Marshal Bagwell described the decision to axe the RAF’s Harrier aircraft, which went out of service last week, as something that “takes us below what we would have seen as a sensible position.” He said the longer-term “problem” for the RAF was that “you can’t in 2018 go, ‘oh hang a on a sec, I’m a bit short of fast jets, can we just hang on a sec …’ it’s going to take a while to build [them]. Will we get caught out? Maybe. Do we know what the risks are? Yes.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Swine Flu: Half of Worst Afflicted Were Previously in Good Health

Professor Dame Sally Davies, the Government’s chief medical officer, has written to all GPs and NHS hospitals warning of a “sharp increase” in the numbers of patients admitted to intensive care because swine flu has caused their lungs to fail. The letter says pressures on critical care services are “significantly over and above” those expected at this time of year. Crucially, the memo, written on Tuesday, says that while “half of patients requiring respiratory support have had recognised comorbidities [underlying health problems] which increase the risk for severe influenza, half have had no recognised comorbidities.” A spokesman for the Department of Health (DoH) confirmed that the presence of so many previously healthy people among those worst affected by the virus was “unusual” and said anyone concerned about worsening flu-like symptoms should contact their GP. While overall flu levels remain normal for this time of year, the rate of flu has more than doubled in just seven days, latest figures show.

The official death toll from flu this winter has now reached 17, including six children. Fourteen of the deaths were linked to swine flu, and none of those who died had been vaccinated against the virus. In the same letter, the senior doctor says pregnant women, children, young adults, and those who are overweight are among the most severely ill.

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           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Temperatures Set to Hit Record Low of -26C in England as Forecasters Predict Freezing Countdown to Christmas

Forecasters are predicting that the lowest temperature ever recorded in England could be broken this week.

They suggest that the record low of -26.1C could be topped as the snow and bad weather caused air and road chaos across the country.

While they say that their prediction is a cautious one, the winter solstice this coming Tuesday is said to increase the chance as the sun is at its lowest point in the sky.

The likely location of the low could be in Shropshire, where the previous record was set in January 1982, or in Herefordshire…

           — Hat tip: bewick [Return to headlines]



UK: US Embassy Cables Detail the Radical Muslim Problem

Nearly one-third of Muslim college students in Britain support killing in the name of religion, while 40 percent want to live under Islamic law, according to a secret cable from the U.S. Embassy in London that reviewed public polling data and government population predictions.

A survey of 600 Islamic and 800 non-Islamic students at 30 universities found that 32 percent of the Muslims believed in religious killing, while only 2 percent of non-Muslim students felt religious murder was justified, the cable said, referring to a poll conducted by the Center for Social Cohesion.

The embassy cable, released by the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks, said the same survey revealed that 54 percent of Muslim students want to be represented by an Islamic-based political party.

The poll also showed that 40 percent of Muslim students endorse Islamic, or Shariah, law, which can impose the death penalty for religious heresy and adultery, often by stoning, or the amputation of hands for theft. Since 2008, Britain has allowed Muslims to follow Shariah law in civil cases, but not in criminal trials.

The embassy report, written in February, also noted that Muslims represent the largest non-Christian religious community in Britain. Although Muslims comprise only 3 percent of the British population of nearly 60 million, they have grown to 2 million from 1.6 million in seven years. The government projects the Muslim population will reach 2.2 million in the next census in 2011, the cable said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Why Are 36% of Our Universities Training Muslim Terrorists?

EFFORTS to spot violently radical students within our universities are doomed to failure because academics cannot get to grips with the potentially deadly problem, a Sunday Express investigation has revealed. As detectives try to find out what happened in the years that a suicide bomber was at university before he tried to kill 100 Christmas shoppers in Sweden last Saturday, our security services are eagerly awaiting the pearls of wisdom from Professor Malcolm Grant, the Provost of University College London. M15 chiefs have already warned 39 universities that they have a serious problem with Islamic “violent extremism” and were alarmed when 14 of those institutions chose not to seek a Government grant to help deal with the issue. Now their hopes of getting tough, positive action lie with Professor Grant, who, with a small team of academics, has been commissioned by UK Universities to address the troubling situation.

Professor Grant’s report for UK Universities, the advisory body for the country’s 133 universities, will be published early in the New Year. He was seen as the ideal person to write new guidelines on dealing with student radicalisation not just because of his academic brilliance but because one of his former students, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, tried to blow up a jet over Detroit last Christmas Day. however, inquiries suggest that his report may not deliver the much-needed wake-up call to chancellors and vice chancellors. Sources fear it is likely to be a wordy academic discourse which tries to balance the need for freedom of speech and academic freedom while also tackling extremism, a stance which some argue is a recipe for fence-sitting.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



University Under Fire as a ‘Hotbed of Extremism’

Muslim extremists were trying to recruit students outside the University of Bedfordshire more than a year ago — but police were powerless to stop them.

On Monday (December 13) it emerged that last weekend’s Stockholm suicide bomber Taimour Abdulwahab al-Abdaly had graduated with a BSc in sports therapy from the University of Luton.

Abdulwahab, 28, lived in Argyll Avenue, Luton, and was enrolled between 2001 and 2004, and British security services are trying to establish whether he was radicalised while he studied there.

This week fears have surfaced that the institution — now known as University of Bedfordshire — is a ‘hotbed’ for extremists and would-be terrorists.

While the university this week strenuously denied any cases of extremist activity ever having taken place on its campus, our sister paper Luton & Dunstable Express published a story in October 2009 revealing Muslim radicals were trying to recruit students outside its main entrance during Freshers’ Week.

Around 15 extremists, some of whom had branded soldiers ‘baby-killers’ and spat at them during the Royal Anglian Regiment’s homecoming parade in Luton town centre in March that year, set up two stalls outside the campus in Park Street and handed out leaflets, some of which showed a placard depicting former US President George Bush below a headline ‘Terrorist Murderer’.

In the House of Commons on Wednesday (December 16), Prime Minister David Cameron said: “If we are frank on both sides of the House, we have not done enough to deal with the promotion of extremist Islamism in our own country.

“Whether it is making sure that imams coming over to this country can speak English properly, or whether it is making sure that we de-radicalise our universities, we have to take a range of further steps, and I am going to be working hard to make sure that we do.”

The university of Bedfordshire insists there has never been a case of extremism on its campus.

But our sister paper Luton & Dunstable Express’s story in October 2009 about radicals operating outside its Park Street main entrance during Freshers’ Week shows they have tried to recruit its students in the past…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



US Pressured Italy to Influence Judiciary

The CIA rendition of cleric Abu Omar in 2003 turned into a headache for Washington when a Milan court indicted the agents involved. Secret dispatches now show how the US threatened the Italian government in an attempt to influence the case. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was apparently happy to help.

In 2007, a court in Milan started trying several CIA agents in absentia for their roles in the 2003 kidnapping of Abu Omar, an Egyptian cleric who had been living in the northern Italian city. When the indictments first came down, the US government tried to intervene — first in Milan and then in Rome — so as to influence the investigations of the public prosecutor’s office.

At first, the efforts were conducted via diplomatic channels. But, later, they also took place during top-level talks with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. American diplomats and even the US secretary of defense were assured that the Italian government “was working hard to resolve the situation.” And they also got to hear Berlusconi vent his rage at his own country’s judicial system.

These anecdotes come from secret dispatches from the US Embassy in Rome, and they are particularly embarrassing for Berlusconi, who recently survived a confidence vote in parliament. The documents provide detailed descriptions of how both the American ambassador and US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates exerted direct pressure on the Italian government in Rome. In particular, they wanted to make sure that Rome would use its influence to make sure that no international arrest warrants were issued for the CIA agents accused of being involved in Abu Omar’s abduction.

The case bears an uncanny resemblance to how the United States dealt with the affair involving Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen with Lebanese roots who was also unlawfully kidnapped by the CIA in Macedonia in late 2003 for having alleged ties to terrorism. In that case, US diplomats in Germany tried to prevent local officials from pursuing a case against CIA officials involved in el-Masri’s abduction and issuing an international arrest warrant for them. In the wake of 9/11, the CIA had expanded such activities with the explicit approval of then-President George W. Bush, abducting several dozen suspected terrorists around the world and transporting them to secret detention centers for interrogation.

Abu Omar’s abduction followed the pattern exactly. Omar, who was known to Italian authorities as a hate preacher at a mosque in Milan, was seized in broad daylight on the open street, hustled into a white van, anesthetized and then flown from Italy to Egypt via Germany. There, Omar claims he was brutally mistreated by Egyptian intelligence officers. He also claims that American officials were present while he was being tortured and interrogated. After being held for 14 months, Omar was finally released, though he continues to live under a type of house arrest.

An Embarrassing Trial for the CIA

In the case involving Omar, the United States quickly ran into the same problem that it had faced in Germany. Italian journalists and Armando Spataro, the unflinching prosecutor in Milan, uncovered in meticulous detail the CIA agents’ at-times-sloppy efforts to camouflage their actions. And the story quickly became a media sensation — particularly after it emerged that a number of agents had rewarded themselves for the successful kidnapping operation by spending a weekend in a luxury hotel in Venice, complete with generous expense accounts. After months of investigations, the prosecutor produced an overwhelmingly detailed indictment that even included the real names of the kidnappers.

When the trial got underway in Milan in 2007, it was a major disaster for the CIA. Though none of its agents were in the courtroom, just the negative attention it brought the organization was damaging enough. Indeed, the mere fact that a trial was being held might have been what prompted American officials to go much further in their efforts to put pressure on the Italian government than it had on the German government in the case of el-Masri.

Indeed, already in May 2006, the American ambassador in Rome relayed a threatening message: If arrest warrants were in fact issued, it could lead to a drastic deterioration in bilateral relations. For example, in notes following a conversation with high-ranking Undersecretary Gianni Letta on May 24, 2006, the American ambassador wrote that he had explained to Letta that “nothing would damage relations faster or more seriously than a decision by the government of Italy to forward warrants for arrests” of the CIA agents named in connection with the Abu Omar case.

It didn’t take long before the Italians reacted to the threat. At a hastily called meeting, Letta suggested that the best way to get the case wrapped up as quickly as possible would be for the then-US attorney general to speak directly to Clemente Mastella, Italy’s justice minister at the time.

‘Committed to Maintaining Our Strong Anti-Terrorism Cooperation’

The notes provide deep insights into relations between Italy and the United States. Even before the Americans started exerting pressure, the Italian government had already been doing all it could to cover up the Abu Omar affair. All the evidence and knowledge that Italian officials had about the kidnapping were declared state secrets, making them worthless to prosecutor Spataro in terms of arguing his case. The Americans were very happy about this move. In fact, one American diplomatic cable regarding the classification of evidence says that the Italian government “is fully committed to maintaining our strong anti-terrorism cooperation.”

Other cables create the impression of a subservient stance on the part of the Italians — to the point that they became active accomplices. With startling frankness, members of the government suggest to the Americans that Italy’s independent judiciary could be easily manipulated. In any other country, publicizing the kind of things cited in the cables would probably prompt a government crisis. But in the Italy of 2010 — where Prime Minister Berlusconi has already had laws amended on several occasions so as to prevent legal proceedings against himself — it’s hard to tell if the leaking of the American diplomatic documents has had any effect at all.

The cables also cast an unflattering light on Berlusconi himself. Secretary of Defense Gates had an appointment with the Italian prime minister at the Palazzo Chigi, his official residence, in February 2010. Gates, a former director of the CIA, was interested in the fate of Joseph Romano, a US Air Force officer who had already been convicted with the other 22 CIA agents in November 2009. Gates wanted to obtain immunity for Romano, since, in his view, the Italian judiciary did not have jurisdiction over him.

Berlusconi’s response shows his condescending attitude towards an independent judiciary. According to the cable, he told Gates that he “was working hard to resolve the situation.” Then, he apparently said that the justice system was “dominated by leftists” and that he had many enemies, especially among the public prosecutors. He also made the prediction that the “courts will come down in our favor” in the appeal proceedings.

Helping the Americans

Berlusconi was not the only Italian that was helpful during Gates’ visit. The next day, Gates met Italian Defense Minister Ignazio La Russa. The secret cable relates how Gates thanked his counterpart for sending letters to the relevant agencies, supporting the argument that the US had jurisdiction over Romano. La Russa also suggested to Gates that the US be more present in the appeals process and not leave the matter solely to Rome.

In the end, a solution was found that was very similar to the one reached in Germany in the case of Khaled el-Masri. Although there were verdicts, arrest warrants and extradition requests in the case, the Italian government refused to formally forward the requests to the US, just as Berlin had done. As a result, Abu Omar’s kidnappers are still at large.

The only consequence is that Robert Seldon Lady, the former CIA station chief in Milan, had to change his plans for his retirement. He can no longer travel to the wonderful property that he bought for himself in Tuscany.

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

Balkans


Kosovo: Was Europe Blind?

The European Council report released on 15 December accusing Kosovo’s leadership of organ trafficking raises plenty of questions about the EU’s indulgent attitude towards prime minister Hashim Thaçi and former Albanian separatists.

In his report, Swiss senator Dick Marty, who gained fame for first revealing the existence of secret CIA prisons holding alleged terrorists, “accuses the prime minister and several government officials from the UÇK [KLA — Kosovo Liberation Army] of being directly responsible for organ trafficking”, explains Le Monde. “Marty has identified six detention centres in Albania in which Kosovo Serbs or pro-Serb Albanians were held. These centres allegedly continued to operate even after the Serb surrender [following NATO bombardments] in June 1999”. This situation, notes the French newspaper, “persisted until NATO deployed international forces. Once the prisoners were taken to Albania, they were tortured” — and their organs were removed, in some cases.

This is not the first time such accusations have been levelled at Thaçi and his henchmen, points out Le Monde: in her book The Hunt (2008), Carla del Ponte, former prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, “already accused KLA members, who were leading the armed struggle against Serbia at the time, of extracting organs from nearly 300 captives held in Albania”.

Kidnapped on orders from the prime minister of a European state?

“Is it possible? Is it possible that people could have been kidnapped on orders from the prime minister of a European state? That he had them murdered in order to extract organs from their dead bodies, e.g. kidneys for rich customers in Germany, Canada, Poland or Israel willing to shell out up to €45,000 for the deal?” asks the Tageszeitung (TAZ). “Is it possible that Hashim Thaçi, the prime minister of Kosovo, unanimously backed by Berlin, London, Paris and Washington, owes his political power to wealth he amassed in criminal activities?” At any rate, according to the Berlin daily, “Dick Marty’s report will heavily impact the dialogue between Serbia and Kosovo that has been heralded with much pomp and circumstance in Brussels.”

Indeed, explains the TAZ, “Not a single Serb would agree to sit down at the negotiating table with Thaçi. Without him, however, it will be virtually impossible to form a government in Pristina following the general elections on 12 December.” Furthermore, “If Eulex, the EU mission in Kosovo, wants to remain credible, it will now have to conduct an impartial investigation into Thaçi & Co — which it has refrained from doing so far because a number of Albanian politicians are former guerrilla commanders and still have armed groups at their disposal.”

Everything about Thaçi’s criminal involvement puts the EU in the dock

So how will Brussels react? Hard to say: “In September 2010, the War Crimes section head for EULEX made statements that completely, or almost completely, contradict Dick Marty’s report”, notes Le Temps. There was “no evidence”, according to Finnish police officer Matti Raatikainen, to corroborate the charges of organ trafficking made against Thaçi’s entourage, recalls the Swiss daily…

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

North Africa


Egypt: Opinion Leader for EU Greater Economic Role, Study

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 16 — A massive 98% of egyptian opinion leaders would like to see the EU play a greater economic role in the country and 97% want more action on trade. Other top priorities include education, culture and the environment. The general public, however, show a distinct lack of enthusiasm, with less than half wanting a greater EU role, even in economic development (the highest scoring sector at just 42%). This is one of the results of a study, promoted by the EU-funded Opinion Polling and Research (OPPOL) project, under the 2007-2010 ENPI regional information and communication programme. It is carried out across the countries benefiting from the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI).

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), the survey involved 100 opinion leaders, followed up by an opinion poll questioning 419 members of the general public. The majority of respondents believe the EU has good relations with Egypt, an impressive 95% among opinion leaders, but only 56% among the general public. Indeed, for the majority of the general public, the spontaneous perception of the EU is positive with caveats: while one third of the respondents who are aware of the EU can see that Egypt has benefited from the EU, some 40% believe it has not. Opinion leaders are far more positive than the general public. Regarding the EU’s ability to promote peace and stability in the country, 54% of opinion leaders are subscribing to the view, and just 39% of the general public. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


British Woman Played Dead to Escape Being Stabbed as Knifemen Pounced on Forest Hiking Trip and Killed Her Friend

A British woman was hurt and her friend killed in a brutal attack as they hiked through a forest in Jerusalem.

Kaye Wilson, 46, recounted her terror today after managing to escape the assailants by pretending to be dead. She then fled to a parking area where other people alerted authorities.

The dead body of her friend, an American, was found the next day with her hands bound behind her back and having suffered multiple stab wounds.

Miss Wilson told police they had been attacked by two Arab men while hiking in the Mata forest, near the town of Beit Shemesh, on Saturday.

The American has been identified as Christine Logan.

Speaking from her hospital bed, Miss Wilson, who emigrated to Israel in the 1990s, recalled the moment when one of her attackers pulled a serrated knife on her and her friend, who was visiting the Middle East country.

She told Israeli newspaper Haaretz she and her companion had been sitting down, just off the hiking trail, when the two men approached and asked them in Hebrew if they had any water.

She tried to get them to leave, she said, feeling that ‘something wasn’t right’, and the two women then headed back towards the trail.

‘Suddenly I noticed them,’ she went on. ‘It all happened so fast. They came and attacked us.’

One of the men pulled out a long knife, which looked like a bread knife with a serrated edge, she said.

           — Hat tip: bewick [Return to headlines]



No Renting Houses to Arabs: 55% of Israelis Agree With the Rabbis

A poll published by Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper gives an overview of popular opinion on the controversial appeal signed by over fifty rabbis to prevent the sale or rental of homes to non-Jews. Significant differences between secular and religious.

Jerusalem (AsiaNews / Agencies) — A survey published by Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth showed that 55% of respondents are in favour of the appeal of more than 50 rabbis not to rent or sell apartments to non-Jews. 55% of the adult population of Israel is in agreement with the edict issued by the religious leaders, while 42% claimed to be in total disagreement.

Examining data based on faith, it emerges that about 53% of secular Israelis oppose the call, while 41% support it in some form (18.4% in full, 12.1%, up to a some point, partially 13.6%). The figures change radically among those who observe the rabbi’s edicts, with 64% adhering to rules enacted by the rabbis, 30% opposing them. Among the “Haredim”, religious traditionalists, the proportion rises to 84% of those in favour. In this case, 66% in complete agreement, 22% partially, and only 10% said they were against.

58% of the respondents expressed opposition to demands for the resignation of the rabbis who signed the appeal, while 42% were in favour of their removal. To the question: what would you do if an Arab family bought or rented a house in the vicinity, 57% said that it would be annoying, and 24.5% said they would act, or would consider the idea of acting to prevent the presence of an Arab family in the area, while seven percent said they would move from the area. If answers are divided based on faith, it emerges that about 24% of “secular” respondents would think or they would act to take action against the arrival of an Arab family in the neighbourhood, the figures rise to 31% in the case of those who practise their faith and hits 78% when it comes to “Haredim”.

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



PNA: 80% for EU Projects, From Education to Healthcare

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 16 — Palestinians are in favour of the Eu development projects: 80% of the general public is aware of the EU’s role in financing projects, with particular awareness of support in healthcare and education. Among opinion leaders likewise, the level of support for EU actions is particularly high in nearly all areas (and consistently higher than the average among other countries of the region), especially in the areas of education, trade and economic development.This is one of the results of a study, promoted by the EU-funded Opinion Polling and Research (OPPOL) project, under the 2007-2010 ENPI regional information and communication programme. It is carried out across the countries benefiting from the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI). According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), the survey involved 64 opinion leaders, followed up by an opinion poll questioning 400 members of the general public. An impressive 93% of the general public would like to see the EU play a greater economic role in the Territories. Other top priorities include energy security, regional cooperation and trade. Opinion leaders also strongly feel the EU should play a greater role in education (94%). An impressive 93% of the general public would like to see the EU play a greater economic role in the country.

Other top priorities include energy security, regional cooperation and trade. Opinion leaders also strongly feel the EU should play a greater role in education (94%). Opinion leaders are far more positive than the general public. While 54% of the general public believe the EU can help bring peace and stability to the Territories, 83% of opinion leaders do so. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



US Woman’s Body Found in Jerusalem-Beit Shemesh Area

Police launch homicide investigation; 2nd woman, Kaye Susan Wilson, alerts police after escaping attackers with hands bound, stab wounds.

The body of Christine Logan, who went missing in the Beit Shemesh-Jerusalem area, was found early Sunday morning after police and IDF searched all Saturday night, fearing she had been kidnapped in a nationalistically motivated incident.

The search, which was joined by volunteers, was launched after another woman, Kaye Susan Wilson reported being attacked by two Arab men in a forest near Mata, located outside Jerusalem, within the Green Line. Wilson was found with her hands bound and several stab wounds to her chest and back. Logan’s body was found several hundred meters from the road between Mata and Beit Shemesh.

Police have launched a homicide investigation.

On Saturday, Wilson said she had escaped her attackers and managed to reach Mata, where she met two families in a park. They contacted emergency services.

Wilson, 46, a tour guide, made aliya from Great Britain in 1991, and lives in Givat Ze’ev.

Her stab wounds were superficial and she did not lose a lot of blood, according to a spokesman at Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem’s Ein Kerem. She suffered moderate-to-light injuries, and was treated in the trauma unit.

The spokesman refused to give any more details, saying the case was in police hands, and declined to let doctors speak to the press.

Kaye remained conscious on the way to the hospital, Magen David Adom paramedics said.

“She described being attacked, tied up and stabbed by two Arab men,” police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

“She did not know who they were, or what the reason for the attack was. We are examining whether this is a nationalistic stabbing, but other leads are being examined as well,” Rosenfeld said.

Security forces were highly concerned for Logan’s safety. The IDF and Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) became involved in the search and the investigation as concern mounted on Saturday night.

Police sealed off Route 375 near Mata in both directions, erected roadblocks in the Jerusalem area, and scrambled helicopters to assist in the search.

Jerusalem district police chief Cmdr. Aharon Franco told reporters during a press briefing in the area that searchers were being guided by descriptions of Logan given by Wilson.

Israel Police Insp.-Gen. David Cohen traveled to a mobile command and control center set up by Jerusalem police to coordinate operations, and the IDF dispatched additional forces to help comb the area.

           — Hat tip: 4symbols [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Five Iraqi Christians Seeking Asylum Returned From Stockholm. UN Protest

The UN Commission for Refugees sharply criticizes the Swedish government for the forced repatriation of five Christians who fled Baghdad for fear of attacks. “Many of the newcomers explain they left Iraq for fear of an attack, after what happened on October 31,” says a UN spokesman.

Baghdad (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Harsh criticism of the Swedish government by the United Nations Commission for Refugees after they forcibly returned five Iraqi Christians seeking asylum in Sweden. The five were part of a group of at least 20 people from Iraq. Thousands of Christians have sought a safe haven outside the borders after the massacre of 31 October in the Syrian Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Salvation. According to unofficial sources the authorities justify the refusal by citing a situation of relative peace in the country.

“We have heard many stories of people fleeing their homes after receiving direct threats. Many new arrivals explain that they left Iraq for fear of an attack, after what happened on October 31, “says Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the UN body in Geneva.

“Some might take only a few things with him,” adds Fleming. The deportation of the five Iraqi Christians took place a week after a suicide bomber, born in Iraq and resident in Great Britain, blew himself up in central Stockholm.

Al Qaeda has claimed responsibility for the massacre in Baghdad, and said that Christians are a legitimate target. Killings and other violent incidents have followed, and according to Fleming about a thousand families have fled Baghdad to the Nineveh province in search of relative security in the Kurdish area. The UN officials in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon say that a growing number of Iraqi Christians are coming, and asking for help. In Syria alone about 133 families — 300 people — have sought refugee status in November. In Jordan, the number of asylum applications from Iraq have doubled in a month. The UN says that the return from Sweden comes at a time when officials on the spot report a growing number of cases of attacks on Christians.

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



From the Bosphorus: Straight — Turkey’s Enlightened Shiite Example

On the occasion of “Asure günü,” or “Ashura” in English, a holiday celebrated around the world and marked Thursday by many Turkish adherents of Shiism, we pause to congratulate the faithful. We also want to praise the example of Turkey’s Shiite community, known locally as “Caferis,” for their enlightened Islamic practice.

We want to take a moment to note their example, as we believe Islam to be a religion that can and should fully respond to a world very different from the one that existed in the time of the Prophet Mohammed. We believe this responsiveness derives from a faith made so by the wisdom of the Holy Quran itself. And while Turkish Shiites have demonstrated this, their co-religionists in the country’s Religious Affairs Directorate have fallen behind, most notably in a ruling that effectively bans chairs in Muslim houses of worship for the infirm to pray without ritual kneeling. An important factor it its decision, as we reported Thursday, is that seating in mosques could make them appear like churches.

But first let’s get back to Ashura, which falls on the 10th of Muharram, the first month of the Islamic lunar calendar. For Shiite Muslims it is a major religious festival commemorating the martyrdom of Husayn, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammad. It is made up of mourning rituals and in some Shiite societies, men seek to emulate Husayn’s suffering by flagellating themselves with chains or cutting their foreheads. This was once practiced in Turkey.

In recent years, however, Turkey’s Shiites have replaced this ritual with blood drives, setting up tents in many cities to support Turkey’s Red Crescent Society. In a country critically short of donated blood for emergencies and routine medical needs, we have no doubt just how the Prophet, or his grandson, might regard this change. This is faith faithful to our age.

By contrast, the Religious Affairs Directorate has ruled against a request for chairs in mosques, formally ruling this to be incompatible with the culture of Islamic prayer. This is hardly the case.

We would suggest the directorate consult advice on practice of prayer at the popular Islamic website, www.bilelim.tr.gg/ABDEST-VE-NAMAZ-1.htm. It not only advises that use of a chair by those who cannot stand or kneel is perfectly acceptable. It also cites the authority of Islamic scholarly text that in the case of immobility, rituals can even be followed simply with the moving of eyes.

We suspect the real problem is a conservative abhorrence for an idea of “camilere sira koymak,” or “placing pews in the mosques” proposed in the 1930s. The idea back then, was to make Islam more Christian-like.

We would agree that the proposal back in the 1930s was religiously offensive. So is the ban on mosque seating today.

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



Inside Yemen: Britain’s Woman on the Frontline of the New War on Terror

There is no longer such a thing as a routine day for Fionna Gibb, deputy British ambassador to the Yemeni capital, Sana’a. The last time there was, it nearly killed her. Heading to work one morning in early October, her armoured vehicle was speeding down a dusty dual carriageway when it passed two al-Qaeda hitmen posing as roadside dustmen. The pair, who are thought to have been watching the movements of cars with diplomatic number plates, pulled a rocket launcher from under a dustbin bag and fired. “There was a terrible noise at the back of car, the whole back mudguard had been blown off and the back tyre had gone down so it was running on one rim,” said Ms Gibb, who had arrived in Sana’a from war-torn Basra. “We were very lucky that it didn’t kill us all.” The attack bore the hallmarks of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the movement’s new Yemen-based franchise, which, in addition to October’s parcel bomb plot, and last Christmas’s botched airline attack by the so-called Underpants Bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, has vowed to “kill Crusaders who work in embassies”. Thanks to Britain’s colonial past in Yemen, and its present role in Afghanistan and Iraq, “Crusaders” of the British variety have proved a favourite target. A month before Ms Gibb arrived, the outgoing Ambassador, Tim Torlot, had a similarly narrow escape, when a suicide bomber disguised as a schoolboy hurled himself at his car.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Saudi Ordered to Deport Foreign Wife

Police say he broke wedding law though he has two children and wife is pregnant

Saudi authorities have ordered a local man to deport his Chadian wife for breaking the foreign marriage law although they have two children and his wife is pregnant again, local newspapers reported on Sunday.

Police in the eastern port of Dammam this week gave Mustafa Ghalib Al-Bargi one month to deport his wife to her home country or he will face prosecution, Okaz Arabic language daily said.

“Police said they are taking these measures because Al Bargi married his foreign wife without getting permission from the authorities concerned,” it said.

It quoted Al-Bargi as saying his marriage in the Kingdom was approved and documented by the Chadian embassy in Riyadh.

The man told the paper that he has two sons aged two and three years and that his wife is pregnant again.

“Al-Bargi has broken the law and is liable for punishment,” the paper said, quoting Bandr Al-Makhlif, spokesman for the Eastern Province Police.

Okaz said Al-Barqi, who works as a security guard at a private firm in Dammam, married nearly six years ago but it did not mention whether he had agreed to send his wife home or if he can appeal the decision.

Saudi Arabia, which strictly enforces Islamic law, has introduced curbs on mixed marriage following a surge in such cases and in the number of local spinsters.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Saudi Warns Public Against New Year Celebration

Saudi Arabia has warned the public against staging New Year celebrations and said shops which sell any items symbolizing the occasion would be punished, the Arabic language daily Okaz said on Sunday.

The Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the most feared Islamic law enforcement body in the Gulf Kingdom, said it would deploy its members across the country to prevent public celebrations on New Year.

But the Commission said its members would not raid houses, adding that it is meant only by festivities that are staged in public.

“We do not know what is going inside homes and we are not meant with monitoring homes,” the Commission said in a statement.

“The responsibility of our men will be confined to controlling and preventing celebrations in public places or calls for such celebrations.”

The statement warned all shops against selling adornment items that “symbolize or reflect” New Year festivities, adding that violators would be punished in accordance with the law and that their items would be impounded.

According to Okaz, authorities in Saudi Arabia, one of the most conservative Muslim nations, also banned the import of any New Year items through its ports.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Stockholm Bomber: Banned Extremists Recruit Near Taimur Abdulwahab Al-Abdaly’s Luton Home

The outlawed Islamist group al-Muhajiroun is openly recruiting near the home of the suicide bomber who blew himself up on a Stockholm street last week, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal.

MI5 and anti-terrorist police are attempting to unravel what transformed the father of three into an extremist.

But moderate Muslims in Luton, where Iraqi-born Taimour Abdulwahab lived for almost 10 years, claim the authorities are to blame for turning a blind eye to the activities of hard-core jihadi sympathisers.

Unimpeded by the police, the group, now calling itself The Reflect Project, is accused of mounting a campaign of intimidation and violence against those who disagree with it.

The group’s members are followers of the radical cleric Omar Bakri Muhammad, who is being held in jail in Lebanon on terrorism charges, and are led locally by Ishtiaq Alamgir or Sword of Islam — a former inland revenue accountant.

Earlier this year, Mr Alamgir helped to organise a protest at a homecoming parade in Luton for troops who had served in Afghanistan. The demonstration ended in violence and arrests…

           — Hat tip: bewick [Return to headlines]



The Kurdish Question in Washington and Gülen Factor

One could only have imagined that a representative from Turkey could share a podium with a representative from the Kurdistan Regional Government, or KRG, a couple of years ago — but such a meeting was conducted by the Middle East Institute, or MEI, in Washington just two weeks ago under very ordinary circumstances.

Can Oguz, a counselor who worked Turkey’s consulate in the KRG in recent years, now at the Turkish Embassy in Washington, represented the Turkish side at the panel, and elaborated on the Turkish engagement in especially Northern Iraq, and accentuated how Iraq’s stability, as a balancing actor in region, is important for the whole region’s stability.

“Iraq-Turkey High Level Strategic Cooperation Council,” which was created between Turkey and Iraq a couple of years ago aims to “reconstruct Iraqi society” and “create stability and security in the region” along with other goals, Oguz said.

Now, thanks to fast increasing trade between the borders, northern Iraq has by itself, become the 10th largest trading partner of Turkey, Oguz said.

Qubad Talabani, KRG’s U.S. representative, at the same panel, was equally optimistic about the better partnership prospects between the regional administration and Turkey, and said Turkey, Iraq and the United States had a lot of overlapping objectives when looking toward Iraq’s future.

Not simply Turkey’s engagement with the KRG, but also the Turkish government’s Kurdish opening was debated in Washington last week at another platform.

At the Brookings Institution, Gönül Tol, Turkey projects director at the MEI, who also took the initiative to put together above Turkey-northern Iraq discussion at the MEI a week earlier, charged that Justice and Development Party, or AKP’s much discussed Kurdish opening, in essence, was a “preemptive attempt” to respond to Abdullah Öcalan’s roadmap for the Kurdish question. Tol argued that the economic interdependence between Turkey and the KRG had eased tensions and fear among both the military establishment and the governing party and was working to diminish Kurdish separatism calls within Turkey.

Hanri Barkey, a Turkey expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, made a presentation at the same panel that was loaded with some sharp warnings. Barkey, who visits the region often, said the AKP’s Kurdish initiative had opened “Pandora’s box,” and concluded his remarks by saying that he expected the process that the initiative had started was going to be messy, but that the clock was not likely to be rewound.

Barkey said Turkey’s stability might have a bleak future, if the Kurdish question is not addressed “in one way or other.” Not many expect the AKP to take any bold steps before the June 2011 general elections. However, experts predict that once the election is over, the government, likely to be another AKP administration, will have to move quickly to deal with the Kurdish issue.

The idea of secession or armed struggle is being abandoned, said Barkey, but new political structures like the Kurdish Communities Union, or KCK, appear to offer a very different challenge to the Turkish state because the latter is not a territorially bound attempt. (A trial against the KCK is continuing against over 1,500 people, including 12 mayors and other politicians.)

The court indictment against the KCK, according to Barkey, charges the KCK with attempting to “create a parallel institution to the Turkish state for the Kurds,” in which the Kurds, regardless of a country, will find “an alternative political identity where one can also have citizenship.”

The AKP, to its credit, took a great risk in 2009 to move on the Kurdish question, but then failed to address it adequately. It is obvious that Ankara, which advocates proactive policies in the region and wants to use its democratic facet as leverage, has to deal comprehensively with the decades-old Kurdish question if it claims to have any pretensions regional power status.

From the talks in Washington in the last two weeks, it appeared that the Turkish government had made enormous progress to acknowledge the KRG and has used its ties with it in a mutually beneficial manner so that both peoples can thrive.

From the talks in Washington, the same Turkish government also appeared quite authoritarian — as it did in the 1990s — and confused in light of the new challenges like the KCK case…

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



Turkish Diplomat Appointed to Key UN Post

Having been appointed to a senior UN post by the UN secretary-general, Ambassador Levent Bilman has become the latest Turkish diplomat to help increase Turkey’s visibility in multilateral diplomacy with posts at international organizations, while Ankara termed the appointment a “a concrete sign of Turkey’s soft power.”

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon appointed Ambassador Bilman, who is currently representing his country in New Delhi, as the director of the Policy and Mediation Division at the UN Department of Political Affairs (UNDPA) which is led by UN Undersecretary-general for Political Affairs Lynn Pascoe.

Ban officially notified Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of his decision concerning Bilman during a bilateral meeting in New York on Tuesday, the Anatolia news agency reported. Davutoglu has been in New York for a high-level UN Security Council meeting on Iraq.

In Ankara, the Foreign Ministry expressed pleasure over Bilman’s appointment, saying that this appointment will strengthen Turkey’s existing contributions to the UN. “Turkey’s recently increasing success in international organizations is impressive. This success is a concrete sign of Turkey’s becoming more active and of its soft-power,” the ministry said in a written statement released on Wednesday. “Ambassador Bilman’s appointment to the Directorship of the Policy and Mediation Division, at the same time, constitutes manifestation of initiatives assumed by Turkey concerning mediation and its unique position,” the ministry added.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan Attacks Target Army Bases, Killing 13

Suicide attackers have targeted Afghan military bases in two cities, leaving 13 members of the security forces dead, along with at least five assailants.

In the northern city of Kunduz, suicide bombers stormed an army recruitment centre, sparking a long gun battle.

On the outskirts of Kabul, attackers ambushed an army bus outside the country’s main recruitment centre.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attacks, which President Hamid Karzai called “criminal”.

Correspondents say the attacks were clearly aimed at deterring Afghans from joining the huge drive currently under way to build up the domestic security forces.

The recruitment centre in Kunduz came under attack from at least four suicide bombers — who early reports suggested were dressed in army uniforms, AP news agency quoted the provincial deputy governor Hamdullah Danishi as saying.

Foreign and Afghan soldiers surrounded the building, in which about 100 people were trapped.

“There are gun shots, heavy machine gun fire and RPGs [rocket-propelled grenades],” a local trader told the BBC. He said the base was on fire.

Local police sources say that five Afghan soldiers and three policemen were killed, along with at least three of the attackers. About 20 recent army recruits were wounded.

“The enemy came prepared,” the police chief of Kunduz province, Mawlana Sayed Khel, told the BBC.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Deadly Kabul Attack is First in Capital for Months

Insurgents opened fire on a bus carrying the officers on the main road from Kabul to the eastern city of Jalalabad, in the first fatal attack in the Afghan capital since May, when six foreign troops were killed by a large suicide car bomb. In another sign of the challenges facing Nato-led forces, the death toll in 2010 for foreign troops reached 700 over the weekend when a soldier was killed by a roadside bomb in the south of the country. This year’s toll surpasses the 521 foreign troops killed in 2009. The Taliban admitted it had carried out Sunday’s attack in Kabul, bringing to an end a period of relative calm as insurgent leaders had opened tentative talks with the government of President Hamid Karzai. One attacker blew himself up and the other was shot by police before he could detonate his explosives, according to General Mohammad Zahir Azimi, Defense Ministry spokesman. At the same time, militants stormed an army recruitment centre in the northern city of Kunduz. Two attackers detonated their suicide vests and killed five security officers, according to a statement released by the Afghan Defence Ministry.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: West Java District Bans Migrant Workers

Garut, 15 Dec. (AKI/Jakarta Post) — A district of Indonesia’s West Java province has imposed a temporary ban restricting people from its capital from working as maids in Saudi Arabia or Malaysia after cases of domestic abuse.

“I feel very sorry for the abused migrant workers. Our nation’s dignity has been trampled,” said Garut district administrator Aceng H. M. Fikri on Wednesday.

Fikri said he had learned about the poor conditions faced by Indonesian migrant workers in Saudi Arabia during his recent Hajj pilgrimage

This year, the local government reported two cases of Indonesian migrant workers who were missing in Saudi Arabia.

From 2005 to 2010, 3,186 people from Gaurut went abroad to work as migrant workers, 95 percent of them travelling to the Middle East to work as domestic maids.

The suspension will apply to those working as domestic helpers or in the informal sector, Fikri said.

He said the suspension was a reaction to the poor treatment of Indonesian workers in both countries.

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



Pakistan: China is a More Reliable Trading Partner Than the US, Economist Says

Islamabad, 17 Dec. (AKI) — By Syed Saleem Shahzad — Chinese premier Wen Jiabao arrived Pakistan Friday to kick off on a three-day visit during which he is expected to sign 20 business agreements. According to a senior Pakistani economist, the current visit of Chinese premier marks the beginning of a ten year long economic plan aiming to turn around Pakistan’s economy.

“Unlike Pakistan’s unreliable and dimensionless economic and strategic relations with the US, China aims to give Pakistan’s economy a very sound footing through a decade-long program,” Washington based economist Meekal Ahmad told Adnkronos International (AKI) in an interview in Islamabad.

Ahmed, who served in Pakistan’s Finance Ministry in the late 1980s and the International Monetary Fund through the late 2000s and is frequently consulted by top Pakistani decision makers, said that Pakistan’s economic dependency on Washington is unrealistic, while long-term economic relations with China are more sustainable.

Pakistan and China have a joint venture to develop fighter jets on par with the American F-16, yet it is about half the price, Ahmed said, adding “Pakistan would certainly get export orders.”

“Similarly China offers Pakistan the nuclear power plants America frowns upon and would provide Pakistan a facility to produce cheap energy,” Ahmad said.

China’s economy is booming. The world’s second-largest economy posted annual growth of 9.6 percent in the third quarter of 2010, slowing from 11.9 percent in the first three months of the year. The figures compare with a 2.5 percent expansion for the US economy.

“‘American supremacy’ is just a matter of time. It will become clear in the next five years as to whether Americans will retain their economic superiority or not,” Ahmad said.

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



Religious Attack in Pakistan. Six Dead in the Shiite Festival of Ashura

Mortar bombs destroyed two homes in Hangu in northwestern Pakistan. Today, the Shiites remember the death of Husayn ibn Ali, grandson of Muhammad at the Battle of Karbala. The area is known for frequent clashes between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

Lahore (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Bloodshed has marked the Shiite festival of Ashura in Pakistan. Eight mortar shells exploded at a religious procession in Hangu, killing six people, including two children. At least eight others were injured. Hangu in northwestern Pakistan, is known because the two largest Muslim communities, the Shia and Sunni, have been protagonists in past conflicts and tensions.

The two mortar shells were fired from the district of Orakzai, which borders Hangu. Orakzai is located in the semi-autonomous tribal area that borders Afghanistan. The bullets hit two houses as the celebrations for Ashura started on Friday, the feast in which the Shiites remember the death (which they consider martyrdom) of Husayn ibn Ali, grandson of the Prophet Muhammad at the Battle of Karbala.

The attack was confirmed by police sources. “Mortar bombs were fired from Orakzai and hit two houses in Hangu. Six people were killed and eight wounded. Among those killed were two children and a woman, “said Fazal Naeem, a spokesman for security forces. In the same city 10 February 2006, 35 people died because of a attack on the Shiite Ashura procession.

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



Tanks ‘Needed to Fight Taliban’

Senior army commanders have asked for the Challenger 2 tanks to be deployed in Helmand, in an admission that forces there lack armoured protection. The tanks would provide close support for infantry and protection against improvised explosive devices (IEDs), according to the Sunday Times. A source told the newspaper: “(The Challenger) can blast a hole in an insurgent compound from a distance and drive straight through it, disabling the IEDs with the minimum of damage. The move follows a decision by the US to send a similar number of heavy Abrams tanks. Until now, the Ministry of Defence has turned down requests for Challengers in Afghanistan, for fear that it would send out the wrong message to locals.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Far East


Chinese Military Complete Highway for Troop Movements to India

Troops and materiel can now easily travel on highway to the border with Arunachal Pradesh, which both nations claim. Beijing preaches peace, but pours troops into the area.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) — A new highway now links Metok County, in southern Tibet, to the rest of China. Although of limited economic significance since it has a small population of some 11,000 people, the area is crucial from a military standpoint because it bolsters Chinese claims to the wider region, currently disputed with India.

The People’s Liberation Army did most of the work. On Wednesday, its construction crews broke through the last obstacle in the 3.3-kilometre Galongla Tunnel at 3,750 metres above sea level, thus completing the 117-kilometre Metok highway.

At present, the “PLA’s fighting capability in southern Tibet is very weak because we failed to overcome countless fatal natural barriers there over the past near five decades,” Shanghai-based military expert Ni Lexiong told the South China Morning Post.

Metok County borders Arunachal Pradesh, an area of some 90,000 km2 under Indian control. For Li, China lost this territory in the 1962 war because it could not hold the area. Since then, India has built up its military and civilian infrastructure, with up to 450,000 people moving into the state and nearly 60,000 military personnel stationed there.

On the Chinese side, mountain roads are impassable for nine months of the year, thus troops get by with cured meat and canned food. Fresh vegetables are a luxury, military sources said.

Thanks to the new road, the PLA can mobilise thousands of soldiers to Metok if need be, since it can take up to 2,000 vehicles a day.

“We don’t want to provoke any military conflicts with India, as we know the US, Japan and South Korea all want to draw India to their side to contain China,” said Sun Shihai , a Sino-Indian affairs expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. “We also trust that India doesn’t want to ruin its ties with China either, as it needs to focus on economic development.”

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Sharia Law to be Tightened if Sudan Splits — President

The north of Sudan will reinforce its Islamic laws if the south secedes as a result of next month’s referendum, President Omar al-Bashir has said.

Mr Bashir said the constitution would then be changed, making Islam the only religion, Sharia the only law and Arabic the only official language.

Correspondents say his comments are likely to alarm thousands of non-Muslim southerners living in the north.

They are currently protected from some of the stronger aspects of Sharia.

“If south Sudan secedes, we will change the constitution,” Mr Bashir told a gathering of his supporters in the eastern town of Gederef on Sunday.

“Sharia and Islam will be the main source for the constitution, Islam the official religion and Arabic the official language,” the president added.

The imposition of Sharia on the non-Muslim south was one of the reasons for the long civil war, which ended when a peace deal was signed in 2005, the BBC’s James Copnall in Khartoum reports.

Under the accord, an interim constitution was drafted that removed Sharia law from the south and also recognised Sudan’s cultural and social diversity, our correspondent says.

President Bashir said on Sunday there would be no question of this diversity when a new constitution was drafted, if the south became independent

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Somali Islamist Groups to Join Forces: Spokesman

War-ravaged Somalia’s two major Islamist movements have ended their rivalry and merged their military forces, a leader of one of the groups told AFP on Sunday. Fighters from Hezb al-Islam joined the ranks of Al Qaeda-linked Shehab militants battling against African Union-backed forces of the fragile transitional government, according to witness reports. “We have decided to rejoin the Shebab and dissolve Hezb al-Islam. I can tell you from today (Sunday) our group, including the highest commanders, will become members of the Shehab,” said Mohamed Osman Arus, a Hezb al-Islam spokesman. The spokesman said the agreement was reached after talks between leaders of the groups, following several weeks of tension which included the Shehab forcibly taking a town held by Hezb al-Islam.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Ailing Greece Struggles With a Flood of Illegal Immigrants

After three days at the center, which Rasha says was so crowded with migrants that she couldn’t see the floor, the family got out. Now they’re outside Fylakio waiting to board a bus bound for Athens, where they know no one. “I am hoping,” says Rasha, as Ali holds their exhausted son. “And I am so happy.” (See pictures of immigration in Europe.)

Considering the rise in migrants traveling to Greece, and the poverty and bureaucracy that keeps them stuck there, Rasha’s optimism might soon disintegrate. So far this year, more than 90% of illegal migrants to Europe have entered through Greece, according to Frontex, the E.U.’s border-patrol agency. Until recently, Italy, France and Spain were the most popular entry points for illegal immigration into the continent. But increased coast-guard patrols in the past couple of years have blocked routes by sea, forcing migrants to find a new way in.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Gulf: Record Number of Immigrants, Over 15 Mln

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, DECEMBER 15 — The number of immigrants in the Gulf area has reached a record of 15.1 million but the peak in remittances may already have started its decline in the countries of origin. This picture is sketched in the report of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), quoted by the newspaper The national. The report will be officially presented this week in New York. Saudi Arabia, the largest and most densely populated of the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), hosts 7.3 million immigrants; the United Arab Emirates hosts 3.3 million (a 20% decrease compared with 2009, caused by the freeze of property and infrastructure projects), Kuwait 2.1 million and Qatar 1.3 million. Oman and Bahrain house fewer than a million migrants, respectively 826,000 and 315,000.

The country with the highest percentage of immigrants compared with its local population is Qatar (87%), followed by the Emirates (70%), Kuwait (69%), Bahrain (39%), Oman and Saudi Arabia (28%). The number of migrants in the whole Middle East increased by 4.5% in the past five years (26.6 million people), making it a region with one of the highest immigration rates in the world. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


Microwave Radiation Map Hints at Other Universes

Collisions between our cosmos and other universes may have left round “bruises” in a map of ancient cosmic radiation.

Our universe is thought to have expanded rapidly in a process called inflation in the first moments after the big bang. Some physicists suspect inflation is still happening, starting up in some regions while stopping in others, such as the part of the universe we live in. In this picture, called eternal inflation, new universes are continually popping into existence like bubbles in a vast, expanding sea of space-time.

Many of these universes should be carried away from one another as soon as they form. But universes born close together could collide if they are expanding faster than the space between them.

If our universe was hit by another bubble universe, the impact would release colossal bursts of energy. If this occurred before inflation ended in our patch of the universe, it could leave an imprint that might still be detectable today. Now Stephen Feeney of University College London and colleagues say they may have spotted such imprints in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the all-sky glow that comes from photons emitted when the universe was less than 400,000 years old.

Hot and cold

A collision would alter how long inflation lasted in the impact zone. If the expansion continued for longer than it otherwise would, the density of matter in the impact zone would be lower than in surrounding regions. This would show up as a cold spot in the CMB. Conversely, a shorter period of inflation would create a warm spot in the CMB.

The team calculated the likely temperature profiles for such impacts and searched for them in CMB data from NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe.

The search turned up four circular patches, each spanning an area of sky equivalent to at least eight full moons (arxiv.org/abs/1012.1995 and arxiv.org/abs/1012.3667). One is a cold spot that had already been cited as evidence of another universe interacting with our own.

“There’s no obvious, boring explanation for the features,” says team member Matthew Johnson of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Canada…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Cultural Genome: Google Books Reveals Traces of Fame, Censorship and Changing Languages

Just as petrified fossils tell us about the evolution of life on earth, the words written in books narrate the history of humanity. They words tell a story, not just through the sentences they form, but in how often they occur. Uncovering those tales isn’t easy — you’d need to convert books into a digital format so that their text can be analysed and compared. And you’d need to do that for millions of books. Fortunately, that’s exactly what Google have been doing since 2004. Together with over 40 university libraries, the internet titan has thus far scanned over 15 million books, creating a massive electronic library that represents 12% of all the books ever published. All the while, a team from Harvard University, led by Jean-Baptiste Michel and Erez Lieberman Aiden have been analysing the flood of data.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Muslim Brotherhood: Should We Engage?

Last summer I began a series of posts entitled “Rethinking Islamism”. I did this not, as some readers appeared to think, to apologise or even propagandise (!) for political Islam, but because it is a dominant ideology in many countries and to understand it, and then decide how to engage with it, seemed important to me — not least because at that particular time a lot of attention was being paid to Turkey, whose AKP government represents either the dangers or the possibilities of an Islamist (or at least Islamist-leaning) party coming to power, according to your point of view.

One book published in the last few months, but overlooked by most literary sections (apart from that of the Economist), adds significantly to the subject. So what follows is a review of a title I would highly recommend, especially to those who see radical Islam, Jihadism, Wahhabism, Salafism and Islamism as one huge monolith and all equally to be feared: “The Muslim Brotherhood: the Burden of Tradition” by Alison Pargeter (Saqi Books GBP 20).

As the author states at the beginning, the Muslim Brotherhood, or Ikhwan, “is one of the longest surviving but also perhaps the most controversial of all Islamist movements to have emerged from the Middle East. The interest and controversy over the Brotherhood spring from the fact that it represents a complete conundrum to many of those trying to fathom it.” Is it a social movement? A political party? A transnational organisation? Committed to democracy or to the imposition of an Islamic state?

Has it always been a fomenter of bloodshed, as the former Kuwaiti minister Ahmad al-Rabi is quoted as saying: “The founders of the violent groups were raised on the Muslim Brotherhood, and those who worked with bin Laden and al-Qaeda went out under [their] mantle.” Or is it now a moderate movement with whom the West should engage, as an influential 2007 article in Foreign Affairs argued?

The difficulty is that is has been all of the above since Hassan al-Banna formed the MB in 1928. At times, more moderate voices have been in the ascendant, at others more extreme. Frequently in different countries (or even within individual countries) both tendencies have been vocal simultaneously, and the MB has had difficulty reconciling these or disowning members whose views do not help the Brotherhood present itself as progressive.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Search for Extraterrestrial Life: ‘Are We All Martians?’

NASA scientists recently announced they had discovered an organism that uses arsenic instead of phosphorus in its metabolism. The geologist Dirk Schulze-Makuch talked to SPIEGEL about the implications of the findings and the likelihood that life could exist on other planets.

SPIEGEL: NASA scientists have discovered strange bacteria in California’s Mono Lake. The microbes incorporate arsenic, which is usually poisonous for life forms, into their cells. Are they originally from another planet?

Dirk Schulze-Makuch: No, that can be ruled out. The arsenic bacteria also did not arise independently from the other organisms on Earth. Like all microbes, they multiply best when there is enough phosphorus around. They only use arsenic when there is not sufficient phosphorus — beggars can’t be choosers. The arsenic bacteria are a wonderful example of the adaptability of microorganisms.

SPIEGEL: What does this discovery mean for the search for extraterrestrial life-forms?

Schulze-Makuch: The arsenic bacteria help us broaden our horizons. If we can find such exotic organisms on Earth, what strange beings could exist on other planets? We have to free ourselves from the idea that life-forms will resemble what we know from Earth.

SPIEGEL: What differences can you imagine?

Schulze-Makuch: Our fixation with the idea that oxygen is essential to life is already short-sighted. This aggressive element inflicts damage to our cells in the form of free radicals. Maybe organisms elsewhere in space have found a gentler alternative. When we send space probes to other worlds, we should expect the unexpected. Life can appear anywhere: in poisonous seas or in hot clouds.

SPIEGEL: Where could the resistant arsenic bacteria thrive?

Schulze-Makuch: Arsenic-eating microbes would probably feel very at home on our neighboring planet, Mars. Its conditions are well suited to them. Measurements collected by landing robots on Mars can indeed be interpreted as evidence of bacterial life. However, it could be that any life-forms on Mars aren’t actually aliens, but are related to us.

SPIEGEL: How do you mean?

Schulze-Makuch: Almost 4 billion years ago, Mars was a planet well suited to sustaining life, with massive rivers and lakes. Back then, the first primitive organisms appeared on Earth. These single-cell life-forms probably made it to our neighboring planet Mars by way of meteorites and established themselves there. It is possible that descendents of these primitive bacteria could have survived in nooks and crannies on Mars until today. Equally fascinating is the opposite possibility: Life could have started on Mars and then, via a meteorite, made its way to Earth. That would raise the question: Are we all Martians?

SPIEGEL: Which planet in our solar system is most likely to sustain life which contrasts significantly from life on Earth?

Schulze-Makuch: The distant Titan, a moon of Saturn, seems completely foreign to us. Its surface temperature is minus 160 degrees Celsius (minus 256 degrees Fahrenheit), and its atmosphere contains no oxygen. Instead of water, its lakes are filled with liquid natural gas. Methane rains from the sky, and it looks like the aftermath of an oil spill in the Antarctic. If we were to discover life there, it would certainly look completely different from life as we know it on Earth.

SPIEGEL: What are the chances of that?…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101218

Financial Crisis
» European Council: All a Blur at the Euro-Summit
 
USA
» New York Classrooms Promote Communist Activist
» North American Union: Why the U.S. Coverup?
» Oregon Islam Class to Go on
» Sacrificed Survivors of 9/11
» Why Violent Revolt Lies in Our Future
 
Canada
» Ugly Fight Against a Death-Cult Ideology
 
Europe and the EU
» Batman Recruits Muslim Sidekick From Paris Suburb
» Cold and Snow Whip Italy From North to South
» EU Auditor: Sicily Spending Fund for Water Not Efficient
» Italy: Mafia Video Games Rake in Sales and Provoke Ire
» Italy: Muslims Plan Gatherings During Christmas Holidays
» Italy: Minister Decries Release of Demonstrators From Prison Following Violent Protest
» Italy: ‘Nine Probed for Pompeii Collapses’
» Making Paris Safer
» Missing Sweden’s Bomber
» Netherlands: New Mosque Opened in Rotterdam at Expense of Sheikh Hamdan
» Palestinian Refugees to Play Bagpipes in Italy
» Protests Greet Paris Conference Against ‘Islamization’ of Europe
» Sweden in ‘Coldest December in 100 Years’
» Switzerland: New Legislation Creates Dilemma for Mormons
» Tweet Revenge: Italians Bombard EU Summit Wall With Silvio Berlusconi Insults
» UK: ‘Mother Cuts Out the Heart of Her Daughter, Four, As She Listens to Recording of Koran in Ritual Killing’
» UK: Calls for ‘Anti-Semitic’ Student Leader to Quit After Facebook Message About Jews
» UK: Ex-Defence Minister Joins Arms Firm Behind MOD £1.5bn Overspend
» UK: Fears of Dummy Bomb Runs by ‘Terror Scouts’ At Regional Airports
» UK: Friend of 7/7 Victim in Air Rage Outburst About Muslims
» UK: What Kind of Woman Would Help Protect a Child Killer?
» UK: Winning the Argument
 
Balkans
» ERRC: Roma Live in Poor Conditions
» Switzerland: Media Question Wisdom of Recognising Kosovo
 
North Africa
» Algeria: New Splendour for ‘Notre Dame D’Afrique’
» Bluefin Tuna: Controversy in Algeria Over Its Quota
» Egypt: Siwa, Ancient Oasis Threatened
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» As Rabbis in Israel Ban Renting Houses to Non-Jews, Rabbis Around the World Oppose the Idea
 
Middle East
» 130 Million Strong: Al-Qaeda’s Deep Muslim Support
» Saudi Arrests 38 After ‘Sectarian’ Clashes: Reports
» Talent: Confirmed: Suspicion of Iran is Universal
» Turkey: We’ll Make Fighter Jets! (and Spaceships Too…)
 
Russia
» Moscow Under Siege for Racist Violence
» Moscow Police Arrest Hundreds Ahead of Nationalist Rallies
 
South Asia
» 24 Hours in Pictures
» Malaysia: Kuala Lumpur: Government Suspends Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim
» Pakistan Spy Agency Denies it Helped Unmask CIA Station Chief in Islamabad
 
Australia — Pacific
» Icky Wiki E-Mails Skeeved Out Teen
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Radical Muslim Sect Again Stalks Northern Nigeria
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Financial Crisis


European Council: All a Blur at the Euro-Summit

A naysaying chancellor from Germany, allied with a fickle president from France, up against massive but irresolute resistance at the EU’s 16/17 December summit. Is this how Europe saves its currency?

Cerstin Gammelin

The crisis has put Europe in a strange mood. If it had to be summed up in a nutshell: ambivalent. Some want to rescue their over-indebted partners at any price, others don’t. Some want to keep the euro, others want their national currency back. Nothing is the way it seemed only a year ago.

High-ranking Polish diplomats posted in Brussels are a credit to their profession when asked over beers whether their country still wants the euro at all. They tend to sigh and say, “Ah, yes, the euro…. Seems to be in rather hot water. Still and all, though, Warsaw naturally stands by its desire to trade in the zloty for the single currency. Only there’s no telling when that might be.” Followed by a diplomatic wink. But first, they say, we’ve got to wait and see whether the rescue funds suffice to liquidate those mountains of debt. We admit though we’ve been pretty relieved in recent weeks that we’re not members of the euro club — that’s understandable under the circumstances, isn’t it?

Juncker has now joined the ranks of the vacillators

The Poles feel much the same way about the euro that a number of European leaders feel about the German proposals: ambivalent. On a scale from outright rejection to full endorsement, most countries are dithering somewhere in the middle, says a senior diplomat from a smaller country. Yes, the Germans were often right on the merits. But we didn’t want to be constantly tagging along behind Berlin. Or behind Berlin and Paris. “We’ve lost our appetite for Franco-German proposals,” says a high-ranking diplomat from a big country.

Europe’s vacillating government heads also bear some of the blame for the ambient ambivalence. French president Nicolas Sarkozy wanted to convince his counterparts to borrow several billion extra euros before the end of the year to give their economies a “growth jolt” and catapult them out of the crisis. Two multi-billion-euro rescue packages later, the bustling Frenchman seems to have been reduced to Angela Merkel’s walking talking shadow.

And Luxembourg’s prime minister Jean-Claude Juncker has now joined the ranks of the vacillators. In much-hyped public appearances he banged the drum for eurobonds to finance some of the debts — without much success. After flat refusals from Berlin and Paris, eurobonds didn’t even make it onto the summit agenda. Whereupon Juncker had his foreign minister Asselborn explain that the whole matter really isn’t all that urgent. And a few hours before the summit started, he again announced that of course he would be tabling his proposal there…

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

USA


New York Classrooms Promote Communist Activist

New ‘human rights’ curriculum espouses teachings of Van Jones

New York schools inaugurated a new “human rights” curriculum last week that promotes the work and teachings of Van Jones, president Obama’s former “green jobs” czar.

Jones resigned in September 2009 after it was exposed he founded a communist revolutionary organization and signed a statement that accused the Bush administration of possible involvement in the 9/11 attacks.

Jones also called for “resistance” against the U.S., among other revelations of his extremist rhetoric and ideology.

Last Friday, students in classrooms across New York state participated in a webcast to launch the new curriculum, entitled “Speak Truth to Power.” Presented in conjunction with the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights, the webcast was broadcast live from Chestnut Ridge Middle School in Spring Valley, N.Y.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



North American Union: Why the U.S. Coverup?

Memory hole? Obama administration replaces content of official website

Operating much like a “memory hole” in George Orwell’s classic novel “1984,” the Obama administration has replaced the content of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America website, providing additional evidence the White House intends to implement the SPP agenda by executive action, below the radar of public opinion and outside the framework of congressional approval.

The SPP website, under the title “Commerce Connect,” now reflects totally different content, announcing its purpose as “a one-stop shop for information, counseling and government services that can help U.S. businesses around the country transform themselves into globally competitive enterprises.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Oregon Islam Class to Go on

To be held at another location while challenge to college’s cancellation continues

The Islam class is on.

At the urging of the American Center for Law and Justice, Eugene, Ore., ACT for America chapter leader Barry Sommer will be teaching his informational class on Islam.

That’s even though the local Lane Community College cancelled the class at the request of a Muslim activist organization, and that decision, while being challenged, is not yet changed.

“The ACLJ has filed a Freedom of Information Act request with LCC and they’ve given LCC 21 days to come up with the information requested,” Sommer explained.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sacrificed Survivors of 9/11

In the 2002 movie The Guys, based on a true story, a lady English professor is asked to help a New York City Fire Dept. captain write eulogies for eight of his men who died in the World Trade Center on 9/11. A big part of the captain’s “needing a writer” (a line from the movie) is that he was in shock and quietly grieving shortly after their deaths.

A new documentary, entitled Sacrificed Survivors: The Untold Story of the Ground Zero Mega-Mosque, is, in many ways, the story and movie that the fire captain from The Guys would make if he had nine years to reflect on the events of 9/11 and was now able to speak with some ease about what happened then. The captain could also now talk about what 9/11 means in today’s world, where a quite different New York City mayor and some imam want to put up a triumphal mosque at one of the buildings hit on 9/11. That is not a stretch: the landing gear of one of the planes crashed through the roof of the Burlington Coat Factory and potential mosque site, along with quite a bit of debris, which included human remains.

“Normally you have to ask people a lot of questions to get them to talk,” says the film’s director, Martin Mawyer, “but we just sat these people in front of the camera, and they told their stories.” Mawyer is the also the head of the Christian Action Network. Patti Pierucci wrote the overview and those parts of the script that didn’t come from the words of survivors and their families.

In a premier showing and discussion held at St. Luke’s Theater in Manhattan, Mawyer and many of the people in the film — rescue operations fireman Tim Brown; construction worker Andy Sullivan; Al and Maureen Santora, the parents of slain fireman Christopher Santora; Madeline Brooks, the head of the New York Chapter of Act! for America — have come to present the film and talk to a select audience that includes an anti-terrorism expert who lived in Arab countries; “Culturalism: A Word, a Value, Our Future” author John Press; various members of the internet media; and the friends and family of those involved in the film.

The DVD began with two film previews that answered the question, “What does a mosque have to do with the sadness and fears of the loved ones of 9/11 victims?” The first preview,, “Islam Rising,” shows Muslim street protesters calling for the death of the West, followed by Dutch politician Geert Wilders stating that “Islam is the communism of today.” This is followed by Pres. Obama receiving a medallion from a Saudi official and scenes of the World Trade Center destruction. The second movie preview, “Homegrown Jihad,” shows jihadist training camps spread across the United States, where the members can be seen marching, shooting rifles, and learning hand-to-hand combat.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Why Violent Revolt Lies in Our Future

President Ronald Reagan used to say that the scariest words in the English language are: “Hi, I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” Two hundred or so years earlier, our Founding Fathers had essentially the same thoughts when they declared independence from the British Crown based on its refusal to take into account the grievances of the colonies and its peoples, and instead attempted to beat them into submission.

Today, as we observe the holidays and ready ourselves for a Republican takeover of the House of Representatives in the New Year, in the face of continued control of the Senate and White House by the Democrats and President Barack Obama, these words and thoughts ring louder than ever. Never before in the history of our sacred nation has the “State of the Union” been worse and indeed more hostile to the needs of the American people. And both Democrats and Republicans are responsible!

I have written in earlier columns that I sincerely believe that we have entered a new revolutionary period in American history. With each passing day, I become more convinced of it. And, regrettably, I believe that we are only a year of so from violent revolt if things do not radically change “on a dime.”

Here are the signs of the violent revolution to come…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Ugly Fight Against a Death-Cult Ideology

At the year end, and this year also brings to an end a conflict-ridden decade, we are ritually inundated with reviews of past months and predictions for the future in magazines and journals from around the world.

On my desk, for instance, I have the Economist cautioning us about the “dangers of a rising China,” and the prestigious journal Foreign Affairs assembling wise individuals to map for us what we might find in the “World Ahead.”

From my perspective — one shaped by travels, readings and talking with people in foreign lands — there is a seismic shift unfolding in global politics and culture.

The man who sensed this shift perhaps most acutely, and described presciently its effect as the “clash of civilizations” was Samuel Huntington.

The severest of this clash is one between political Islam and the West.

I say political Islam to distinguish this ideology of murder and mayhem from Islam — the faith-tradition of hundreds of millions of simple, honest, God-fearing Muslims devoted to their family as were my parents, and also victims of Islamists who turned a simple faith into death-cult ideology.

This struggle between political Islam and the West will stay with us well into the next decade and, perhaps, beyond. It will end only when Islamists are effectively defeated and political Islam expunged similar to the defeat of German Nazis and Japanese militarists.

The struggle of this nature is invariably ugly. It is also bewildering to people caught in the midst of the struggle.

[…]

And so in my final column of this decade I predict the “clash” Huntington foresaw will get more severe before it eventually comes to an end.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Batman Recruits Muslim Sidekick From Paris Suburb

Nightrunner is a citizen of France, a Sunni Muslim, and 22 years old living in the Clichy-sous-Bois of Paris who is phenomenally well trained in parkour.

I knew it was only going to get worse at DC Comics: in his continuing efforts to form Batman Inc, Bruce Wayne recruits an Algerian Muslim living in France, in Clichy-Sous-Bois, where the Muslim riots grew out of in 2005, over the death of 2 delinquents who electrocuted themselves by stupidly entering a power station, and the blame was laid upon at least 2 policemen who weren’t even at fault and didn’t even know they were there. How about that, Bruce Wayne goes to France where he hires not a genuine French boy or girl with a real sense of justice, but rather, an “oppressed” minority who adheres to the Religion of Peace. And this is a guy whose very parents were murdered at the hands of a common street thug!

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cold and Snow Whip Italy From North to South

Rome, Capri dusted with snow

(ANSA) — Rome, December 17 — Teeth are chattering from Milan to Rome and Naples as a Siberian air current affecting much of Europe chills the length of Italy. Snow has crept outward from the Adriatic coast, now suffering its fourth day of snow, to cover regions from Lombardy in the north to Calabria in the extreme south.

In Rome, residents and tourists were delighted to see snowflakes fluttering down for the first time this year, an all-too-rare sight.

Outside the capital, snowfall had residents, travelers and airport operators snapping photos of the strange sight of Fiumicino, Rome’s international airport, dusted in white. Snow in Rome is extremely rare, and even more so on its coastline. Ice is expected to delay some trains running to or from the capital.

The famed tourist island of Capri in the Bay of Naples also saw a sprinkling of snow that melted all to fast for the local kids.

The Civil Protection department sent out a weather alert on Thursday as Italians prepared to pack freeways, roads and trains for holiday travel. Particularly hard hit are freeways leading to Genoa, in Liguria, and Valle D’Aosta, located on the Italian side of Mt Blanc. Freeway authorities pledged rigorous snow removal to keep northwestern arteries open to traffic.

Snow created treacherous stretches of road in La Spezia, where residents awoke to a rare blanket of white. Stranded residents called firemen for help leaving their homes.

“Everything is blocked, covered in snow, from sea level to the hills,”“ confirmed the local head of Civil Protection, Maurizio Bocchia, who even found himself blocked on the road to his office. “We don’t have sufficient means to clear the arteries, so today getting around will be very difficult. We invite (residents) to avoid moving unless strictly necessary”.

Snow has paralyzed traffic across Tuscany, causing numerous traffic accidents, with snow covering Florence, Pisa, Livorno and other urban areas. No lives have been lost, but a section of state road was shut due to the collision of two shipping trucks. Snow chains are necessary outside Siena, and police advise keeping them aboard vehicles throughout the region. Many Tuscan schools will be closed on Saturday.

Rarer still, snowfall picked up overnight along the freeway running from the arch to the toe of Italy’s boot, from Salerno to Reggio Calabria.

Sardinia and Sicily are being whipped by gelid winds.

Cold weather is expected to ease by Christmas but the risk of rain remains.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Auditor: Sicily Spending Fund for Water Not Efficient

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 14 — The spending of EU funds for a number of water facilities in Sicily and in certain regions of Spain, Greece and Portugal has not been efficient, with too much money general badly spent.

This is the finding of the latest report by the EU Auditor General Office on infrastructure for water supplies co-financed by the EU Cohesion Fund and Regional Development Fund between 2000 and 2006.

The report says that in all four countries, there was a preference for spending money on new facilities and sources instead of intervening in the existing networks. “More careful analysis would have allowed for infrastructure with lower capacity to be built, taking alternative solutions into consideration,” such as avoiding leaks and aiming to reduce consumption.

The report adds that “in a number of projects, delays and extra costs were registered, although, to an extent, these could have been avoided”. The functioning of different projects is characterised by “low efficiency” (based on the rate of capacity and non-billed water) while these long-term investments were never covered by users.

In Italy’s case, the EU Auditor General Office monitored five projects in Sicily: an untreated water adducent in Rosmarina (13.69 million, of which 6.16 million from the EU); the completion of external links between Palermo water tanks (12.34 million, 5.14 million co-financed); distribution network by the 5 Liberta’ sub-network (13 million, of which 5.42 million from the EU); the rebuilding of the Favara di Burgio aqueduct (32.96 million, 13.28 million co-financed); fifth module bis of the Gela desalinator (cost of 32.86 million, 14.79 million provided by the EU). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Mafia Video Games Rake in Sales and Provoke Ire

Rome, 17 Dec. (AKI/Bloomberg) — The Mafia killed Sonia Alfano’s father, Sicilian journalist Beppe, on 8 January 1993. Now she’s fighting against video games that she says trivialize violence and murder.

A member of the European Parliament, Alfano opposes games such as “Mafia II” by Take-Two Interactive Software Inc., whose investors include billionaire Carl Icahn. The sequel to 2007’s “Mafia” for personal computers, Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Sony’s PlayStation 3 lets players take on the role of Vito Scaletta, who rises through the organization’s ranks, going from petty robberies to mob hits, gunfights and combat.

“It really, really hurts,” Alfano, who’s also the president of Italy’s association for the families of Mafia victims, said in an interview. “We can’t allow this to happen, our wounds are still too fresh.” She asked the European Commission last week to consider banning the games.

Take-Two may sell about 1.27 million copies of Mafia II in its fiscal year, bringing in 55 million dollars and making it the New York-based company’s fourth best-seller in terms of revenue, Mike Hickey, an analyst at Janco Partners Inc. in Greenwood Village, Colorado, wrote in a note last month. Take-Two’s shares have risen 19 percent in 2010, outperforming the 11 percent gain in the Russell 3000 Technology Index.

Mafia II’s M warning comes from its gore, violence and strong language. In Europe, the Pan European Game Information rates it 18+ and warns against violence and bad language. The game has the greatest number of instances of the “f-word” among video games with 397 in the 75,000-word script and 15-hour single-player story, according to Guinness World Records Gamer’s Edition 2011.

“‘Mafia II’ tells a compelling story about organized crime in America — a subject that for decades has been featured in award-winning movies, television shows and novels such as ‘The Godfather’ and ‘The Sopranos,’“ said Alan Lewis, Take-Two’s vice president for corporate communications and public affairs. “We fully and completely stand behind our creative teams and products, including ‘Mafia II.’“

Italian-American organizations opposed the release of Mafia II in August, said Andre DiMino, chief media officer of New Jersey-based Italian-American group, UNICO.

Electronic Arts, the second-largest US video-game company, has published titles based on “The Godfather” novel by Mario Puzo that was made into a film by Francis Ford Coppola.

“Movies and games reflect the allure and repulsion that people feel toward violence,” said Janet Murray, a professor of Digital Media at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. “Games raise special anxieties because they are active and participatory.”

The Sicilian Mafia, or Cosa Nostra, is the most tightly knit and best known. It has existed since the middle of the 19th century, historians say. There were on average 116 Mafia and other organized-crime killings a year in Italy between 2004 and 2008.

Gaming companies are becoming more sensitive to opposition in Europe to violent games. Microsoft introduced a Pan-European website called Play Smart, Play Safe this month that helps families determine what video and online games to buy.

“We have to deliver a platform that can offer the widest range of entertainment experiences possible,” Andrew House, head of Sony’s game unit in Europe, said in interview. Sony creates a “good balance” between games for mature users while delivering others like “Gran Turismo 5,” a car racing simulator play, for a broader audience, he said.

While violent content is generally rated by the likes of the Entertainment Software Rating Board, themes in games are more difficult to monitor, said William Lugo, a professor of sociology at the Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic.

“The only message within video games that is highly regulated is violence,” he said. “The harder and more complex messages, such as those having to do with race, politics, or in this case the Mafia, are outside the realm of responsibility of game companies.”

The video-game industry may become more socially responsible as it matures, Lugo said, a development the Mafia victims’ association’s Alfano would welcome.

“These games transform the Mafia, a reality of death and destruction, into a thrilling and hands-on virtual pastime,” she said. “Even if momentarily, players identify with brutal killers and for us who have experienced violence firsthand, it’s appalling.”

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



Italy: Muslims Plan Gatherings During Christmas Holidays

Rome, 17 Dec. (AKI) — Italy’s Islamic community plans to gather in a series of meetings slated for 25 and 26 December.

Unlike past meetings planned during the holidays in overwhelmingly Catholic Italy, the Muslim faithful this year will meet in different locations rather than at a single conference.

Members of Italy’s Islamic Union will come together on 25 December in Vicenza. Yahya Waziri, a noted Kuwaiti politician and two preachers from Egypt will be present at the northern Italian gethering.

The following day a meeting is planned in the industrial city of Turin, while other conferences are planned for Rome and Florence.

Many members of Italy’s growing immigrant population arrive from Muslim countries in northern Africa.

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



Italy: Minister Decries Release of Demonstrators From Prison Following Violent Protest

Rome, 17 Dec. (AKI) — Italian interior minister Roberto Maroni on Friday condemned the release of all 23 student-aged people detained after prime minister Silvio Berlusconi prevailed in a parliamentary tense confidence vote with which sparked an urban warfare-sytle clash with police on Tuesday.

“I respect but do not share the decision to release the youths that were jailed after the protests of 14 December,” Maroni said in an address to the Italian Senate.

Maroni also rejected the notion that police had infiltrated the protesters and incited them to violence.

“It is without grounds and seriously offensive,” Maroni said.

The interior minister’s remarks came a day after a Rome judge released all 23 of the detained protesters, many of which are called to hearings on 23 Dec and 13 June and one of which has been given house arrest.

Tuesday’s protest caused an estimated 20 million euros of damage in the historic centre of the Italian capital where armored police vehicles and private cars were set aflame.

Maroni said around 100 police and 34 demonstrators had sustained injuries.

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



Italy: ‘Nine Probed for Pompeii Collapses’

Probe into Schola Armaturarum and House of Moralist cave-ins

(ANSA) — Rome, December 16 — Nine people were reported to have been placed under investigation Thursday for two headline-grabbing collapses at the ancient Roman city of Pompeii last month.

Judicial sources said the former superintendent at the 2,000-year-old site, Pietro Giovanni Guzzo, and Excavations Director Antonio Varone were among those probed for the cave-in of the Schola Armaturarum, a spacious hall once used by a military association, on November 6 and a retaining wall at the House of the Moralist on November 30.

Guzzo and Varone were unavailable for comment but sources close to the latter said he was convinced he had nothing to fear from the probe.

Other officials are reportedly being probed for work on the roof of the Schola Armaturarum — commonly but mistakenly known as the Gladiators School — before a commissioner was appointed for the site by Culture Minister Sandro Bondi in 2008.

According to reports after the collapse, the cement roof put on the structure after it was wrecked in WWII Allied bombing came down after heavy rain which seeped into supporting mortar.

Bondi has been targeted by the centre-left opposition after the incidents and three other less serious collapses in early December, and is facing a no-confidence motion in parliament.

The most recent collapse, on December 3, took place as UNESCO inspectors conducted a tour of the World Heritage Site, buried by Mt Vesuvius in 79 AD and excavated from the mid-18th-century on, to assess its maintenance and conservation.

The inspectors are due to report their findings at a conference in Bahrain in June.

Some international experts suggested taking Pompeii’s care out of Italy’s hands after the Schola Armaturarum collapse which President Giorgio Napolitano called “a national disgrace”.

Polemics about looting, stray dogs and structural decay have dogged Pompeii for years.

Pompeii’s current superintendent, Jeannette Papadopoulos, has stressed that the string of collapses came after weeks of torrential rain.

She said the crumbling “should not generate any alarmism or sensationalism”.

Bondi has pledged to set up a new foundation to better channel funds and manage conservation at the ruins, which is visited by an estimated two million people a year.

Rejecting calls that he should resign, the minister claimed he had done a “good job” in appointing special officials for Pompeii’s upkeep.

But he acknowledged more needed to be done and announced the foundation where the culture ministry would work with experts to better use proceeds from millions of visitors.

“The problem is in the management, not in resources,” he told parliament last month, saying the ancient site brought in an average of more than 50 million euros ($70 million) a year.

“We need management that uses the resources better”.

The new body, Bondi said, would “assess the state of decay” all over the ancient city and decide what action to take.

Work would resume on five Pompeii houses including the famous Villa of the Mysteries, he said.

The centre-left opposition was not impressed by the minister’s report and the two main groups, the Democratic Party and Italy of Values (IdV), announced their no-confidence motion aimed at bringing him down.

“Bondi has done more damage than Vesuvius,” the IdV claimed.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Making Paris Safer

It all started with a nationwide march across 23 cities, in 2002 — in response to an epidemic of violent crimes against young Muslim women that were perpetrated by Muslim male gangs in the infamous Parisian suburbs called Cites (pronounced See-tay) — low-cost housing projects. The bleak, Muslim-dominated suburbs sprung up in the 1950s and 60s around large cities in France. With an unemployment rate that’s double the national average, and blatant discrimination, some young men in the ghettos, often of Muslim heritage, direct their aggression inward, assuming the role of the moral police and guardians of their families’ honour.

They create an environment where young girls are afraid to leave their homes unescorted, dress as they would like to or even talk to male classmates at school. It might sound like a tale from some obscure town in the Middle East, or in North Africa…but this is the reality of young Muslim women in Paris!

The brutal rape and murder of Sohane Benziane, a 17-year-old girl by her ex-boyfriend and his friends, served as the final catalyst. Five women and two men decided to fight this growing obscurantism and targeting of young Muslim girls. They marched all across France, calling the public’s attention to the condition of young girls in poor neighbourhoods.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Missing Sweden’s Bomber

British and Swedish authorities admit to lapses in identifying and controlling Islamist militancy following Stockholm’s first suicide bombing. It’s an acknowledgement made evident by the proliferation of terrorism cases in Britain, as well as disclosures among Wikileaks releases which show northern Europe’s struggle to counter Islamic extremism.

“Whether it’s making sure that imams coming over to this country can speak English properly, whether it’s making sure we deradicalize our universities, I think we do have to take a range of further steps,” British Prime Minister David Cameron said after the Swedish attack.

“But we’ve also got to ask why it is that so many young men in our own country get radicalized in this completely unacceptable way.”

It’s a question that has been on the table for at least four years. In 2006 diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks last week, U.S. officials discuss frustration over the apparent failure of British counter-radicalism efforts. An August 2006 cable assessed that the British government “has invested considerable time and resources in engaging the British Muslim community. The current tensions demonstrate just how little progress has been made.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: New Mosque Opened in Rotterdam at Expense of Sheikh Hamdan

A new landmark mosque, built by the Al Maktoum Foundation at the expense of H.H. Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Deputy Ruler of Dubai and UAE Minister of Finance, was opened here yesterday in the presence of leaders of the Muslim community in Europe.

The opening of the Al Salam mosque was attended by Ahmed Aboutaleb, Mayor of Rotterdam, Ali Thani Al Suwaidi, UAE Ambassador to Netherlands, Mirza Al Sayegh, Director Sheikh Hamdan’s Office and member of the board of trustees of Al Maktoum Foundation, members of the Foundation’s board of trustees and leaders of the Muslim community.

Dr. Hussein Halawa, preacher of the Islamic Centre in Dublin, gave the first Friday sermon in the new mosque, urging Muslims to follow the moderate school of Islam and keep away from divergence.

The mosque, whose construction took a whole decade, is today the second famous cultural and civilsiational landmarks in Rotterdam after the City Hall Council.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Palestinian Refugees to Play Bagpipes in Italy

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT — Scottish bagpipes played by young Palestinians, dressed not in kilts, but in their traditional clothes, residents of a refugee camp in the extreme south of Lebanon near the temporary border with Israel, will return to perform in Italy thanks to the efforts of the Ulaia ArteSud not-for-profit organisation, a cultural, artistic and social association based in Rome. The announcement of the initiative was made in recent days in the Burj ash Shamali camp, south of the Mediterranean port of Tyre, some 10 km from the blue demarcation line between Lebanon and Israel, by Olga Ambrosanio, president of Ulaia: “we still have to finalise the details, but we are working to bring these kids back to Italy thanks to a new collaboration with the ‘Prima Materia’ musical school in Tuscany, to allow them to play with their Italian contemporaries,” she told ANSAmed in a conversation in Beirut. The music group ‘Ghirab’, which takes its name from the local term that the Palestinians use for the bagpipes (qirab in classical Arabic), was set up spontaneously in 1989 and is today made up of 40 people, including around 15 ‘veterans’, nonetheless all aged between 15 and 24. The group is part of the non-governmental Palestinian organisation Beit Atfal — Assumud.

Bruno Le Rouzic, the Breton maestro who is one of the greatest bagpipe experts in Europe, has been going to Burj ash Shamali regularly for three years to run ‘musical empowerment’ workshops for the Ghirab band. “The instruments that the kids play now were given to them in 2003 during the traditional inter-Celtic festival in Lorient, in France, but before they were using prehistoric bagpipes, some created with makeshift material.” As Le Rouzic points out, speaking again with ANSAmed, “the bagpipes are one of mankind’s oldest instruments and traces of it have been found in the Mediterranean, from current-day Algeria to the Yemen, passing through the Arab Levant.” In the Palestinian camp near Tyre, the instrument which is commonly associated with Scotland however arrived in more recent times: “in all likelihood,” says Le Rouzic, “the bagpipes were brought here by refugees in 1948, after they had been adopted from Scottish soldiers during the British mandate in Palestine” (1920-1948).

At the end of the third workshop with the young people of Ghirab in Burj ash Shamali, Bruno Le Rouzic is stopping off in Beirut before leaving for Europe: “I’m not here to make them the best pipers in the world,” he says, “but to help them, through music and dedication, to get away from their extremely difficult daily life. We are here not for the bagpipes but for the young people.” Last year Ulaia organised Ghirab’s first Italian tour: seven girls and 6 boys from Burj ash Shamali covered over 4,200 km from Rome to Milan to Apulia, playing and marching through the historic centres of over 10 towns and cities, “each time receiving warm and welcoming hospitality from local associations.” Thanks to fundraising from the sales of their CD ‘Fuori dal Campo’ (Outside the Camp), recorded during the 2009 tour, as part of the ‘Music For Study’ initiative, Ulaia has been able to finance two scholarships, of 2,000 euros each, for two people from the camp.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Protests Greet Paris Conference Against ‘Islamization’ of Europe

About 150 people protested Saturday outside the site of a conference in Paris organized to criticize the “Islamization” of Europe. Protesters held banners reading “United Against Islamophobia” and “Fascists, get out of our neighbourhoods.” Socialist Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe had asked police to ban the conference, but police allowed it to go forward under surveillance. The conference was organized by several French groups, including nationalist political group Bloc Identitaire, that frequently complain about what they see as Islam’s growing influence over traditional French values. France has Western Europe’s largest Muslim population. Several hundred people attended the conference, which also was broadcast over the Internet. “Resistance against Islamization is alive. Nothing can stop it!” Bloc Identitaire wrote in a statement about the conference on its Web site.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Sweden in ‘Coldest December in 100 Years’

Power outages, traffic accidents as well as train and flight delays have left Swedes reeling from Thursday’s snowstorm, which forecasters say isn’t over yet.

“Slippery conditions will continue across the country. There is already a lot of snow on the roads,” SMHI’s Elin Torstensson told the TT news agency.

She explained that Sweden has experienced more cold days and more snow than is normal for December.

“There were a number of days in a row with below-freezing temperatures, so called ice days. And that we have that before Lucia (December 13th) hasn’t happened in more than 100 years,” she said.

In Örnsköldsvik in eastern Sweden, 2,300 customers of the Vattenfall power company were without electricity for several hours overnight. As of 7am Friday morning, about 1,000 households remained in the dark.

And an additional 1,000 homes lost power in Västerbotten in northern Sweden in the wake of the storm, which dumped a blanket of thick snow on much of the country.

However, according to Vattenfall spokesperson Magnus Örvell, the outages were likely caused by the storm’s heavy winds.

The fierce winds and continued snow also caused problems at many of Sweden’s airports, according to airport operator Swedavia.

Passengers are encouraged to contact their airlines for the latest information about possible delays.

Rail service was also affected by the storm. In Skåne in southern Sweden, trains traveling between Malmö and Lund were replaced with buses, and other trains were redirected via the Lommabanan route, according to the website of the Swedish Transit Authority (Trafikverket).

Trains traveling between Ängelholm and Båstad in western Sweden are experiencing 25 minute delays because of switching problems, while track problems have resulted in buses replacing trains between Karlskrona and Emmaboda in southern Sweden.

Swedish motorists also had trouble dealing with the wild winter weather. A long-haul truck slid off of route 56 north of Heby in central Sweden. While no one was injured, the road was blocked as crews struggled to clear away the trucks spilled load of gas canisters.

Outside of Luleå in northern Sweden, a school bus collided with a logging truck on Thursday, sending eight children to hospital for observation.

In Skåne, around 35 accidents were reported on Thursday, five of which resulted in injuries.

Meteorology agency SMHI has issued a class 1 warning covering all of northern Sweden due to the large amounts of new snow, combined with the strong winds.

The agency also forecasts that the snow will continue throughout much of the country on Friday.

Snow showers are expected to continue throughout the weekend over parts of Götaland and southern Svealand in central Sweden, with light flurries forecast for the north of the country.

“We’re expecting about five centimetres of new snow,” said SMHI’s Torstensson.

Temperatures on Saturday are expected to range from a few degrees below freezing in Götaland to -25 Celsius in the far north, before cooling somewhat on Sunday when temperatures in the northern Sweden may dip down to 35 degrees below zero.

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



Switzerland: New Legislation Creates Dilemma for Mormons

The Swiss authorities say moves to prevent missionaries from the United States from working in Switzerland are not directed specifically against Mormons.

Swiss Mormons and many swissinfo readers reject the ban as unfair and incomprehensible.

The problem has arisen because rules allowing the free movement of people between Switzerland and the European Union, which came into effect in 2002, were counterbalanced by severe restrictions on the numbers of third country nationals allowed to take up residence in Switzerland.

“We always used to have a quota system, and that worked very well,” Peter Gysin, Swiss media spokesman for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — the official name of the Mormon church, told swissinfo.ch.

“With the new rules, the number of residence permits for Americans was cut, and then Swiss businesses complained that they didn’t have enough. So they looked around to see where they could reduce the numbers, and decided on the Mormons,” he said.

Quotas

He explained that all the missionaries are volunteers who pay their own way, and yet Swiss legislation regards them as paid workers, who therefore fall under the overall quota system.

A position paper issued by the LDS points out that young missionaries who get to know and love a country and its people “make a valuable contribution to understanding between nations”, and their positive feelings can only be of benefit to the host country.

“They are not taking anyone’s job and are in no way a burden on the country,” says the position paper.

This is not disputed by the Federal Migration Office, which is responsible for allocating permits. But it is not the point, as Adrian Wymann, head of the Labour Market Section for German-speaking Switzerland, told swissinfo.ch.

“The question of whether they are being paid is irrelevant,” he said.

It all goes back to an ordnance of 1986, which gave a very broad definition of gainful employment, in order to prevent employers taking on foreign nationals as “trainees” and paying them lower wages.

The Mormons challenged this all the way up to the Federal Court, which stated in 1996 that actually being paid is not the issue.

“If you are doing something which by regular Swiss standards you can expect to be paid, then that is gainful employment,” Wymann explained.

Skilled workers

Under the Foreign Nationals Act of 2008, residence permits can only be given to third country nationals who are skilled and qualified.

“The only professional vocation that we can accept is ‘religious caretakers’,” said Wymann — an expression used to refer to a trained person, like a priest, vicar, Buddhist monk or nun, Muslim imam and so on.

But while the Migration Office is prepared to be “subtle”, as Wymann put it, Swiss legislation includes the principle of equal treatment, and this poses a problem in the case of the Mormons, despite the fact that the Mormons have long links with Switzerland.

“If we say we’ll continue to accept around 200 Mormon missionaries every year, and accept that they have a four month training before coming to Switzerland, there’s no way we can not accept missionaries from Brazil, from Africa, from religious communities which may not be as well known as the Mormons, which may be dubious or not — we don’t know.”

“From a legal point of view, we would have no way of saying ‘no’ to those communities.”

The Migration Office grants about a dozen permits every year to the international scout movement — “an organisation that we know and can trust”.

The difference between the Mormons and the scouts is that religion is one “box” and youth exchange an entirely different one, Wymann explained.

Discrimination?

As it is, the fact that LDS missionaries were allowed a transition period between the coming into force of the Foreign Nationals Act and the end of the quota system for them, could be seen by other religious groups as discrimination.

While some of swissinfo’s readers are hostile to the LDS, many cannot understand the ban.

“I served as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years in Switzerland. .. I love Switzerland and I love the people. It seems that the birthplace of the Reformation should continue to be a place of religious freedom and tolerance,” wrote one.

Working for solutions

Wymann said that the Mormons had been given time to adapt because “we don’t want things to come to a grinding halt”.

He insisted that the door was open and that talks are going on. While the Swiss side has made it clear that the current practice is unconstitutional, they have also pointed to ways out of the dilemma.

LDS missionaries would have no problem if they had been trained for two or three years and had additional professional experience; they would then be regarded as religious caretakers.

But as Wymann admitted, the Mormons are unlikely to introduce special training specially for Switzerland…

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



Tweet Revenge: Italians Bombard EU Summit Wall With Silvio Berlusconi Insults

Giant screens at Brussels meeting display Twitter epithets calling Italian PM ‘a mafioso’ and ‘a paedophile’

An experimental “tweet-wall” on giant TVs in the main hall of the EU summit in Brussels was shut down to avoid causing embarrassment to Silvio Berlusconi after being hijacked by Italian Twitter users who bombarded it with messages calling their prime minister “a mafioso” and “a paedophile”.

Postings on the microblogging site tagged “#EUCO” were automatically fed to a pair of large plasma screens in the main hall of the Brussels building in which the 27 leaders of Europe were meeting to discuss a response to the eurozone debt crisis.

But soon after it was launched yesterday, Italian twitter users found out about it and flooded it with anti-Berlusconi messages.

After only two hours, the “tweet-wall” was replaced by anodyne footage of the summit proceedings and the European Council logo.

“Berlusconi pays for sex, for votes, for mafia protection, for everything he can buy. What he cannot buy will be stolen,” one tweet read.

“Berlusconi is a mafioso but he make laws for be not judged,” said another.

At around 3pm, the Euro-blogger Joe Litobarski realised what was happening and wrote: “Uh oh. Italians have realised tweets tagged #EUCO shown on Twitter wall at #EU Council meeting — expect mayhem”.

But it was the messages sent by mpietropoli, an Italian designer, that caused the council press team to take down the system when he started bombarding it with quotes from the Italian leader, including some praising Mussolini.

“Mussolini never killed anyone. Mussolini used to send people on vacation in internal exile,” he posted — a quote from the PM.

“[I cannot] think that there are so many pricks around who would vote against their own best interests,” mpietropoli also tweeted — another Berlusconi quote.

“We had the tweet-wall up for two hours in the main hall, but it wasn’t moderated and a lot of the tweets were … well, very, very frank,” Dana Manescu, the council press team official who organised the wall, said.

“The point was not to show insulting messages about Berlusconi. If anyone from the Italian delegation saw it, it would hurt their sensibility.”

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



UK: ‘Mother Cuts Out the Heart of Her Daughter, Four, As She Listens to Recording of Koran in Ritual Killing’

The 35-year-old woman was allegedly sitting in a her kitchen chanting verses of the Koran as her daughter’s disembowelled corpse lay next to her.

The little girl’s heart and other organs were found in different rooms around the flat in Clapton, east London.

Crime scene: Shayna Bharuchi, 35, was allegedly sitting in a her kitchen chanting verses of the Koran as her daughter Nusayba’s disembowelled corpse lay next to her.

Police suspect she she carried out the killing as a religious offering as she listened to the Muslim holy book on an MP3 player at full volume.

The mother, who is understood to have two teenage children of 14 and 16, has since been sectioned under the Mental Health Act and is in a secure unit.

The gruesome scene was discovered by the girl’s father when he arrived home to the flat on Thursday to find his partner clutching a kitchen knife.

The man, believed to be a Muslim convert, dialled 999 and paramedics pronounced the girl dead at the scene. Police said next of kin have been informed.

One neighbour, who lives in the downstairs flat and asked not to be named, said: ‘I was feeding my daughter her lunch at about 3pm and suddenly heard horrific screaming. It is shocking and so upsetting.’

He said the couple have lived in the flat for about a year.

A post-mortem examination will take place on Saturday at Poplar mortuary in east London.

The Metropolitan Police’s Child Abuse Investigation Command is leading the murder inquiry. They are not believed to be looking for anybody else.

Yesterday another shocked resident, a mum in her 30s, said the mother always wore a black headscarf with a veil.

She added: ‘Usually you could only see her eyes.

‘I often heard shouting coming from the flat as she and a man argued.

‘Their quarrels would become very heated.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Calls for ‘Anti-Semitic’ Student Leader to Quit After Facebook Message About Jews

A radical student leader who dismissed the violent tuition fees protests as ‘a few smashed windows’ has been accused of making anti-Semitic comments on a social networking site.

Mature student Clare Solomon, 37, president of the University of London Union, helped co-ordinate the protests — during which a car carrying Prince Charles and Camilla was attacked — and declared herself proud of the students.

Now there are calls for Ms Solomon, the daughter of a Royal Military policeman, to resign after she wrote on Facebook: ‘The view that Jews have been persecuted all throughout history is one that has been fabricated in the last 100 or so years to justify the persecution of Palestinians.

‘To paint the picture that all Jews have always had to flee persecution is just plainly inaccurate.’

Carly McKenzie, a campaigns officer for the Union of Jewish Students, said: ‘We have lost confidence in her ability to represent Jewish students.

‘To claim that Jewish suffering is a deliberate fabrication goes beyond ignorance into real malice.

‘Her remarks had nothing to do with principled opposition to Israel and everything to do with her disdain towards the Jewish people.’

Adam Levine, President of Queen Mary Jewish Society, added: ‘She should find out before she makes such strong comments about what it means to be Jewish.’

Ms Solomon, who was raised as a Mormon, declined to comment when contacted by The Mail on Sunday but told the Jewish Chronicle newspaper: ‘This badly worded comment was something that I wrote in haste on Facebook. I’m sorry for any misunderstandings.’

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Ex-Defence Minister Joins Arms Firm Behind MOD £1.5bn Overspend

A former Labour defence minister has become an adviser to a French arms firm that supplies the government with billions of pounds worth of equipment.

Lady Taylor of Bolton — Ann Taylor — was minister for defence equipment for a year until 2008 and became minister for international defence and security until Labour lost the general election in May.

This month she joined the arms contractor Thales, which is part of the consortium supplying two aircraft carriers that are £1.541bn over budget.

The disclosure comes amid calls for closer examination of the “revolving door” of jobs between the Ministry of Defence and the arms industry.

Peter Kilfoyle, a former Labour defence minister, said: “I think its sad that people think they have to go off and do these things. I don’t think that former ministers should be working in this area at all. There’s going to be a view here that there is a potential conflict of interest.”

Taylor, 63, became leader of the House in 1997. In 2001, she became chair of the intelligence and security committee, which monitors the expenditure, administration and policy of the security service, GCHQ and the secret intelligence service. While at defence from 2007, Taylor was often involved with Thales.

In 2008, she visited Thales’ British headquarters in Crawley, West Sussex, to see their £700m Watchkeeper unmanned plane, or “drone”, programme which aims to be ready this year. In 2009, she met Thales staff at two arms exhibitions and at an international strategic thinktank. That November she announced that the government was deciding whether it could arm the Thales drones.

The advisory committee on business appointments, which decides if ministers can take up a job after leaving office, announced her appointment to Thales Corporate Services last week. She applied for permission to take the job in September and has been told that she cannot personally lobby ministers or civil servants until May 2012.

Thales is part of the consortium supplying two aircraft carriers that are £1.541bn over budget. The coalition government considered cancelling one, but could not because of penalty clauses. Instead, one of the ships will be mothballed temporarily.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Fears of Dummy Bomb Runs by ‘Terror Scouts’ At Regional Airports

Security officials have tested security at regional airports amid fears terror scouts have been staging dummy runs, it emerged today.

Two suspect packages have reportedly been spotted in the last three months which appeared to be like improvised bombs.

One hidden in a box inside a bag of hand luggage had a BlackBerry attached to a baby’s bottle with a charging cable thought to be simulating a detonator.

The second — spotted at the same airport some weeks later — also contained a mobile phone and detonator, according to The Guardian.

Both ‘devices’ were examined by bomb disposal experts and found to be harmless, meaning no passengers were charged.

Counter-terrorism officials apparently believe that airports are being ‘periodically tested’ in a bid to hunt out any weaknesses that could be exploited.

One Whitehall source said airports out of London were a greater concern because they are perceived to have less stringent security measures.

‘Periodically they [suspected terrorists] are seeing how the system works, that the security systems are being tested,’ the source told The Guardian.

BAA, which owns Heathrow and Stansted, has urged the Government to make security procedures less predictable.

It is trialling ‘behavioural detection’, where staff are trained to pick out any passengers behaving strangely.

Fears have been heightened after the alert at East Midlands Airport last month, when an ink bomb wired up to a mobile phone was found on a freight flight.

Al Qaeda planners believed the plane would have been over the Atlantic to America when it was primed to go off but it had to make an unscheduled stop off to refuel.

The counter-terror battle to prevent 9/11 style attacks is becoming ever more difficult as terrorists become more sophisticated.

But earlier this month, the Government revealed the ban on carrying liquids in hand luggage at UK airports was to be eased and could go completely by 2013.

Passengers have been restricted to carrying just 100ml of liquid in their hand luggage following a failed plot to blow up transatlantic jets in 2006.

Transport Secretary Philip Hammond said he planned to make the system more flexible, starting with aerosols, gels and liquids.

A Department of Transport spokesman said: ‘The UK adopts a multi-layered approach to aviation security, combining technology, intelligence and other techniques to give us one of the strictest regimes in the world. This is kept under constant review based on the latest developing threats.’

           — Hat tip: bewick [Return to headlines]



UK: Friend of 7/7 Victim in Air Rage Outburst About Muslims

A computer expert was yesterday spared jail for a drunken air-rage rant against Muslims — after a court heard his best friend had been killed in the 7/7 bombings.

Anthony Jones, 31, launched a foul-mouthed outburst, saying Muslims should not be allowed on planes because ‘they blow people up’, after downing four cans of Stella Artois on a flight from Shanghai to Heathrow.

He had resorted to alcohol after running out of tranquilisers, which he had been taking on the 13-hour flight to control his nerves.

He said after his friend, Fiona Stephenson, a lawyer, died in the Aldgate Tube bombing on July 7, 2005, he had developed severe anxiety and a terror of flying.

In a series of foul-mouthed rants while travelling with his Chinese wife and baby son he racially abused Muslims and said ‘they blew up my friend’. He also told a stewardess he would ‘get her the sack’.

[…]

Judge Andrew Johnson told him he would have been jailed were it not for the fact that his outburst had been caused by his mental condition.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: What Kind of Woman Would Help Protect a Child Killer?

Dressed in her sparkling white communion veil, grinning shyly for the camera, Amy Houston looked a picture of purity and innocence in photographs taken when she was 12 years old.

Today, little Amy should be a contented young woman. Instead, in the words of her devastated father Paul, she was left to ‘die like a dog’ in the street after being knocked down by Mohammed Ibrahim, a serial criminal and failed asylum seeker, who was driving while supposedly banned from the road.

After taking Amy’s life, Ibrahim — an Iraqi Kurd who, after killing Amy, allegedly married a woman and had two children by her — committed a series of further crimes, including burglary, theft, harassment and yet more driving offences.

Once he was captured, Amy’s family had every right to expect that this vile man would be punished and then ejected from the country. Deporting him back to Iraq — a country where British soldiers died to help make safe — was the least punishment he deserved.

But, this week, Ibrahim won his lengthy legal battle to remain in the UK thanks, yet again, to the Human Rights Act. Being returned to his homeland would infringe on his right to a ‘private, family life’ in Britain, you see, and never mind the devastation he wrought on Amy’s family’s life.

Is it any wonder that most decent people loathe a piece of legislation which, though well-intended, has become nothing more than a charter for villains and a nice little earner for the lawyers who fight their causes…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Winning the Argument

Whenever I worry that my instinct for pluralism and debate is drawing me to listen to siren voices, I am reminded of the idiocy of the authoritarian alternative. This week I had the honour of being singled out by the Islamist fellow-travellers of iEngage after I dared to write that such a sectarian organisation should never have been considered to act as the secretariat for the new All-Party Parliamentary Group on Islamophobia.

The full letter from the head of iEngage, Mohammed Asif, is available on the organisation’s website.

This is the meat of the gripe:

“It is the machinations of journalists like Martin Bright who have through their disreputable work sought to advance the “good (apolitical) Muslim”/”bad (politically active) Muslim” dichotomy that has created a situation in which Muslims who challenge and demur from the sham discourse on “Islamism” are derisively treated and cast beyond the pale.”

Beyond the barely comprehensible jargon, I think what he is saying is that he’s really angry that I rumbled him. I have no desire to close down the debate with political Islam. But it was never right that such an ideologically driven organisation was considered as the appropriate body to administer and advise such an important committee. The argument was an important one. It has now been had and the committee has made the decision to drop iEngage. Of such debate is democracy made.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Balkans


ERRC: Roma Live in Poor Conditions

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, DECEMBER 15 — The Roma in Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia and Slovakia live in poor conditions, and racism and discrimination are the main hurdles in improving the situation, showed a research conducted by the European Roma Rights Center (ERRC), presented at the Media Center, Belgrade.

The research, which included visits to 110 families, was designed to identify the main problems of the Roma, start legal activities and see what the governments in the region are doing to tackle the problem, said ERRC research consultant Djordje Jovanovic.

“Public officials and institutions discriminate against the Roma not only by forcing them from their homes, but also by denying them the right to social housing. The criteria are strict, because the applicants must be employed and have proof of years of service, and most Roma have no personal documents,” Jovanovic said.

“The Roma live in unsatisfactory conditions, which affects their access to education, employment and health care, which in turn affects their health,” said the ERRC researcher.

ERRC lawyer Idaver Memedov said that segregation is widespread in Slovakia, where in one case municipal authorities went as far as building a wall to separate the Roma neighborhood from the rest of the town.

The Roma must be involved in the planning and implementation of all activities which help solve their housing problems, amnesty needs to be guaranteed for all informal Roma settlements and state officials guilty of discrimination need to be held accountable, Memedov said.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Media Question Wisdom of Recognising Kosovo

Does Switzerland bear a responsibility for the legitimacy of the Kosovo government, given it was one of the first nations to recognise Kosovo’s independence?

There have been criticisms in the Swiss media this week of Switzerland’s diplomatic move, following a Council of Europe report accusing the Kosovo leader of heading a mafia-style organisation.

The international community also came in for criticism by Swiss politician Dick Marty, who led the investigation..

According to Marty, the European Union, the United States and the United Nations were all aware of the crimes committed by the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), but turned a blind eye in favour of short-term stability.

His report accuses Thaci of being the head of an organised crime ring during the Kosovo Albanian guerrilla war against Serbia in the late 1990s — a ring that assassinated opponents and trafficked in drugs as well as organs harvested from murdered Serbs.

Newspapers including Geneva’s Le Temps took Switzerland to task. On Thursday, it said that Switzerland was following and even encouraging the trend of quasi-absolving crimes committed by the Albanians — and that despite the work of its countryman Marty as well as war crimes prosecutor in the Hague, Switzerland’s own Carla Del Ponte.

“How blind! How could such a careful country that insists on human rights be so partisan,” asked Le Temps.

In Le Temps’ view, Switzerland carries a larger part of the burden than other countries on account of its connections with the KLA.

“Would Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey still shake Hashim Thaci’s hand today as she did when the Swiss embassy opened in Pristina in 2008?” queried the newspaper.

Right or wrong?

“Marty is right regarding one accusation — that the goal of political stability in Kosovo was given priority over the basic principles of justice,” wrote the Zurich-based Neue Zürcher Zeitung on Friday.

Yet former parliamentarian Ruth-Gaby Vermot from the Social Democratic Party disagrees, coming to the defence of the Swiss government’s position on Kosovo sovereignty.

“I still think it was right for Switzerland to recognise Kosovo so quickly. This young nation needed support as well as money for its development,” Vermot told swissinfo.ch.

She pointed out that there are always human rights issues linked with nations and liberation organisations involved in wars. However, it is only since Marty’s report that people realise how dreadful these crimes are.

“Now it is possible to look into it properly and make the government accountable,” Vermot said.

Clarity needed

The Swiss foreign ministry has not yet taken a position on Marty’s report. It called on the affected countries to contribute to the clarifications of Marty’s “very serious” allegations.

“Now it is time for the responsible authorities — including the international ones — to take the necessary legal steps,” the ministry told the Swiss News Agency. The EU mission EULEX has already led investigations into allegations of inhumane treatment. “Justice now takes priority,” said the ministry.

A key part of Switzerland’s involvement in Kosovo is the goal of strengthening the country’s rule of law. According to the foreign ministry, the allegations in Marty’s report have provided “more arguments” that this commitment should continue.

Kosovo and Switzerland

On February 17, 2008, the former Serbian province of Kosovo declared its independence.

The Swiss government recognised Kosovo as an independent state on February 27, 2008; it was one of the first countries to do so.

Since October 1999, the Swiss Armed Forces have been involved in the international peace support mission of the Kosovo Force (Kfor) with Swisscoy in Kosovo — short for Swiss Company.

Swisscoy is composed of up to 220 voluntary military personnel armed for self defence with pistols, assault rifles and riot agent spray generators.

There are around 270,000 Albanian speakers currently living in Switzerland, of whom 200,000 are thought to originate from Kosovo.

But only a minority of Kosovars in Switzerland are thought to have participated in Sunday’s elections in Kosovo as the participation deadline for Kosovars living abroad was very short.

Kosovo, where ethnic Albanians make up 92 per cent of the population of 2.2 million, declared independence from Serbia in 2008, but Serbs still dominate the north of the country.

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

North Africa


Algeria: New Splendour for ‘Notre Dame D’Afrique’

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, DECEMBER 14 — The luminous and imposing ‘Madame Africa’, as it is known by Algerians, has regained its antique splendour, and once again dominates the bay from one of the hills of Algiers, more resplendent than ever. After restoration works lasting three years and costing 5.1 million euros, the Notre Dame d’Afrique Basilica was inaugurated yesterday before a number of Algerian and French personalities.

“Notre Dame d’Afrique prays for us and for all Muslims” is written on the apse in French, Arabic and Berber. Yesterday, as if wanting to forget for a moment the problems faced by Algeria’s Christian community — four converted Algerians were sentenced on Sunday for building an unauthorised place of worship — the ceremony was attended by the Archbishop of Algiers, Ghaleb Bader, and the Minister for Religious Affairs, Bouabdallah Ghlamallah, as well as by the representative of President Bouteflika, the Minister Abdelaziz Belkhadem, and the historic bishop of the Algerian capital, Monsignor Tessier.

This restoration, Bader said, “is a real work of art, not only architecturally but in terms of understanding between the different religious communities in Algeria and between the two peoples on the two sides of the Mediterranean”. Speaking to the press, Belkhadem said that “there is no distinction in Algeria between Muslims and Christians as far as religious practices are concerned,” ruling out any form of restriction. “Everyone must respect the law, and Islam is fighting for tolerance,” he added.

Built in the mid 19th century, the Basilica was showing its age. It was also seriously damaged by the serious earthquake of 2003 that hit the region around Algiers. The restoration, which has been financed by the European Union, but also by the wilaya of Algiers, three French regions, the city of Marseille and a number of Algerian and French companies, such as Cevital, Sonatrach, Sonelgaz and Total, involved a number of different parts of the building.

The aim of the work was not only to restore the Basilica to its bygone youth, but also to introduce an anti-seismic structure. The bell tower and turrets were dismantled, stone by stone, and reassembled with a new steel reinforcement.

The vaults and the apse were strengthened with carbon strips, while the 46 glass windows were taken to Marseille to be restored by French master glassworkers. The works were directed by the architect Xavier David, who also opened a training building site. In the next few weeks, David will begin the restoration of one of the other most important religious buildings in Algeria, the Basilica of Saint Augustin in Annaba, the birthplace of the saint. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Bluefin Tuna: Controversy in Algeria Over Its Quota

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, DECEMBER 15 — There is controversy in Algeria over the bluefin tuna quota assigned to the country for 2011: 138 tonnes against the 680 of 2010. A drastic reduction due, according to Algiers, to the absence of its representatives at the most recent meeting of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) due to a visa not being issued. “The absence of the delegation was done in order to deprive Algeria of its quota,” stated the president of the union for the tuna fishermen in the Mediterranean, Mourad Kahoul, who accuses ICCAT of having redistributed the Algerian quotas to Libya, Morocco, Egypt and Croatia. The north African country has already presented its appeal to the Commission to obtain at least the same quota as last year.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Siwa, Ancient Oasis Threatened

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 16 — Siwa, the oasis in northern Egypt and the extreme eastern point of the Berber civilisation — ‘Siwi’, a Berber dialect, is still spoken in the area — risks losing its original urban heart, the old town of Shali, which is built out of a salt, rock and mud mixture locally known as ‘kershef’.

The area risks dissolving due to the rain and due to water that flows underground every day and is also threatened by restoration projects with modern, unnatural materials. “Of course we want to protect Shali, which is currently decaying due to the excessive cost of kershef, water, and seismic risks, we can easily rebuild it out of plastic,” said Italian architect Attilio Petruccioli with a note of sarcasm, a professor at the Politecnico University in Bari, speaking during the presentation in Cairo of the Diarcheo-Proposal for sustainable development of the Siwa Oasis, of which the architect is one of the leaders. Financed by the Italian Foreign Office and Economic Development Ministry, the project is managed by several Italian Regions, led by Apulia, and receives a contribution from Molise. During the debate, Siwa Mayor Samir Belal expressed concerns about the economic aspects of the survival of the oasis and of its urban centre, where 15,000 to 20,000 people reside. “Our agriculture,” he underlined, “is seriously hindered by the salt water that always surfaces and requires constant draining in order to continue farming. Especially for date palms.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


As Rabbis in Israel Ban Renting Houses to Non-Jews, Rabbis Around the World Oppose the Idea

The ruling by 50 leading Israeli rabbis against renting or selling property to Gentiles has caused a storm in Israel and the Diaspora. The Attorney General’s Office of Israel plans to look into possible criminal aspects of the religious ruling. More than 750 rabbis in the Diaspora said the decision caused “shock and pain”.

Jerusalem (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Hundreds of leading rabbis from congregations around the world have signed a petition criticising their counterparts in Israel after they issued a religious ruling forbidding Jews from selling or leasing property to Gentiles. More than 750 signatories to the petition by ‘Rabbis against Religious Discrimination’ deplored the new ruling issued by prominent Israeli rabbis saying it caused “shock and pain.”

“The attempt to root discriminatory policies based on religion or ethnicity in Torah is a painful distortion of our tradition,” the petition said. “Am Yisrael [the people of Israel] knows the sting of discrimination, and we still bear the scars of hatred. When those who represent the official rabbinic leadership of the State of Israel express such positions, we are distressed by this Chillul HaShem, desecration of God’s name,” the petition also read.

The petition went on to say that the Jewish communities outside of Israel “struggle to maintain a strong, loving relationship” with Israel. It noted that “Many of our congregants love Israel and want nothing more than the safety and security of the Jewish homeland, but for a growing number of Jews in America this relationship to Israel cannot be assumed.”

The petition statement added that such proclamations “communicate to our congregants that Israel does not share their values, and they promote feelings of alienation and distancing,” as well as provide “justification for anti-Jewish and anti-Israel sentiment across the world.”

For his part, Rabbi Chaim Druckman, a moderate religious Zionist leader, is working to achieve a compromise on the controversy surrounding the banning of Jews from selling or leasing property to Arabs.

Druckman is proposing an alternative that would distinguish between “loyal Arabs” and “Israel-hating rabbis.” For him, a “loyal Arab” must have equal rights, but “Israel-haters” should be ostracised.

In the meantime, Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein’s office stated last week that it would look into possible criminal aspects of the religious ruling that prohibits renting homes to gentiles signed by a number of leading rabbis.

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

Middle East


130 Million Strong: Al-Qaeda’s Deep Muslim Support

On December 2, 2010, the Pew Research Center released the results of a new poll of six Muslim countries that sheds a surprising new light on the number of Muslims worldwide that support al-Qaeda. (The six countries polled: Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan, Nigeria, Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey.) The report reveals that majorities of the world’s 1.3 billion Muslims neither support al-Qaeda nor believe that suicide bombings are ever justified in defense of Islam. Osama bin Laden, the poll reveals, “receives overwhelmingly negative ratings in nearly all countries” asked about him.

The Pew report coincides with an al-Qaeda video distributed on October 23, 2010. In it, al-Qaeda spokesman Adam Gadahn airs al-Qaeda’s poor view of the majority of Muslims. According to Gadahn, one part of the global Muslim community is apostate; another is victim to lustful, worldly influences; and a third (perhaps largest) portion has lost the ability to think for themselves, allowing clerics to turn them against al-Qaeda and the jihad.

While it is good news that the majority of the world’s Muslim population repudiates al-Qaeda, and vice versa, we in the West cannot take too much comfort. Pew also provides each polled country’s percentages of support for al-Qaeda: 34 percent of Jordanians, 49 percent of Nigerian Muslims, 3 percent of Lebanese, 20 percent of Egyptians, 23 percent of Indonesians, 18 percent of Pakistanis, and 4 percent of Turks. In real numbers, the total is staggering. A whopping 129,942,000 Muslims support al-Qaeda. That’s right, almost 130 million Muslims support al-Qaeda — and that from just the six countries Pew’s pollsters visited.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arrests 38 After ‘Sectarian’ Clashes: Reports

Saudi police arrested 38 people in the holy city of Medina after fighting erupted near Islam’s oldest mosque Al-Quba on the Shiite religious holiday of Ashura, Saudi media reported on Saturday. Several people suffered minor injuries in Thursday’s clashes between “groups of youths,” the press reports said. Three security officials were also wounded, the Al-Madina newspaper said. The Shiite website Rasid.com said the fighting pitted members of Saudi Arabia’s Shiite minority against majority Sunnis. Many of the kingdom’s top Sunni clerics have condemned Shiites as having rejected “true” Islam.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Talent: Confirmed: Suspicion of Iran is Universal

One of the few good things to come from the despicable WikiLeaks of U.S. diplomatic cables is that they demonstrate that Muslim leaders who are closest to the Iranian regime — and who know it best — are emphatic that Iran is an aggressive and ongoing state sponsor of terrorism, that it must not be allowed to obtain nuclear weapons capability and that it cannot be trusted.

Those who have been skeptical of Western claims on these matters should heed the warnings of Arab leaders with regard to Iran’s sponsorship of terrorism. Egyptian President HosniMubarak tells us that the Iranians are “sponsors of terrorism.” And Kuwait’s military intelligence chief told U.S. Gen. David H. Petraeus that Iran was supporting extremist groups in Yemen.

As to the threat of the Iranian nuclear weapons program, we now know that Jordanian officials have called for the Iranian nuclear program to be stopped by any means necessary. And officials in the United Arab Emirates and Egypt have referred to the Iranian regime as “evil” and an “existential threat.” Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed of Abu Dhabi warned the United States and the world against appeasing the Iranian regime, going so far as to declare that “Ahmadinejad is Hitler.”

King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia urged the United States to attack the Iranian regime to destroy its nuclear program. According to one cable, King Abdullah “frequently exhorted the U.S. to attack Iran to put an end to its nuclear weapons program.” The Saudi ambassador to Washington, reporting on a 2008 meeting between King Abdullah and Gen. Petraeus, tells American officials that King Abdullah “told you to cut off the head of the snake.”

It is instructive to learn what Muslim leaders think of Iran as a negotiating parter. Egypt’s Mr. Mubarak cautioned the United States to be wary of what Iranian leaders say because “they are big, fat liars.” Saudi King Abdullah told a U.S. diplomat: “The bottom line is that [the Iranians] cannot be trusted.” Foreign Policy magazine reports: “In a telling exchange at the end of his meeting with the Emir, the Qatari ruler gave [Sen. John] Kerry some advice for dealing with the Iranian government. ‘The Amir closed the meeting by offering that based on 30 years of experience with the Iranians, they will give you 100 words. Trust only one of the 100,’ the cable said.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Turkey: We’ll Make Fighter Jets! (and Spaceships Too…)

The Defense Industry Executive Committee… Even the mention of the name radiates an ultimate level of seriousness that one feels an urge to stand up and button an unbuttoned jacket. This is the panel that brings together the prime minister, defense minister, chief of the General Staff and defense procurement chief for final discussions on what weapon systems Turkey should be buying, from which supplier and under what terms and conditions.

One can imagine grey, grim office rooms decorated with giant-size Turkish flags, distasteful seats for the very important committee members, humorless discussions bogged down with complex details concerning war toys on endless shopping lists. But behind this gloomy façade, the meetings can be fun! Especially when the committee members sit down over humorless meetings but produce humorous decisions.

Wednesday was a particularly entertaining day for the Turkish defense industry. Not because the important men in suits and uniform gathered for another humorless meeting, but because they agreed to do something “humor-ful.”

After the meeting, Defense Minister Vecdi Gönül proudly announced that the committee had pushed the button for feasibility studies for the design, development and production of Turkey’s first “entirely indigenous and national” fighter jet!

The new generation “Made in Turkey” fighters will replace Turkey’s aging F-4 aircraft, and will operate together with the F-16s — which Turkey already has in its inventory — and the F-35s (widely known as the Joint Strike Fighter) — which Turkey plans to buy from a U.S.-led international consortium. The committee has decided to task the local aviation company TAI with the “conceptual design” work. With the project, Turkey will join the small league of half a dozen or so countries that has the capabilities to design and produce their own fighter jets.

Wonderful news! I cannot help prematurely suggesting to christen the Turkish fighter “the Fatih” or “the Yavuz” — or just “the Sultan.” With some Italian help it could well be dubbed “the Mamma li Turchi!” Since the proposed aircraft will boast state-of-the-art features specifically for air-to-air missions (dogfights and combat), an alternative name could be “the 1453,” with a hidden message to our friends across the Aegean.

Things may take an even more humorous turn with the involvement of TAI, our national aerospace powerhouse. I could not hide my smile in front of the defense official friend upon Minister Gönül’s announcement, especially when I remembered that TAI had been bogged down with developing a simple trainer for the past several (oh, more than several!) years. The Hurkus, TAI’s basic trainer, is yet to make a maiden flight, but a photo at the TAI premises shows it flying over Turkish skies thanks to Turkish engineering miracles — not aircraft making but photo-shopping!

Apparently, trainer aircraft and drones are systems too complex for Turkish engineering. On the other hand, kites and model planes would be too simple. I would suggest something in between for a nice start, rather than an agile fighter jet with air-to-air combat role. Maybe big model planes or kites equipped with rockets would do. Should Minister Gönül insist on a fighter aircraft flying over our skies and safeguarding the homeland, TAI’s engineers will have to do overtime on more photo-shopping projects.

But “the Sultan” — I increasingly warming to the name — will certainly capture the average voter who would be content with a photo-shopped warplane. He won’t care if there really is a Turkish-made aircraft. Just the news of it will suffice to thrill him — and make him proud of his government. See from now on how the “yellow newspapers” will cover the “big news.”

In early 2000s, a cartoon in a Turkish magazine depicted two defense procurement officials apologetically telling an angry minister of defense that their national tank prototype “had derailed during field tests.” I cut the cartoon and sent it, with compliments, to the procurement chief, Murad Bayar. The always polite and gentlemanly Mr. Bayar later told me that that cartoon was adorning an office wall where the head of the project for the design and development of Turkey’s first main battle tank works — on strict orders that it should remain framed there until Turkey’s first national tank, the Altay, is up and running.

But what happened to the Altay after more than a decade? The government earmarked a generous $500 million for the design and development of four prototypes, one of which will eventually become the Altay. There is a minor problem, though. Of that money, $350 million went to a foreign technology supplier for what will become “Turkey’s first entirely Turkish tank!” I hope the project coordinator will forgive me for forcing him to face a boring cartoon for several years.

But I won’t give up. As soon as some creative cartoonist depicts two procurement officers apologetically telling an angry minister of defense that the prototype for our first national fighter jet has failed to glide underwater during sea tests, I’ll send it along to Mr. Bayar — with compliments, as always.

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

Russia


Moscow Under Siege for Racist Violence

The death of a Spartak fan killed in a fight with a Caucasian triggers clashes between xenophobic ultra-nationalists and immigrants from the Caucasus. For four days the capital has been under curfew and there are still incidents of xenophobia. The police yesterday arrested over 1300 people, including immigrants and extremists. Islamic and Orthodox religious leaders are warning about the risk of ethnically motivated massacres.

Moscow (AsiaNews) — For four days an escalation of violence between the xenophobic ultra-nationalists, linked to the world of football fans and groups of immigrants from the Caucasus, has been holding the capital prisoner. Yesterday, in a maxi raid on a demonstration organized by fans, police arrested about 1300 people, most of them immigrants with whom the extremists had already begun to clash.

The town’s police chief, Viktor Biryukov, said that police seized knives, sticks and other weapons. More than 3 thousand officers in riot gear were deployed around the station in Kiev where the xenophobic nationalists and immigrants had gathered for the protest. “Caucasians go Home” and “Russia for Russians” read some of the banners and slogans shouted by the protesters.

The trigger, a brawl between supporters and immigrants

The death of a Spartak fan, in a fight with a Caucasian, on 11 December triggered the violence. Immediately after the killing, rumors of the arrival of groups of Caucasians in the capital, ready to respond to the provocations of the Spartak hooligans started to circulate online and in media reports. Spartak fans in turn had already taken to the streets shouting racist chants. The reaction of the murdered boy’s “comrades”, was decidedly ultra-nationalist in nature and led to the first violent protest during the weekend, which resulted in a real urban warfare under the walls of the Kremlin that ended with a toll of more than 30 wounded, and seventy arrests. Since then, Moscow is virtually under a state of siege, with the center closed and patrolled by police in riot gear, ready to intervene in case of any recurrence.

December 13, the xenophobic alarm saw attacks by gangs of young against Caucasians immigrants and death by stabbing, of a Dagestani who had been brutally beaten first.

Religious leaders appeal for peace

The alert level has also led to the mobilization of members of religious communities. The head of the Council of Mufti Ravil Gainutdin warned about the risk of an “anti-Caucasian and anti-Islamic trend in Russian society.” “Russia must not become an arena of inter-ethnic slaughter.” And he called to “Youth, first of all the Muslims, not to respond to provocation. Do not leave home “was his call.

The Russian Orthodox Church has said it is “concerned about the situation” of ethnic relations. The head of the department for relations between the Church and Society of the Moscow Patriarchate, Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin, has called on the authorities to expel the immigrants responsible for the death from the country and asked local people for dialogue on the basis of shared rules of civil coexistence.

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



Moscow Police Arrest Hundreds Ahead of Nationalist Rallies

Russian police arrested some 1,300 people Saturday in Moscow city and the region in a bid to prevent gatherings of Russian nationalists and Caucasians which have already sparked deadly violence. “The police prevented several attempted non-authorised gatherings in the Moscow region,” regional police spokesman Evgeny Gildeev was quoted as saying by the Itar-Tass news agency. “As part of these preventative measures to ensure public order, 808 people have been detained in police stations,” he said, without specifying whether the people were nationalists or Caucasians. In the city of Moscow, some 500 right-wingers marched in a park near the Ostankino television headquarters shouting slogans such as “Russia for the Russians,” an AFP photographer at the scene reported. Hundreds of riot police descended on the park, after Internet messages called for a rally at Ostankino to protest at media coverage which had described the right-wingers as “fascists”. There were no confrontations with police, the AFP photographer said. “Nearly all the participants (in the march) were arrested,” city police spokesman Viktor Biryukov told Russian news agencies. He added that most of some 500 people arrested in Moscow were minors. Questioned about the number of teenagers taking part in the far-right rallies, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told Russian television that he thought it was a “disturbing sign”, that it was necessary to “work with the youth”, saying that they were not “a lost generation”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


24 Hours in Pictures

New Delhi, India: A Shiite Muslim beats his chest as part of a self-flagellation ritual during the Ashura mourning period. The festival commemorates the slaying of Prophet Muhammad’s grandson Imam Hussein in the seventh century

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Malaysia: Kuala Lumpur: Government Suspends Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim

The former deputy premier accuses the government of having ties with Israel. Along with him, three other members of Pakatan Rakyat, the opposition coalition, have been suspended. This move brings the Barison Nasional, the ruling party, to regain a majority of two thirds, lost for the first time in 40 years with the 2008 elections.

Kuala Lumpur (AsiaNews) — Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, along with three members of his camp, were suspended yesterday for six months, allowing the Barison Nasional coalition to reach a majority of two thirds. Ibrahim accused the ruling party of having ties with Israel. The leader of the Pakatan Rakyat, the opposition coalition, can however still participate in current parliamentary debates.

Earlier this year, Ibrahim said that the policy agenda 1Malaysia, planned by Prime Minister Najib Razak in 2008, is connected to Israeli political alliance called One Israel. The opposition leader said the prime minister employed the Apco Worldwide, a public relations consultancy firm, to develop the slogan of 1Malaysia. He also accused the Apco of having links with Israel.

The parliament has also suspended the opposition MPs Azmin Ali, Karpal Singh and Sivarasa Rasih accused of leaking information while they were part of the inquiry committee into 1Malaysia.

The suspension paves the way for the Barisan Nasional to regain a two-thirds majority in parliament, gaining the support of independent candidates. This will allow the coalition to amend the Constitution and redraw the electoral boundaries.

The next general elections are scheduled for 2013, but the government wants to bring them forward to 2011. With the last vote in 2008, the Pakatan Rakyat deprived the Barisan Nasional of a two-thirds majority for the first time in nearly 40 years.

Anwar Ibrahim, 62, was deputy until 1998, when he had to leave his post following allegations of corruption and sodomy. Jailed at the time of the Asian financial crisis at the end of the millennium, he has spent six years in prison. In 2004 the Federal Court overturned the conviction for sodomy, and Ibrahim threw himself back into political life. Now he faces a new set of charges of sodomy, which the opposition claims conceal political motives.

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



Pakistan Spy Agency Denies it Helped Unmask CIA Station Chief in Islamabad

Pakistan’s top spy agency denied speculation Saturday that it helped unmask the CIA’s station chief in Islamabad in retaliation for a New York City lawsuit linking Pakistan’s intelligence chief to the 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai, India.

The CIA ordered its station chief out of Pakistan because his life was threatened after a Pakistani lawsuit revealed his name.

His recall comes at a delicate time, as the White House presses Islamabad to rid its lawless tribal regions of safe havens for militants fighting in Afghanistan, where the U.S. is grappling with an exit strategy.

The station chief’s name was revealed by a Pakistani man threatening to sue the CIA over the deaths of his son and brother in a 2009 U.S. missile strike.

The attorney involved with the legal complaint said the man learned the name from Pakistani journalists. Pakistan’s spy agencies have kept ties to a number of Pakistani journalists as a way to influence coverage.

Questions have arisen as to whether a civil lawsuit filed last month in Brooklyn in connection with the 2008 Mumbai attacks may have raised tensions with Pakistan and spurred it to retaliate.

The lawsuit lists Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the head of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, as a defendant and accuses the ISI of nurturing terrorists involved in the Mumbai attacks, which left 166 people dead.

A Pakistani intelligence official dismissed any claims of ISI involvement in exposing the CIA official as “a slur.” He declined to offer any comment on the Brooklyn lawsuit and said it was entirely possible Pakistani journalists simply figured out the station chief’s identity on their own.

Such “unfounded stories can create differences between the two organisations,” the Pakistani intelligence official warned.

He also said the CIA has not directly accused the ISI of any wrongdoing in the matter.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Icky Wiki E-Mails Skeeved Out Teen

Julian Assange has his own embarrassing e-mails.

The lovesick WikiLeaks founder sent a 19-year-old girl a series of gross-out messages for 10 days until he finally heeded her pleas to go away.

Assange also tracked down the girl’s phone number and license plate in a futile attempt to date her in 2004, long before he became famous.

Assange, then 33, met her at a bar near Melbourne, Australia, and tried to flirt by explaining complex math equations.

“I didn’t think he was sexy or anything” — but rather “quiet and nerdy,” the woman, identified only as Elizabeth, told Gawker.com.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Radical Muslim Sect Again Stalks Northern Nigeria

In the dusty streets of northeastern Nigeria, far from the battlegrounds of Afghanistan, a group known as the Nigerian Taliban is waging war against a government it refuses to recognize.

The radical Muslim sect called Boko Haram was thought to be vanquished in 2009, when Nigeria’s military crushed its mosque into concrete shards, and its leader was arrested and died in police custody. But now, a year later, Maiduguri and surrounding villages again live in fear of the group, whose members have assassinated police and local leaders and engineered a massive prison break, officials say.

Western diplomats are concerned that the sect is catching the attention of al-Qaida’s North Africa branch. They also worry that Boko Haram represents chaos and disintegration in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and one of the top suppliers of crude oil to the United States.

“It is possible that Nigeria could be a future Pakistan,” a leaked cable released by the WikiLeaks website quotes U.S. Assistant Secretary of African Affairs Johnnie Carson as saying earlier this year. “In 25 years, there could be impoverished masses, a wealthy elite and radicalism in the north. The question is whether the oil wells will be dry as well.”

The cable later adds: “Nigeria is at a critical financial and political threshold and the entire nation could possibly tip backwards permanently.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Tide of Refugees on Nile as Sudan Faces Break-Up

The first barges came yesterday at dawn completing an epic 17-day journey along the White Nile to deliver their human cargo from Khartoum to Juba, the capital of what may become Africa’s newest country next month.

Washerwomen on the west bank sang a high-pitched welcome to the hundreds of incoming refugees who crowded the decks ululating and beating drums.

The half-dozen rusting hulks that floated into Juba with more than one thousands passengers were the latest additions to a wave of southerners flooding out of the north ahead of a January vote expected to split Sudan in two.

As many as 75,000 southerners have moved south, according to the UN, aboard makeshift convoys of trucks, buses and barges. Some have come to vote and others to escape a feared backlash in the Muslim-dominated north.

“These big numbers are moving earlier than humanitarian agencies had anticipated,” said Vincent Bolt from Catholic charity Cafod. “It has not yet reached humanitarian crisis proportions but the UN estimates are that up to 800,000 in the next six months could make the journey, which would be a 10 per cent increase of the southern population.”

The influx is coming into one of the poorest countries on earth where nine out of 10 people live in abject poverty. In the would-be new country, a girl has more chance of dying in childbirth than finishing school.

Three weeks today, a referendum in the south will decide whether to divide Africa’s largest country under the terms of a 2005 peace deal that ended the continent’s longest civil war. An overwhelming “yes” vote is expected in favour of secession.

Prior to the ceasefire, 22 years of fighting between the Arab-ruled north and the predominantly Christian and animist south left two million dead and scattered millions of refugees. As war ravaged the south, emptying vast areas, the population of southerners living in the north swelled to 1.5 million.

A recent drumbeat of threatening noises from the government in Khartoum has persuaded many to abandon their lives in the more developed north and move south.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Immigration


European Problem, Not Just Local, Libyan Minister

(ANSAmed) — TRIPOLI, DECEMBER 13 — “Solutions linked to security are temporary and do not resolve the problem.

Strategies need to be found to support the economies of the countries of origin, and to develop reasons not to leave through dialogue between departure countries, transit countries and destinations”.

This is according to Libya’s Public Security Minister, General Younis Al Obeidi, who has been speaking about illegal immigration at the informal meeting of 5+5 countries in Tripoli this morning.

So far, the Minister said, “we have not found effective cooperation on issues linked to illegal immigration, which is a direct problem for us”. According to some figures quoted by Al Obeidi, there are “5,000 Libyan police involved in controlling the 4,000 kilometres of the southern borders, the 2,000 kilometres of coast to the north and the one and a half million illegal immigrants in Libya who have committed 24,000 crimes between 2002 and 2010”. Some 30% of these illegal immigrants die trying to reach Europe.

“We find dozens of them in the desert and just as many die at sea aboard any available boats that are loaded beyond all limits by people-traffickers”, the General said, adding that illegal immigration is “not a local problem but one that concerns all of Europe”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Kate Middleton’s Posh Pal Jokes: I’d Shoot Immigrants

A POSH pal of Kate Middleton was at the centre of a police probe last night — after joking she planned to SHOOT illegal immigrants. Emma Sayle, who works as an orgy organiser, will be formally quizzed by cops on Monday over alleged racist posts on Facebook.

The 32-year-old socialite shocked friends when she wrote of herself: “Just had a two-hour shooting lesson. She will now be using this skill on the top of East London high rises to help with the UK’s illegal immigrant problem.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Our Coverage on Immigration and Europe Was Weak, Admits BBC Director General

BBC coverage of issues such as immigration and Europe had been weak in the past, admitted the corporation’s Director General Mark Thompson.

He confessed the BBC had been nervous about tackling issues regarded as sensitive.

But he claimed the broadcaster had corrected that position and forced reluctant politicians to address the matter of immigration during this year’s General Election.

He admitted it should not be the corporation’s role to start ‘censoring the public debate’ and said the BBC would give space for ‘extreme and radical perspectives’.

His admission comes only a few months after he accepted the corporation had been guilty of a ‘massive’ Left-wing bias.

His latest comments — made during a speech at the Institute for Government on Thursday night — follow a 2007 BBC Trust report which suggested news coverage had sidestepped immigration and Europe.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


UK: We’re Not Prejudiced — Just Two Christians Who Passionately Believe in the Sanctity of Marriage

The seven-bedroom hotel is, you see, owned and run by devout Christians Peter Bull, 71, and his wife Hazelmary, 66, who permit only married heterosexual couples to book into their double rooms. Unmarrieds can sleep in their twins and singles.

Civil partnerships between same sex couples do not count as marriage in the Bulls’ eyes.

‘We are not homophobic, but the Bible is very clear that a man should not lie with a man and woman should not lie with a woman,’ Hazelmary tells me.

[…]

This week, both sides had their day in court, with the Bulls — supported by the Christian Institute — arguing that the Equality act infringes their human rights as Christians. Judgment has been deferred.

But during the hearing, an intriguing question was raised: could the Bulls have been deliberately ‘set up’ by the gay rights lobby?

A month earlier Mr and Mrs Bull had received correspondence criticising their policy from gay rights group Stonewall, of which Mr Hall and Mr Preddy are reportedly supporters.

The booking page of the hotel’s website contains a ‘special note’ which states: ‘Here at Chymorvah we have few rules, but please note that as Christians we have a deep regard for marriage (being the union of one man to one woman for life to the exclusion of all others).

‘Therefore, although we extend a warm welcome to our home, our double-bedded accommodation is not available to unmarried couples.’

However, Mr Preddy told the court he’d not been aware of this special note on the hotel’s website, and had booked Chymorvah simply because it looked like a nice place. He denied the hotel had been deliberately targeted because of the Bulls’ Christian beliefs.

The Bulls remain unconvinced.

Don’t most people, they ask, do quite a bit of research on hotels, scouring websites for every single detail, rather than risk disappointment, before parting with their cash?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Pythagoras, A Math Genius? Not by Babylonian Standards

(CNN) — Over 1,000 years before Pythagoras was calculating the length of a hypotenuse, sophisticated scribes in Mesopotamia were working with the same theory to calculate the area of their farmland.

Working on clay tablets, students would “write” out their math problems in cuneiform script, a method that involved making wedge-shaped impressions in the clay with a blunt reed.

These tablets bear evidence of practical as well as more advanced theoretical math and show just how sophisticated the ancient Babylonians were with numbers — more than a millennium before Pythagoras and Euclid were doing the same in ancient Greece.

“They are the most sophisticated mathematics from anywhere in the world at that time,” said Alexander Jones, a Professor of the History of the Exact Sciences in Antiquity at New York University.

He is co-curator of “Before Pythagoras: The Culture of Old Babylonian Mathematics,” an exhibition at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World in New York.

“This is nearly 4,000 years ago and there’s no other ancient culture at that time that we know of that is doing anything like that level of work. It seems to be going beyond anything that daily life needs,” he said.

Many scribes were trained in the ancient city of Nippur in what is now southern Iraq, where a large number of tablets were discovered between the mid-19th century and the 1920s.

Typical problems they worked on involved calculating the area of a given field, or the width of a trench.

These problems, says Jones, required the kind of math training taught to American Grade 10 students, but not in a format we would now recognize.

“It’s not like algebra, it’s all written out in words and numerals but no symbols and no times signs or equals or anything like that,” he said.

This system, and the lack of recognizable Western mathematical symbols such as x and y, meant that it was several years before historians and archaeologists understood just what was represented on these tablets.

It took a young Austrian mathematician in the 1920s, named Otto Neugebauer, to crack the mathematical system and work out what the ancient Babylonians were calculating. But despite his advances, it is only recently that interest in Babylonian math has started to take hold.

“I think that before Neugebauer and even after Neugebauer, there wasn’t a lot of attention placed on mathematical training in Babylon even though we have this rich cuneiform history with the tablets,” said Jennifer Chi, Associate Director for Exhibitions and Public Programs at Institute for the Study of the Ancient World.

One of the aims of the institute, she says, is to find interconnections between ancient cultures as well as look at what the institute sees as under-represented ancient cultures — and the culture of ancient Babylonian math, she says, is ripe for popular revision.

“When we think of ancient mathematics, the first names that come to mind are Pythagoras and Euclid,” she said, but that “this shouldn’t be the case.”

And though ancient Babylonia is often referred to in popular culture as a “lost” world, in fact much more evidence of mathematical learning from the period exists than from ancient Greece, said Chi.

Jones of New York University believes that there is much more that could be excavated but that, of course, current conditions in Iraq are not favorable. Still, there are enough tablets in collections across the world for mathematical historians to get stuck into.

For non-mathematicians, these tablets are a fascinating document of life in Mesopotamia. Most of the problems displayed are grounded in the everyday needs of ancient Babylonians.

But some tablets show the students engaging in what Jones calls “recreational math” — math for math’s sake.

“The only point of learning to do this kind of thing is really as a mental exercise, as a way of showing how smart you are,” he said.

And it seems there is still more to learn from the Babylonians. Duncan Melville is a Professor of Mathematics at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, whose special interest is Mesopotamian mathematics.

According to Melville, teachers can continue to learn a thing or two about the way math was taught in Mesopotamia.

“You look at the way they set up their sequences of problems and it’s all very carefully graduated, from simple problems to more complicated problems,” he said.

“As a teacher of mathematics, it’s very interesting to see how they organized their material,” he continued. “There’s still interesting things to learn from cutting-edge pedagogy 4,000 years ago.”

With research continuing into this strand of ancient history, it remains to be seen whether Pythagoras’s theorem will come to bear the name of an old Babylonian scribe instead.

           — Hat tip: STT [Return to headlines]



UN Mulls Internet Regulation Options

WikiLeaks sparks push for tighter controls.

The United Nations is considering whether to set up an inter-governmental working group to harmonise global efforts by policy makers to regulate the internet.

Establishment of such a group has the backing of several countries, spearheaded by Brazil.

At a meeting in New York on Wednesday, representatives from Brazil called for an international body made up of Government representatives that would attempt to create global standards for policing the internet — specifically in reaction to challenges such as WikiLeaks.

The Brazilian delegate stressed, however, that this should not be seen as a call for a “takeover” of the internet.

India, South Africa, China and Saudi Arabia appeared to favour a new possible over-arching inter-government body.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20101217

Financial Crisis
» EU Budget Freeze: Cameron Springs Secret Deal With France and Germany
» Greece: Church Denounces “Country Governed by IMF”
» IMF Chief Worried About Europe Domino Effect
» Moody’s Downgrades Ireland’s Debt
» The Ghost Towns of China: Amazing Satellite Images Show Cities Meant to be Home to Millions Lying Completely Deserted
 
USA
» Accused Bomb Plotter’s Mosque Tied to Radical Group
» Hindu Priest Wins $2.3m After Temple Owners Forced Him to Work as a Slave for Seven Years
» It is Time to Address the Threat of Radical Islam
» Lawyers Reach Deal to Recover $7 Billion for Madoff Victims
» Man Accused of NY Hate Attack on Imam is Cleared
» Peter King, House Republican, Plans Muslim Inquiry
» US Man Executed With Animal Drug
» Washington Subway Police to Begin Random Bag Checks
» Washington Post Blogger “Proud” To Have Shared Stage With Geert Wilders
 
Canada
» Canadian Court Hikes Terrorists’ Sentences
» The Brutish Temper of Quebec’s Times
 
Europe and the EU
» Analysis: Suicide Attack Punctures Swedish Sense of Security
» Carbon Trading Schemes in Trouble and Ignored
» EDL Has ‘Left BNP a Mere Sideshow’
» France: Far Right Prepares Demonstration
» Fundamentally Freund: Why Bomb Sweden?
» Germany: Sarrazin Earns Millions With Anti-Immigration Book
» Italy: Anti-Government Rioters Caused €20mln of Damage Says Rome’s Mayor
» Italy: Amnesty International Lauds Increased Jail Terms in CIA Abduction Case
» Italy: Berlusconi Aims to Woo ‘Disaffected’ MPs
» Italy: Snow on Eastern Beaches as Cold Snap Bites
» Jordan: 58% People Believe EU Can Bring Peace, Study
» London, Tuberculosis Capital of Western Europe
» Netherlands: Wilders is a ‘Golden Pompadoured Maverick’: WikiLeaks
» Netherlands: VVD is More Popular But Afghanistan, Theatre Tax Problems Loom
» Netherlands: Cohen Compares Position of Muslims With Jews in 1930s
» Not an Open Europe, But a Strong One
» Stockholm Bomber Denounced by Father-in-Law
» Sweden’s Tolerance ‘At Risk’ Following Attack
» Sweden Probes Suicide Bomber’s Facebook
» Swedish Med Students Perform Prof’s Autopsy
» UK: ‘My Name’s “Go **** Yourself”‘: Bus Passenger Accused of Attempted Murder of Two Policemen Hurls Abuse in Court
» UK: BNP Leader Nick Griffin’s Propaganda Victory as He Fights Off Contempt of Court Case
» UK: Essex Police to Follow Known Burglars 24 Hours a Day to Thwart Christmas Break-Ins
» UK: George Medal-Winning Bomb Hero Was Paid Just £20 Extra a Day to Defuse 140 IEDs
» UK: Muslims in Bomber’s Town Get £500,000 to Combat Terror… But Don’t Give Police a Single Tip-Off
» UK: Muslim Aid: Hopeless Charity Commission Whitewashes Yet Another Islamist Group
» UK: Why Prince Charles is Too Dangerous to be King: Max Hastings Tells Why This Increasingly Eccentric Royal Could Imperil the Monarchy
» Western Europe’s Biggest Mosque Opens in Netherlands
» WikiLeaks Cables Show Importance of Dutch US Alliance
 
Balkans
» Carla Del Ponte Feels Vindicated by Kosovo Report
» Kosovo: European Rights Watchdog Committee Approves Report on Organ Trafficking
» Kosovo: Organ Trafficking; Belgrade, About 500 Victims
» WikiLeaks: President Tadic Conspires Against His Own People
 
North Africa
» Tunisia: Le Kef Region Hit by Snow
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Bloggers Claim WikiLeaks Struck Deal With Israel Over Diplomatic Cables Leaks
» Caroline Glick: Bringing Bibi Down
» For a Local Chief Rabbi, The Laws of the “Jewish” State Ought to be Subject to the Torah
» The Canary in the Gold Mine
 
Middle East
» CIA Accused of Role in Iran Suicide Bombing
» Daughter of Turkish Premier Fuels Debate on Headscarf
» FIFA Boss Sepp Blatter Sorry for Qatar ‘Gay’ Remarks
» Iran Cuts Hezbollah Aid by ‘40 Percent’
» Iran Continues to Produce Disinformation
» Iraqi Christians Flee Baghdad After Cathedral Massacre
» Steven Spielberg Was Target of Arab League Boycott, WikiLeaks Cable
» Trial is Next Chapter in Clash Between Turkey’s Muslim Leaders, Secular Elite
» UAE: Muslim World Claims World’s ‘Most Expensive’ Christmas Tree
 
Russia
» Mufti Accuses Russian Authorities of Islamophobia
» Nationalist Riots in Russia Spread Fear Among Muslims
 
South Asia
» CIA Man Pulled Out of Pakistan Amid Drone Attack Storm
» Indonesian Christians Say No to Christmas Protection by Muslim Radicals
» Pakistan: Radical Muslims Plan Mass Protest in Defense of Blasphemy Law
» Pakistan: The British White Converts Signing Up to Fight Against Our Troops for Al Qaeda
» Scores Die as Drones Renew Attack on Pakistan’s Khyber
 
Far East
» North Korea Warns South Korea to Stop Planned Artillery Drills on Disputed Island
» Venus Probe’s Problems May Cause Japan to Scale Back
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Mauritania: Militants Against Slavery Arrested
» South Africa: ‘It’s Like the Middle-East’
» WikiLeaks Cables: Sudanese President ‘Stashed $9bn in UK Banks’
 
Immigration
» Asylum Seeker Aso Mohammed Ibrahim Who Let Girl, 12, Die Can Stay in UK
» Feds Save Millions After Undocumented Immigrants Lose Benefits
» UK: Introduction of Immigration Cap Deemed ‘Unlawful’
 
Culture Wars
» European Commission Criticised for Omitting Christmas on EU School Diary
» Michael Moore Writes an Open Letter to Sweden Slamming Their Rape Laws
» Serbia: Gender Discrimination Still Alive, Report
» UK: Labour Candidate David Bradley Bombarded Gay Colleague Ed Bramall With Homophobic Texts After Losing Out to Him in Election

Financial Crisis


EU Budget Freeze: Cameron Springs Secret Deal With France and Germany

David Cameron declared victory in saving Britain from future Euro bailouts last night that could have cost British taxpayers £19 billion.

The Prime Minister won a ‘politically binding commitment’ from all 27 EU leaders that the UK will not have to help prop up the single currency in future.

Downing Street aides said the deal gives Britain a ‘belt and braces’ defence against future demands for cash.

But Tory Eurosceptics and EU officials last night questioned whether the deal would be worth the paper it was written on, since it will not be legally binding.

Mr Cameron yesterday gave the green light for the 16 Eurozone countries to set up a permanent fund to prop up failing EU economies at a summit in Brussels.

Controversially that required a revision of the Lisbon Treaty without a referendum.

But he staged an 11th hour intervention to prevent the European Commission using a loophole in the Treaty to force Britain to contribute to a separate £120 billion pot funded by all 27 EU nations.

That would have saddled British taxpayers with a bill of up to £16 billion between 2014 and 2020, with further £3 billion costs through the International Monetary Fund —bringing total British liabilities to £19bn.

Today he is expected to join forces with France and Germany to demand tighter controls of the EU budget over the next decade. He is expected to publish a letter setting out the British position.

Mr Cameron said: ‘First of all, we do need a new mechanism to help the eurozone sort out its problems and its issues. That’s important for Britain.

United: French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, and British Prime Minister David Cameron, right, have agreed with German Chancellor Angela Merkel that the budget should be fixed in real terms

‘But we do need to make sure that Britain is not liable to spend money under that mechanism. Those are the two key things that matter to me.’

The European Commission used emergency rules designed to help countries hit by natural disasters to set up a £51 billion bailout ‘mechanism’ earlier this year. Britain is liable for £7 billion of costs under that scheme, which expires in 2013.

Downing Street aides insisted last night that the loophole —Article 122 of the Lisbon Treaty — will now restricted to natural disasters.

Mr Cameron won support from France, Germany, Spain, Sweden and Portugal for his position.

A No 10 spokesman said: ‘We have a clear agreement that Article 122 need not and should not be used for financial bailouts. It is a very clear in black and white.

‘The Prime Minister is confident that this wording is a very strong political agreement that will prevent Article 122 being used for financial bailouts.’

That would mean that in future Britain will only help countries with ailing economies if the Chancellor wants to offer a bilateral loan, as he has with Ireland.

To the anger of eurosceptics, Mr Cameron did not demand a change in the offending clause because that would require him to call a referendum.

And a Brussels source familiar with the negotiations cast doubt on whether the deal will be enough to protect taxpayers from further cash demands. He said: ‘Commission lawyers have made quite clear that you can’t come around later and start spelling out what the Article 122 means. The treaty is the treaty.’…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Greece: Church Denounces “Country Governed by IMF”

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, DECEMBER 17 — The Orthodox Church has denounced the lack of leadership and the moral sense that — by means of the crisis — has made Greece a country “under occupation” which “carries out the orders of its creditors” from the IMF and the EU and which “appears to have lost its independence.” In a message to worshippers to be distributed on Sunday in all churches, the Holy Synod harshly criticises the country’s “ruling class”, a general term which appears to include the previous centre-right government, as well as the current government under George Papandreou. According to the bishops, it is not the State itself that is to blame for the “current crisis” but the political leadership which has not been able to modernise and, interested only in power, “has not been able to speak the language of the truth.” And it is has transformed itself into an “agent” of the creditors, imposing “radical changes that only a short while ago would have disgusted Greece and which on the other hand has caused almost no reaction.” And this situation, according to the Synod, puts “the real interests of the country and its people” at risk, allowing them in fact to be “governed by our creditors.” The Synod points out that “according to many economists,” the global crisis “is an artificial and instrumental crisis that aims to all the world to be controlled by non-philanthropic forces.” The Church on the other hand denounces a moral impoverishment of society which, attracted only by “easy wealth and wellbeing,” “has lived irresponsibly”, moving away from the “truth of things” and “contributing to the current crisis through selfish requests without control by the various sectors involved.” The bishops conclude by urging the people to take advantage of the crisis to rediscover “the strength and love” needed in the “toughest moments”, offering solidarity to those in need to exit this difficult situation together and with the Church.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF Chief Worried About Europe Domino Effect

The head of the International Monetary Fund said on Thursday he was worried that EU leaders’ piecemeal approach to Europe’s debt crisis was encouraging markets to pick off weak countries one by one.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn appeared to endorse the idea of common euro bonds, saying they could be a useful tool, but added the political will to give power to the center of Europe was the main hurdle to their creation.

“I am worried, and that’s why I am urging the Europeans … to provide a comprehensive solution because this piecemeal approach … obviously doesn’t work,” Strauss-Kahn told Reuters. “The markets are just waiting for what’s next.”

Due to its cumbersome decision-making structure, the euro zone has tended to offer countries such as Greece and Ireland rescues only once they were “at the edge of the cliff,” he said. That approach has created a domino effect.

Interviewed at a Thomson Reuters Newsmaker event, Strauss-Kahn spoke as European Union leaders began a two-day summit at which they agreed changes to the European Union’s governing treaty to create a permanent mechanism for handling financial crises.

“You can’t have a single currency, especially in times when you have troubles, without having more coordination and economic policy,” Strauss-Kahn said, also calling on the EU to revisit with more rigor the bank stress tests it carried out earlier this year.

Saying decision-making among the 16 countries of the euro zone was too slow, Strauss-Kahn said he was confident that the resources to address countries’ debt problems were available in Europe but “fair or unfair, there’s skepticism in the markets so the problem has to be addressed.”…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Moody’s Downgrades Ireland’s Debt

Moody’s Investors Service Inc. downgraded Ireland’s debt to Baa1 from Aa2 Friday, warning the government’s financial strength could deteriorate further if economic growth were to miss its projections.

The five-notch downgrade was made as “Ireland’s sovereign creditworthiness has suffered from the repeated crystallization of bank-related contingent liabilities on the government’s balance sheet,” said Dietmar Hornung, vice president, senior credit officer at Moody’s.

Michael Casey discusses Moody’s downgrade of Ireland’s sovereign debt and its impact on markets in Europe and the Euro.

The ratings agency put the country on review for downgrade in early October, saying the process would likely result in a multi-notch downgrade but that the rating would remain in investment-grade territory. On Friday, it kept its negative outlook on the country.

Ireland has been the latest country to succumb to pressures extending from the European sovereign debt crisis. The government conceded in November that it would require an international bailout package from the European Union and International Monetary Fund to help it avoid defaulting on its debt.

Moody’s now rates Ireland three notches above the speculative-grade range. If the country’s credit were be downgraded to “junk status,” funding costs would rise further as some investors, mandated to hold only highly-rated bonds, would be forced to sell. A further downgrade could come if the country’s efforts to stabilize its debt fail, or if problems arise with the long-term support efforts from the EU.

The move came a day after Moody’s also placed Greece’s Ba1 rating on review for downgrade. Warnings for possible downgrades for Spain and Belgium were made earlier in the week…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Ghost Towns of China: Amazing Satellite Images Show Cities Meant to be Home to Millions Lying Completely Deserted

These amazing satellite images show sprawling cities built in remote parts of China that have been left completely abandoned, sometimes years after their construction.

Elaborate public buildings and open spaces are completely unused, with the exception of a few government vehicles near communist authority offices.

Some estimates put the number of empty homes at as many as 64 million, with up to 20 new cities being built every year in the country’s vast swathes of free land.

The photographs have emerged as a Chinese government think tank warns that the country’s real estate bubble is getting worse, with property prices in major cities overvalued by as much as 70 per cent.

Ghost city: Kangbashi was meant to be the urban centre for wealthy coal-mining community Ordos and home to its one million workers, but its roads are eerily empty and the houses stand vacant

The mostly empty city of Bayannaoer, which boasts a beautiful town hall and World Bank-sponsored water reclamation building

Of the 35 major cities surveyed, property prices in eleven including Beijing and Shanghai were between 30 and 50 per cent above their market value, the China Daily said, citing the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Prices in Fuzhou, capital of the southeastern province of Fujian, had the worst property bubble with average house prices more than 70 per cent higher than their market value, according to the survey conducted in September.

The average price in the 35 cities surveyed was nearly 30 per cent above the market value, the report said.

Property prices have remained stubbornly high despite the government adopting a slew of measures since April including hiking minimum downpayments to at least 30 per cent and ordering banks not to provide loans for third home purchases.

Prices in 70 major cities were up 0.2 per cent in October from the previous month and 8.6 percent higher than a year ago, official data showed.

The increase came after prices gained 0.5 per cent month on month in September, which was the first increase since May.

Property to let: Zhengzhou New District is China’s biggest ghost city, complete with entire blocks of totally empty accommodation

Property bubble: Zhengzhou New District features vast public buildings that have never been used

Half of Erenhot is empty. The other half is unfinished

Now here’s Kangbashi, a new city with capacity for 300,000 — that houses 30,000

Massive stimulus measures taken since 2008 to fend off the financial crisis injected huge amounts of liquidity in the market and have been blamed for fuelling real estate prices.

‘The government target is not clear and policy is incoherent,’ CASS senior research Ni Pengfei was quoted saying.

According to research carried out by Time magazine, fixed-asset investment in the Asian country accounted for more than 90 per cent of its overall growth — with residential and commercial real estate investment making up nearly a quarter of that.

Regional governments across China have been building massive real estate projects, including Kangbashi in Inner Mongolia and Zhengzhou New District, which have remained empty, because of the high prices and interest in investment.

Kangbashi, which was built in just five years, was meant to be the urban centre for Ordos City — a wealthy coal-mining hub home to 1.5million people.

It was filled with office towers, administrative centres, museums, theatres and sports facilities as well as thousands of homes, but remains virtually deserted.

The ghost city of Dantu has been mostly empty for over a decade

The orange area to the north-east of the Xinyang has yet to be occupied

No cars in the city except for approximately 100 clustered around the government headquarters

Zhengzhou New District residential towers: Soaring property prices in China and high levels of investment has fuelled the construction of up several new cities. Experts fear a subsequent property crash could damage the global economy

Prices have continued to soar, investors have increasingly turned to property speculation fuelling the continued bubble.

The onset of the 2008 global recession was the bursting of the real estate bubble in the U.S. and experts fear a similar situation in China could prove catastrophic for still struggling economies and banking systems.

Beijing has introduced measures to cool ‘ridiculous’ property prices, but the risks of a crash mean the campaign is unlikely to ease up in the next year.

Public discontent has been fuelled by high prices in China’s cities and the measures, introduced in April, have made it more difficult for speculators and developers to hoard land and chase up prices as lending has been restricted…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

USA


Accused Bomb Plotter’s Mosque Tied to Radical Group

The mosque attended by accused Baltimore bomb plotter Antonio Martinez is part of a network of mosques run by the radical group Jama’at al-Muslimeen that questions the existence of the Holocaust, supports the release of convicted terrorists and wants the United States to stop “interfering” in Muslim countries, Maryland corporate records show.

Martinez, who was arrested Dec. 8 and charged with plotting to blow up an Army recruiting center in Catonsville, Md., attended the Al-Madina mosque in Baltimore, friends and associates told The Baltimore Sun.

That mosque, Maryland records show, is owned by the All Farooq Foundation of Catonsville. The foundation’s incorporation papers, which were filed with the state of Maryland on Feb. 3, 2009, say that all leaders of the foundation “must have at least one year of active membership in the Masjid Jamaat al-Muslimeen community.”

State records show that the Masjid Jama’at al-Muslimeen’s address — 4624 York Rd. in Baltimore — is the same as the group Jama’at al-Muslimeen, which is run by Kaukab Siddique, an assistant professor of English at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania and a longtime opponent of Israel and U.S. policies in Muslim nations.

Incorporation papers filed Oct. 6, 2003, by the Masjid Jama’at al-Muslimeen with the state of Maryland list Siddique as one of four mosque trustees. The mosque’s stated purpose and rules for elections and trustees are virtually identical to those for members of the All Farooq Foundation and are in the same handwriting, records show.

Jama’at al-Muslimeen (JAM) also calls itself the Islamic People’s Movement International, according to its website. At a Nov. 6 conference in Greensboro, N.C., the group’s officials reelected Siddique as JAM’s leader, according to an account of the meeting in New Trend, an online magazine edited by Siddique.

At the Nov. 6 meeting, JAM leaders approved a series of resolutions that included calls to:

Question the accuracy of historical accounts of the Holocaust in which 6 million Jews were killed by the German Nazi government in World War II. “No one has a right to exclusive victim status. As for offensive viewpoints, comments and abuse on Jesus … in the Zionist media have gone beyond decency, without any attempt at scholarship,” the resolution says.

Remove U.S. troops from Muslim nations. “We demand immediate withdrawal of all U.S. and NATO troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. We urge an end to the occupation of Kashmir by India and of Chechnya by Russia. We call for an end to U.S.-Israeli interference in Somalia, Sudan and Nigeria,” the resolution says.

Demand that President Obama free “Muslim political prisoners.” Those prisoners include Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind sheik imprisoned for life for a variety of terrorist plots; Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani woman and former U.S. resident imprisoned for life for plotting to kill American troops in Afghanistan; and Ali Al-Timimi, a former Islamic lecturer in Washington who’s serving a life sentence for trying to recruit members to help the Taliban kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan. Maryland records show that JAM controls three mosques in the state, either directly or through the All Farooq Foundation. They are the Masjid Jama’at al-Muslimeen in Baltimore, the Al-Madina Mosque in Baltimore and the Masjid Al-Muneer in Curtis Bay, Md. The Al-Muneer mosque was incorporated in May.

JAM’s officials include Badi Ali, imam of the Islamic Center of the Triad in Greensboro, N.C.; Abdulalim Shabazz, a mathematics professor at Grambling State University in Louisiana and Abu Talib, a JAM activist in Brooklyn, N.Y. The group’s website also lists affiliated mosques in Knoxville and Oak Ridge, Tenn.

Ali has history with two American-based support groups for Palestinian terrorist organizations. He is listed among the members in a 1991 document attached to an organizational chart for the Palestine Committee, a group created by the Muslim Brotherhood in the United States to support Hamas. A year later, Ali identified himself as the North Carolina chairman of the Islamic Committee for Palestine (ICP) in a letter to the New York Times.

The ICP was the “active arm of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine.”

Siddique, JAM’s longtime leader, has an extensive history of calling for the destruction of Israel.

On Sept. 3, he was among a series of activists who protested U.S. policies at an Al Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally in Washington’s Dupont Circle. There he said that Muslims “must put their hands on the Quran and say that they do not recognize Israel as a legitimate entity.”…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Hindu Priest Wins $2.3m After Temple Owners Forced Him to Work as a Slave for Seven Years

A Hindu priest has won $2.3million compensation after being forced to ‘work as a slave’ for seven years at a Hindu temple in New York.

Devout Devendra Shukla had his passport confiscated by Sat Prakash Sharma and his wife Geeta — who ran the Corono ashram in Corona, Queens — and was then forced to do their bidding for a pittance in exchange.

The court was told the 34-year-old worked 18-hour days, including heavy labour on a construction site, for which he received a paltry $50 a week.

Over the seven years he stayed with the Sharmas, Mr Shukla received a miserly $21,000 and was unable to once go home and see his family the whole time.

He finally snapped and sued the Sharmas and was overwhelmed when a jury sided with him and awarded the huge sum in compensation.

Fighting back the tears, he said: ‘I have received justice. I am hopeful that I will see my wife and children soon — it’s almost 10 years that I have not seen my wife and children in India.’

Mr Shukla had moved to New York from his remote Indian village in the impoverished Uttar Pradesh region in the hope of providing for his family, who remained back home…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



It is Time to Address the Threat of Radical Islam

When I enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1972, the United States was still entrenched in an ideological struggle with the nations and insurgencies who strongly held a shared allegiance to Marxist Communism and who listed the United States as their chief adversary.

Today, the United States finds itself in an ideological struggle with radical Islam. This struggle is just as dangerous as the threat of communism once was during the Cold War.

This time, however, a political ideology has emerged that is fraudulently camouflaged within a religious tradition and is so twisted in its beliefs that it values death over life and uses terrorism as its only tactic.

Our leaders can no longer turn a blind eye to the growing threat of radical Islam. Without significant corrective action, we face the possibility of more attacks like the one at Fort Hood, Texas, in November of last year.

I can clearly remember as a young soldier being ordered to affirm, under oath, whether I was or had ever been a member of the Communist Party and whether I had any associations or sympathies with other related organizations that might call into question my allegiance to the U.S. government.

I was assigned to an armored division in Europe where an active counterintelligence operation made sure this enemy ideology never penetrated our ranks.

Just as the United States had previously recognized that it was in an ideological war with Marxist Communism, now it must come to terms with accurately describing the threat to our national security: radical Islam.

Unfortunately, our military, constrained by the Obama administration, has yet to do so for fear that it might offend the loyal adherents to the virtues of political correctness that has led this administration to change “Global War on Terror” to “Overseas Contingency Operations” and “Terrorists Attacks” to “Man-Caused Disasters.”

Neither of these semantic changes, nor any other attempts at avoiding reality, has altered the fact that we are at war with radical Islam and that terrorism is their weapon of choice.

Also tellingly, three days after the massacre at Fort Hood, Texas, where 13 soldiers were killed and 30 were wounded, Gen. George Casey, chief of staff of the U.S. Army, stated, “Speculation could potentially heighten backlash against some of our Muslim soldiers and what happened at Fort Hood was a tragedy, but I believe it would be an even greater tragedy if our diversity becomes a casualty here.”

The U.S. Army’s “Final Report on Fort Hood,” released late last month, reflects the views earlier expressed by Gen. Casey by avoiding the role that radical Islam played in the killing of those 13 American soldiers.

The final report does recognize that the Army did not properly identify the internal threat Major Nidal Hasan posed before he killed 13 American soldiers, but, unfortunately, it falls short of identifying the significance of the threat that the radicalization of Muslims can pose within our military.

Because the Fort Hood Shooting Army Internal Review Team did not recognize and clearly address the threat of radical Islam, I believe it is further evidence of a failure of leadership.

To that end, I expressed these grave concerns with the Secretary of Defense in a letter on Nov. 19, 2010. In the letter, I called on Secretary Gates to take immediate action and update the Fort Hood report to accurately address this threat and detail what appropriate measures are necessary to counter it.

In 2005 and 2006 I served with the U.S. Marine Corps in Iraq where I met Muslim Americans who served our nation with distinction and were every bit as patriotic as other members of our military. I strongly believe that it would be in the best interest of not only our military but to Muslim Americans, in particular, to have a vigorous vetting process whereby members of our Armed Forces would have full confidence that all our service men and women could, at all times, be counted on.

The unintended consequences of the overly politically correct approach currently advocated by the U.S. Army will ultimately have the negative effect of only increasing the suspicions of Muslim American military personnel and thereby potentially causing increased alienation, segregation, and finally the radicalization of Muslim American personnel.

I strongly believe that the failure to classify radical Islam as an ideological threat to the United States led to the loss of 13 American soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas. If we continue down this path we will fail to develop the counterintelligence capability necessary to prevent future incidents from occurring…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Lawyers Reach Deal to Recover $7 Billion for Madoff Victims

Federal prosecutors and the trustee liquidating the estate of Bernard L. Madoff, the convicted swindler, have reached a civil settlement that will recover at least $7 billion to compensate victims of Mr. Madoff’s global Ponzi scheme, according to people briefed on the negotiations. An announcement is expected at noon Eastern time. Prosecutors have said privately that the settlement is the largest civil forfeiture in American history.

The settlement will conclude the trustee’s case against the estate of Jeffry M. Picower, a Palm Beach philanthropist and longtime Madoff investor who died in October 2009. The complaint filed against the estate indicated that Mr. Picower, who became wealthy investing in medical-technology companies, had profited hugely from Mr. Madoff’s scheme, drawing out billions more than he paid in.

The settlement will greatly expand the funds available to repay victims of the fraud; before Friday, the trustee had collected $2.3 billion from other sources.

[Return to headlines]



Man Accused of NY Hate Attack on Imam is Cleared

A transportation police officer accused of aiding a bias-fueled beating of a Muslim religious leader in a subway station has been cleared of all criminal charges.

Manhattan prosecutors dropped their case against Eddie Crespo this week after a grand jury declined to indict him on any charges in the Dec. 8 incident. Co-defendant Albert Melendez was indicted on a misdemeanor charge, but prosecutors said the specific charge wouldn’t be revealed until his next court date, as is their common practice.

Both were initially charged with assault and robbery as hate crimes in an episode that sounded alarms among Muslim advocates. The men’s lawyers, however, said religion played no role in what they described as a straightforward scuffle over an accidental nudge on a train.

“I think this was just a mistake, all along,” Crespo’s lawyer, Arnold Keith, said in an interview Wednesday as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority lifted his unpaid suspension from his job as a bridge-and-tunnel officer. The 28-year-old Crespo, who said he had broken up a fight rather than furthered it, spent about a day in jail after his arrest.

Melendez’ lawyer, who has called the allegations “trumped-up,” didn’t immediately return calls Wednesday and Thursday.

Manhattan district attorney’s office spokeswoman Erin Duggan said the agency “takes any allegation of a bias crime seriously.”

Prosecutors had said in a court document that Melendez, 30, declared “I don’t like Muslims” and used an insulting term for Muslims or Arabs while attacking a man who was wearing a traditional Muslim prayer cap and trying to get off a subway train in lower Manhattan.

The man, Imam Rod Peterson, has an arrest record of his own but now is a Muslim community leader in Queens, said his lawyer, Hassan Ahmad.

Crespo was accused of grabbing Peterson, 49, to help Melendez in the scuffle. According to prosecutors’ court papers, Melendez ultimately punched Peterson in the face and threw his prayer cap, called a kufi, onto the subway tracks. The imam ended up with a black eye, court papers said.

Defense lawyers said the fight began after Melendez and Peterson bumped into each other. Crespo told the grand jury he separated the two, asked Peterson whether he was all right, was rebuffed and walked away with Melendez, Keith said. Crespo never saw Peterson’s kufi, he said.

“He certainly did what he was supposed to do, as far as breaking up a fight between two men who got a little bent out of shape,” the attorney said.

Crespo and Melendez are friends, and Crespo dates Melendez’ sister; Melendez’ own longtime girlfriend is from a Muslim family, Keith said.

Peterson is extremely disappointed by the grand jury’s decision, Ahmad said Thursday.

While Peterson has had his own trouble with the law, “I don’t think that’s really what any of this should be about. He was attacked in the subway, based upon his appearance and religion,” the attorney said.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations — which issued a press release calling for hate crime charges as Crespo and Melendez awaited arraignment last week — said it had heard from Muslims “outraged by the attack and the result of the grand jury proceedings.”

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Peter King, House Republican, Plans Muslim Inquiry

The Republican who will head the House committee that oversees domestic security is planning to open a Congressional inquiry into what he calls “the radicalization” of the Muslim community when his party takes over the House next year.

Representative Peter T. King, Republican of New York, will become the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. Representative Peter T. King of New York, who will become the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said he was responding to what he has described as frequent concerns raised by law enforcement officials that Muslim leaders have been uncooperative in terror investigations.

He cited the case of Najibullah Zazi, an Afghan man and a legal resident of the United States, who was arrested last year for plotting to bomb the New York subway system. Mr. King said that Ahmad Wais Afzali, an imam in Queens who had been a police informant, had warned Mr. Zazi before his arrest that he was the target of a terror investigation.

“When I meet with law enforcement, they are constantly telling me how little cooperation they get from Muslim leaders,” Mr. King said.

The move by Mr. King, who said he was planning to open a hearing on the matter beginning early next year, is the latest example of the new direction that the House will take under the incoming Republican majority.

Indeed, Mr. King, a nine-term incumbent from Long Island, said that he had sought to raise the issue when Democrats had control of Congress, but was “denounced for it.” He added: “It is controversial. But to me, it is something that has to be discussed.”

Mr. King’s proposal comes amid signs that deep anxieties about Muslims persist in the United States nine years after the 9/11 terror attacks and an outcry this year over a proposed Islamic center near ground zero in New York City.

Told of Mr. King’s plan, Muslim leaders expressed strong opposition, describing the move as a prejudiced act that was akin to racial profiling and that would unfairly cast suspicion on an entire group.

Abed A. Ayoub, the legal director for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, said Mr. King’s effort ignored that Muslim leaders around the country had been working closely with law enforcement officials since the 2001 terror attacks.

“We are disturbed that this representative who is in a leadership position does not have the understanding and knowledge of what the realities are on the ground,” Mr. Ayoub said, adding that Mr. King’s proposal “has bigoted intentions.”

Salam al-Marayati, the executive director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, also expressed deep concern and noted that his group would be holding a convention this weekend at which members would discuss the impact that the Republican takeover of Congress could have on Muslims.

“He basically wants to treat the Muslim-American community as a suspect community,” Mr. Marayati said of Mr. King. He added that Mr. King was potentially undermining the relationship that Muslim leaders had sought to build with law enforcement officials around the country. Tensions have occasionally erupted in recent years over counterterrorism measures that civil rights groups and others said had gone too far…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



US Man Executed With Animal Drug

Officials in the US state of Oklahoma have executed a convicted murderer using a drug that is typically used to euthanize animals.

John David Duty (58) was pronounced dead at 6.18pm local time, Department of Corrections spokesman Jerry Massie confirmed by telephone from Mcalester, Oklahoma.

Mr Massie said a three-drug cocktail was administered, including pentobarbital, a drug used in euthanasia of animals as well as a sedative for humans. He said it was its first use in a US execution and replaced sodium thiopental, a sedative that was in short supply.

“There were no apparent issues” with the new drug, Mr Massie said. A federal court in Oklahoma ruled the drug could be used in the execution, a ruling later upheld by the 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals.

Duty was convicted of murdering his cellmate, Curtis Wise, with a bedsheet in 2001.

Prison officials said Duty’s last words were: To the family of Curtis Wise, I would like to make my apology. One day you will be able to forgive me, not for my sake but for your own. My family and friends are here too. You’ve all been a blessing. Thank you Lord Jesus. I am ready to go home.”

Duty was serving two concurrent life sentences for robbery, shooting with intent to kill, and rape, when he murdered Mr Wise. Duty convinced Mr Wise to pose as a hostage to entice guards to move Duty to a different cell. After binding Mr Wise’s hand and foot, Duty strangled him.

Duty then wrote a letter to his victim’s mother bragging about the murder.

His execution was the third this year in Oklahoma and the 46th in the United States.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Washington Subway Police to Begin Random Bag Checks

Officers will start random bag inspections on the sprawling Washington subway system, the Washington Metro Transit Police said on Thursday, a week after a man was arrested for making bomb threats to the rail system.

Metrorail police officers plan to randomly select bags before passengers enter subway stations and they will swab them or have an explosives-sniffing dog check the bags, according to the Metro police.

There is “no specific or credible threat to the system at this time,” Metro said in a statement. Passengers who refuse to have their bags inspected will be denied entry into the subway system.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Washington Post Blogger “Proud” To Have Shared Stage With Geert Wilders

After Matt Duss called out new Washington Post blogger Jordan Sekulow at Think Progress and on Twitter for saying at a demonstration against the Park51 project, “Imam Rauf, America rejects you,” Sekulow responded by tweeting: “Enjoyed that speech!”

And in response to Duss pointing out that Sekulow shared the stage with far-right nationalist, anti-Islam Dutch politician Geert Wilders, Sekulow tweeted, “proud to.”

In one of the State Department cables released by WikiLeaks, a U.S. embassy official in the Netherlands summed up Wilders for President Obama as “no friend of the U.S.”:

The Wilders Factor: Golden-pompadoured, maverick parliamentarian Geert Wilders, anti-Islam, nationalist Freedom Party remains a thorn in the coalition’s side, capitalizing on the social stresses resulting from the failure to fully integrate almost a million Dutch Muslims, mostly of Moroccan or Turkish descent. In existence only since 2006, the Freedom Party, tightly controlled by Wilders, has grown to be the Netherlands second largest, and fastest growing, party. Recent polls suggest it could even replace Balkenende,s Christian Democrats as the top party in 2011 parliamentary elections. Wilders is no friend of the U.S.: he opposes Dutch military involvement in Afghanistan; he believes development assistance is money wasted; he opposes NATO missions outside “allied” territory; he is against most EU initiatives; and, most troubling, he forments fear and hatred of immigrants.

Let’s sum up: the Post’s On Faith, which has a stated mission to promote “intelligent, informed, eclectic, respectful conversation,” has hired a blogger who describes himself as a “human rights attorney” yet is proud to share a stage with someone who “calls Islam ‘the ideology of a retarded culture’ and likens the Quran to ‘Mein Kampf.’“

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Canada


Canadian Court Hikes Terrorists’ Sentences

A Canadian court has increased the sentences for three convicted Islamic terrorists in a series of judgments.

The Ontario Court of Appeal on Friday raised the sentence of Mohammed Momin Khawaja from 10 1/2 years to life in prison for participating in an al-Qaida-inspired plot to bomb British targets in 2004.

Two other men convicted of participating in a homegrown plot to set off truck bombs in front of Canada’s main stock exchange and government buildings also had their sentences raised.

In other rulings, the court ordered the extradition of two alleged Sri Lankan terrorists to the United States. The men are charged with assisting the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam by attempting to purchase surface-to-air missiles and AK-47s from an undercover police officer in New York.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



The Brutish Temper of Quebec’s Times

I was struck by three events over the past week. I want to share them with you. Toward the end of last week a south shore family went to a local church that was preparing food baskets for the needy. They were sent away because they were not francophone and the baskets at that church were for francophones. They were directed to another church where anglophones were served. This in the season of “Suffer the little children to come unto me…”

Some eight days before this sad incident, Quebec culture minister Christine St-Pierre applauded a citizen who was being honored. The honor being bestowed on the woman the Minister was praising was being given for having reported some 200 businesses that had supposedly violated Quebec’s language laws. The Minister said that reporting was the duty of every citizen.

[…]

The CSST, Quebec’s workers safety board, formalized a decision that it will no longer communicate with Quebec employers in English. Only in French. It will continue to serve employees in English as well as out of province employers. It went so far in its pettiness and venality that it deleted the “press 9 for English” on it’s call-in phone system.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Analysis: Suicide Attack Punctures Swedish Sense of Security

Two centuries of neutrality, decades of good relations with the Middle East and years of liberal immigration policies have led many Swedes to believe their country was a safe haven.

But the Stockholm bombing has forced a rethink — not about their values or the government’s policies but about their security.

“The attack was a game changer,” said Magnus Ranstorp, Research Director at the Center for Asymmetric Threat Studies at the Swedish National Defense College.

“It goes against the grain of the Swedish psyche. We are the moral guardians of the world, we work through the United Nations, we are doing good humanitarian work. Why would anyone want to target us?”

Part of the explanation for why is that Sweden has linked itself increasingly closely to other Western nations, not least through its membership of the European Union. It joined in 1995.

“Sweden has become more of a ‘Western’ state, like others,” Ulf Bjereld, professor of political science at Gothenburg University said. “For someone standing outside, it is more and more difficult to distinguish Swedish foreign policy from that of other European countries.”

The country has had troops in Afghanistan since the early 1990s, making it easy to identify Sweden with anti-Muslim aggression in the eyes of militants.

Furthermore, the publication in Swedish and Danish newspapers of drawings lampooning the Prophet Mohammad drew massive criticism from Muslims around the world and death threats against the artists.

Taymour Abdulwahab, the man who blew himself up in Stockholm last Saturday — after a bomb belt he was wearing went off prematurely — gave Afghanistan and Swedish artist Lars Vilks as motives.

Sweden and Denmark stood up for the artists’ rights to free speech, drawing the countries’ governments into the controversy, although Sweden was at pains to try to conduct a dialogue with Muslim nations over the affair.

Now, Sweden has joined the United States, Britain, Spain and other nations as a target of politically motivated violence…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Carbon Trading Schemes in Trouble and Ignored

Why are carbon trading issues that have gone awry ignored by the media? Two examples: 1-scam artists from around the world, capitalizing on lax regulations at the Danish emissions trading registry have made off with an estimated $7-billion over the last two years, and 2- the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) announced that it will be ending carbon trading this year. Both of these have been underreported (ignored?) by most media.

Denmark

The Danish climate emission permit registry allowed companies with no documented address trade CO2 emission permits. While allowing a free-for-all served the carbon market on the short term by appearing to inflate the interest in carbon as a commodity, it ultimately backfired when much of the trading proved to be phony. One of the companies had the address of a parking lot. Lawrence Solomon notes, “This story, greatly underreported, came to me via a Norwegian reader, Geir Hasnes, who has translated one of the few press reports to have appeared.” (1)

Denmark isn’t the only place where carbon folks have been in bed with organized crime. A probe in Germany, where the total damage is estimated at 80 million Euros followed investigations in Britain, France, Spain, Norway and the Netherlands over carbon fraud over the past year. (2)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



EDL Has ‘Left BNP a Mere Sideshow’

The head of Britain’s leading anti-fascist organisation has said the English Defence League has replaced the British National Party as the major force on the far right of British politics. Nick Lowles of Searchlight said the BNP had become a “sideshow” since the crushing defeat of its leader Nick Griffin in Barking at this year’s general election.

In recent months, he said, the EDL’s anti-Muslim message had given the party a wider appeal. At the same time, the violence EDL rallies attracted meant the organisation received a great deal of media attention.

He added that the BNP were stuck with an old-fashioned neo-fascist image which alienated many who were prepared to back the EDL. Mr Lowles has made it clear that Searchlight will no longer limit its operations to the fight against traditional neo-Nazi organisations. In the new year it will launch a think tank to examine new forms of extremism such as the anti-Muslim politics of the EDL and totalitarian Islamism.

Pastor Terry Jones of the Dove World Outreach Centre in Gainesville, Florida, is the controversial cleric who was first invited and then “uninvited” by the EDL, allegedly on the grounds of his racism and homophobia. In August this year, giving a deposition in a court case in which he was a witness, Mr Jones described Judaism as “a religion of the devil”, along with Hinduism and Buddhism.

Gainesville is best known as the home of the University of Florida, where there are about 2,000 Jews in the year-round community with three congregations, Conservative, Reform and Jewish Renewal to serve them. On the campus itself, Hillel and Chabad-Lubavitch cater for nearly 7,000 Jewish students.

According to Rabbi Berl Goldman, co-director of the Lubavitch Chabad Jewish Centre on campus, Pastor Jones is not even on the local community’s radar. He said: “I’ve been here 10 years and I don’t know of any formal ties or relationship between Jones and faith-based organisations. I’ve never seen him at any meetings of the Campus Ministry Co-operative which has representatives of all different faiths and denominations in Gainesville. The Jewish community is very distressed at his provocative actions.”

Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Centre (the Montgomery, Alabama-based civil rights organisation) confirmed that Pastor Jones is extremely isolated. “I very much doubt if he has connections with anyone except a dozen or so followers.”

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



France: Far Right Prepares Demonstration

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, DECEMBER 15 — There is mobilisation in Paris against the ‘Assises contre l’islamisation de l’Europe’ organised for Saturday by the far right movement, Bloc Identitaire.

The League for Human Rights and other NGOs have united in an appeal signed by representatives of left-wing parties of the 12th arrondissement where the meeting is being held, in which it is stated that “the object of the assembly has nothing to do with laicity, but on the contrary the ideas used carry hateful and potentially violent discourse against a part of our fellow citizens, under the pretext of their religious convictions.” The Mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoe, who in a letter to the prefect of police, Michel Gaudin, urged him to take all the necessary measures to prevent the meeting, “which can only generate hatred, xenophobia and bring damage to the public peace of mind.” Delanoe points out that Bloc Identitaire “has for years increased provocations” organising in Paris and Nice “pork soups” for homeless people, or “an aperitif with wine and salami” in neighbourhoods with a Muslim majority. The Movement against racism has also asked for the banning of this “racist congress”, planned before statements by Marine Le Pen, leader of the National Front of the far right, who compared “the street prayers” of Muslims of certain neighbourhoods to the period of the Occupation. Among the people invited to the assembly are Oskar Freysinger, from the Swiss UDC party, who in 2009 brought about the approval with the people’s referendum of the banning of minarets, and Tommy Robinson, spokesman from the English defence league, a far-right, anti-Muslim group. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Fundamentally Freund: Why Bomb Sweden?

Despite the chilling familiarity with similar incidents in other parts of Europe, this latest assault by the forces of radical Islam left many people scratching their heads.

Stockholm this week joined the long and terrifying list of Western cities targeted in recent years by Islamic fundamentalism.

For the first time since the 1970s, the normally tranquil Swedish capital was hit by terror last Saturday, as an apparently botched suicide bombing, which Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said “could have been truly catastrophic,” tore through its center, wounding two people. The perpetrator, who died of his wounds, is said to have been an Iraqi who immigrated to the country as a child together with his family.

In recent years, according to various media reports, he became increasingly radicalized and may have been linked to al-Qaida in Iraq.

Moments before the blasts, which aimed to slaughter throngs of Christmas shoppers, the TT news agency received communications in Arabic and Swedish warning of unspecified “action.”

“Our acts will speak for themselves,” they said. “Now your children, your daughters and your sisters will die as our brothers, our sisters and our children are dying.” They also urged Islamic a to rise up in Sweden and elsewhere and carry out further attacks.

Despite the chilling familiarity which many of these details share with similar incidents in other parts of Europe, this latest assault by the forces of radical Islam left many people scratching their heads and pondering one simple question: Why would anyone target Sweden? After all, few countries have a reputation as being more tolerant, more open and more accepting.

INDEED, SWEDEN is widely viewed as one of the most liberal states on a very liberal continent, with extensive state-sponsored welfare programs and one of the highest levels of social spending as a percentage of GDP.

The Swedes have also swung open their doors in the past few decades, allowing in significant numbers of Muslim immigrants. Sweden, for example, accepted more Iraqi refugees fleeing the chaos after the toppling of Saddam Hussein than any other country in the West.

In April 2008, the mayor of the town of Sodertalje testified before the US Congress that his municipality with just 85,000 residents had absorbed more Iraqi refugees than the US and Canada combined. Muslims now constitute 5 percent of the Swedish population, with growing political and economic clout.

So the question remains: Why would extremists hit Sweden?…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Germany: Sarrazin Earns Millions With Anti-Immigration Book

Former Bundesbank board member Thilo Sarrazin has become a millionaire many times over thanks to the proceeds of his inflammatory book attacking Muslim immigrants.

Sarrazin enraged politicians and the public this summer with the incendiary publication Deutschland schafft sich ab — Wie wir unser Land aufs Spiel setzen, or “Abolishing Germany — How we’re putting our country at jeopardy.”

In the book, Sarrazin warns that Germans could become “strangers in their own country” because of integration, and argues that Muslims are not compatible with German society.

He may have been forced to resign from his post at the Bundesbank and fight expulsion from the centre-left Social Democratic Party, but Sarrazin said on ZDF’s talk show Stuckrad Late Night on Thursday that he’d made a pile of money from the book.

When host Benjamin von Stuckrad-Barre estimated that the 1.2 million copies sold had earned his guest €3 million, Sarrazin indicated it was significantly more.

But the sudden wealth has not changed life for him and his wife, Sarrazin said.

“I just say, ‘It will go into the account and then we’ll wait patiently,” the 65-year-old said, adding he still needed to pay taxes on the large sum.

When asked why he waited until his political career was over to publish the book, the former Berlin finance minister said he’d had other issues to tackle, such as the consolidation of the German capital budget.

And there won’t be a another book about his time at the Bundesbank, he said.

“That would be a little too boring,” he quipped.

In the run-up to his first book’s publication, Sarrazin also made several controversial public remarks, claiming that Muslims don’t want to integrate and are making the country “dumber.”

Other controversial statements include that ethnic groups are distinguished by particular genes — for example that “all Jews share a certain gene.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Anti-Government Rioters Caused €20mln of Damage Says Rome’s Mayor

Rome, 15 Dec. (AKI) — Protesters who rioted in the Italian capital on Tuesday — the day the government narrowly won a crucial confidence vote in the parliament — caused 20 million euros of damage, Rome’s mayor Gianni Alemanno said Wednesday.

‘The damage is immense, we are talking about around 20 million euros,” said Alemanno, who is a member of conservative Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s ruling People of Freedom party.

“We will now make a closer assessment,” he said.

The City of Rome will be a civil plaintiff in trials against those brought to justice for the damage, Alemanno stated.

“It is unacceptable that the city and its inhabitants, who have nothing to do with these protests and are who are innocent should pay,” he said.

Hooded youths torched numerous vehicles, vandalised bins and benches and set some of these alight, banged the metal blinds of shuttered shops in central Rome. They threw paint and smoke bombs at the Italian lower house of parliament and attempted to storm the building.

The youths wreaked havoc one of the capital’s main shopping streets, smashing windows and cash machines, as alarmed tourists and shoppers fled. Many of the youths hid their faces by wearing crash helmets and balaclavas.

Firefighters were called to deal with six burnt out vehicles in the area around Rome’s famous Piazza del Popolo, including a police van, rubbish truck and four private cars which had been torched.

The famous square became a battleground littered with tear gas shells, poles, bottles, bolts and chairs while shopkeepers who had been forced to pull down shutters as the riots erupted later emerged to clear the debris.

Police, who baton-charged the protesters, said at least 50 people were injured in the riots, including two policemen. Police said they detained 41 protesters over the violence, which lasted for over four hours.

Media reports said at least 100 people were injured in the clashes,

The violence erupted as the lower and upper houses of parliament held confidence motions, both of which the government won. Defeat in either house would have forced Berlusconi to resign.

Student leaders had obtained permission to hold a peacful march through the capital to protest at government education cuts. But alleged anarchist youths infiltrated the demonstrations and attacked police with clubs, stones, smoke bombs and paint.

Alemanno compared the scenes in Rome on Tuesday to the political violence and terrorism in Italy during the 1970s and 1980s, the so-called ‘years of lead’.

Tuesday’s violence was not just limited to the Italian capital. Demonstrators clashed with police in Milan where the Stock Exchange was stormed and briefly occupied. In Palermo, protesters occupied the airport runway.

Interior minister Roberto Maroni said on Wednesday he would report “soon” to the Italian parliament on the violence.

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



Italy: Amnesty International Lauds Increased Jail Terms in CIA Abduction Case

(AKI) — Human rights campaign group Amnesty International on Thursday praised the tougher sentences handed by an Italian appeals court to 23 CIA agents convicted in absentia of kidnapping an Egyptian terrorism suspect from a Milan street in 2003.

The Milan appeals court increased to nine years from seven the jail terms handed to 23 CIA agents in the lower court’s landmark ruling in 2009.

The appeals court gave a nine-year prison sentence to the CIA’s former Milan station chief, Robert Seldon Lady, for his role in Egyptian cleric Osama Hasan Mustafa Nasr’s abduction in February, 2003.

The lower court had sentenced Lady to eight years in prison over the abduction of Nasr, also known as Abu Omar.

“Abu Omar was snatched off a Milan street and spirited away without any due process at all. That was the first step in his alleged rendition, secret detention, and torture in Egypt.”

“The Italian courts have acknowledged that the chain of events leading to such serious abuses cannot go unanswered,” Amnesty said in a statement.

Nasr claims he was flown to Egypt and tortured in prison there. He was released in 2007 and now lives in the Egyptian city of Alessandria. He was suspected of recruiting Muslim fighters to train in Afghanistan and could still be arrested in Italy if he were to return.

“The appeals court’s recognition that Abu Omar suffered a grave injustice at the hands of US and Italian intelligence actors is another step in the effort to seek accountability in Europe for abuses in the context of the CIA rendition and secret detention programmes,” said Julia Hall, Amnesty International’s expert on counter-terrorism and human rights in Europe.

The appeals court acquitted Italy’s former spymaster Nicolo Pollari and former secret agent Marco Mancini over Nasr’s kidnapping, saying they could not be tried due to state secrecy. The court also slightly reduced the jail terms given by the lower court to two Italian secret service agents, accused of abetting Nasr’s abduction to two years and 8 months each in prison, down from three years.

Amnesty criticised the use of state secrecy to protect individuals from prosecution.

“The Italian government and its officials should not be able to use ‘state secrecy’ as a shield to cover up human rights abuses,” said Hall.

Hundreds of terrorism suspects have allegedly been abducted and secretly transferred for interrogation in countries which often have poor human rights records, under the CIA’s ‘extraordinary rendition’ programme.

Italy is among 14 countries that were accused of collusion in a ‘global spider’s web’ of CIA abductions of terror suspects carried out on their soil, according to a 2007 report by Europe’s top human rights body The Council of Europe.

The European Union states of Poland and Romania also hosted secret CIA prisons where the abducted terror suspects claimed the report, written by Swiss lawyer Dick Marty.

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



Italy: Berlusconi Aims to Woo ‘Disaffected’ MPs

Italy ‘can’t afford an election campaign’, premier says

(ANSA) — Rome, December 15 — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi on Wednesday said he was sure he could win over more disaffected MPs to give himself a solid majority and avoid early elections after he just squeaked home in a crunch House confidence vote Tuesday.

After being rebuffed by a partner in a previous government, the centrist Catholic UDC, Berlusconi said he would now be targeting individual members of parliament.

Speaking on one of his TV channels, the premier said Italy could not afford an election campaign that would inevitably bring it under the scrutiny of the financial markets that dislike any sign of political instability and have raised prices on Spanish and Portuguese bonds after Ireland followed Greece in getting a bailout.

“It is necessary to carry on with financial rigour to avoid storms which have hit other countries,” Berlusconi said, voicing confidence he could attract more MPs in the House to ward off the possibility of a snap election two years before the end of the government’s term in 2013. “Taking the country to elections would be really irresponsible given the current international picture,” he said.

Berlusconi won the confidence vote, by just three votes, after MPs from House Speaker Gianfranco Fini’s new Future and Freedom for Italy (FLI) party, which split from the premier’s People of Freedom (PdL) party to set up the showdown, returned from the FLI to the PdL.

He was also able to benefit from one defection from the Democratic Party (PD), the largest centre-left opposition party, and two from Italy of Values (IdV), another opposition party.

The premier indicated he would seek to lure more members of the FLI back to the fold as well as playing on the discontent he said more Catholics in the PD might be feeling.

“I’m thinking of individual MPs who are in parties whose line they no longer share,” Berlusconi said, acknowledging that his overtures to the UDC as a whole had not been productive.

The UDC has said it will remain in opposition with the FLI, together hopefully forming a fledgling ‘third pole’ in Italian politics.

Berlusconi echoed Italian newspaper analysts in predicting that the FLI might see a slew of members rethinking Fini’s decision to split from the PdL in July after months of bickering.

“Yesterday evening, already, several other MPs offered me their collaboration,” he said. Asked specifically if he thought FLI members might now reconsider, he said: “Yes, not only a few, but several, who feel it is unnatural for them to stay in a party that is now in the opposition”. He said a number of FLI MPs went to talk to him after the confidence vote, but did not say how many.

“We have several posts free in government and we can reinforce the team,” Berlusconi added.

PD leader Pier Luigi Bersani rejected Berlusconi’s argument, saying that the defections from the centre left “have accelerated the move towards elections”.

He also repeated claims that Berlusconi had bought votes, saying that “shameful things” had happened which would increase Italians’ disenchantment with politics. Rome prosecutors are investigating vote-buying allegations on the basis of complaints presented by IdV leader Antonio Di Pietro, the former Bribesville investigator. The Northern League, Berlusconi’s key ally, wants a snap vote unless the government is widened to produce a workable majority.

But it intends to wait at least until a cherished fiscal federalist project is passed in January to leave more tax revenue in the richer north of Italy, analysts say.

Despite Berlusconi’s optimism, most observers think a spring election is in the offing, with March 27 being repeated as a likely date.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Snow on Eastern Beaches as Cold Snap Bites

Schools and Ancona airport closed, traffic problems

(ANSA) — Rome, December 16 — Inhabitants of Abruzzo’s slice of the Adriatic coast were given the rare treat of seeing their beaches covered in snow on Thursday as this week’s cold snap in Italy bit harder.

One man took advantage of the exceptional snowfall to go cross-country skiing on a Pescara beach, but the weather brought disruption as well as enjoyment.

Ancona airport in the central Marche region was shut because of the snow and sub-zero temperatures, which also caused roads to be closed, traffic congestion and accidents. Many schools in Marche have been closed until Saturday.

The freeze hit central and southern Italy hardest, but the north was not spared.

Emilia-Romagna got its far share of snow, temperatures plunged as low as -22 Celsius in Veneto and parts of Milan were coated in a layer of frost in the morning. Farmers unions said crops were at risk if things do not start warming up as Italy comes towards the end of one of its coldest weeks this year.

Forecasters, however, said temperatures may grow slightly colder in southern Italy at the weekend.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Jordan: 58% People Believe EU Can Bring Peace, Study

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 15 — The 58% of the jordans and 77% of the country opinion leaders believe that EU can bring peace in Jordan, and peace and stability to the surrounding region (62% of the general public, 77% of opinion leaders). This is one of the results of a study, promoted by the EU-funded Opinion Polling and Research (OPPOL) project, under the 2007-2010 ENPI regional information and communication programme. It is carried out across the countries benefiting from the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI). According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), the survey involved 100 opinion leaders, followed up by an opinion poll questioning 400 members of the general public. The 91% of opinion leaders say Jordan has benefited from the EUs policies in the country and opinion leaders are particularly appreciative of the role the EU plays in promoting democracy (much more so than the average across the region 84% vs. 62%). In terms of further involvement, respondents feel the EU should focus less on gender equality and more on environment and climate change, transport, energy security and migration issues.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



London, Tuberculosis Capital of Western Europe

“The rise in tuberculosis cases has nothing to do with migration and immigrants,” said Alimuddin Zumla of University College London, author of the commentary. “This is a fallacy that needs to be corrected,” he said, noting the same risks that plagued Victorian England — like poor housing, bad ventilation and overcrowding — are to blame for Britain’s current outbreak.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Wilders is a ‘Golden Pompadoured Maverick’: WikiLeaks

Geert Wilders is a ‘golden-pompadoured, maverick’ who is ‘no friend of the US’, according to a briefing document on Dutch politics for US president Barack Obama, put together in July 2009.

The document, published by whistleblower website Wikileaks and hosted by the Guardian, was drawn up by US diplomats to brief Obama ahead of his meeting with the then prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende.

In the document, the US official states: ‘Wilders is no friend of the US: he opposes Dutch military involvement in Afghanistan; he believes development assistance is money wasted; he opposes NATO missions outside ‘allied’ territory; he is against most EU initiatives; and, most troubling, he forments fear and hatred of immigrants.’ .

Other documents which mention Wilders look at preparations to combat the effect of his anti-Koran film Fitna prior to its release in 2008.

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



Netherlands: VVD is More Popular But Afghanistan, Theatre Tax Problems Loom

The right-wing VVD Liberals will move into 2011 as the biggest party in the country, having added four seats to their election total of 31 in the final political barometer of the year.

Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam PVV is second in the poll, with 26 seats, two more than it won during the general election, despite a string of revelations about the criminal convictions of several MPs.

Labour, second in the general election with 30 seats, is now on 24 and is third while the Christian Democrats, who form a minority cabinet with the VVD, are on 19, two down on their general election total.

Difficult issues

Despite his popularity, prime minister Marc Rutte has two difficult issues to solve: the senate’s opposition to the increase in value-added tax on the performing arts and a lack of support in the lower house for a new Afghan mission.

The cabinet will discuss the stalemate over the tax rise on Friday, although Rutte is in Brussels. Senators are threatening to block the passage of the entire 2011 tax plan unless ministers agree not to put up the tax from 6% to 19% in January.

Afghanistan

Moreover, according to the Telegraaf, Rutte is also having problems finding a majority in parliament to support a police training mission to Afghanistan.

‘We have to see if there is a parliamentary majority. But I have no guarantees,’ Rutte told the paper.

The PVV, which supports the minority government on economic issues, opposes the mission, forcing Rutte to look for support from other parties.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Cohen Compares Position of Muslims With Jews in 1930s

AMSTERDAM, 17/12/10 — Muslims are excluded from present-day Dutch society, as also happened with Jews in the 1930s, in the view of Labour (PvdA) leader Job Cohen.

Cohen drew the controversial comparison in an interview with Vrij Nederlands weekly. He links his views to the rise of Geert Wilders. In reaction, the Party for Freedom (PVV) leader rejected Cohen’s criticism as “disgusting.”

Cohen, himself Jewish, recounts how his mother experienced around the time of the outbreak of the Second World War that Jews were slowly being excluded. He also sees this alienation now in society.

“The PVV simply says to the Muslims: we would prefer for you to go away. But you cannot blame Islam for the extremism. There are so many Muslims that just want suburban contentment and nothing else. These people are now afraid of the fact that Wilders is part of the power structure.”

Cohen’s comparison of Muslims now with the Jews in the 1930 is “too disgusting and abject for words,” according to Wilders. “Combating Islamisation and harsh tackling of criminal Moroccans, for example, is cleaning up the mess that was actually caused by Cohen’s PvdA of poultices and palliatives, tea-drinking and keeping things together. Cohen has now really lost the plot, hitting out around him in a panic.”

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



Not an Open Europe, But a Strong One

The foreign ministers of Sweden, Italy, Britain and Finland provide an unconvincing rationale for letting Turkey join the European Union (“Europe, look outward again,” Views, Dec. 11-12).

The Union is not ready for enlargement. Its newest members and various population groups are not yet well integrated, and the euro crisis has produced another kind of fragmentation. Europe, already an economic heavyweight, does not need Turkey’s alleged dynamism to give it weight in world affairs. It needs an effective E.U. presidential leadership and a common security and foreign policy to guide its strategic cooperation with other world powers.

Moreover, Turkey does not compare with Britain, Sweden or Finland before they joined the Union, primarily because of its Islamic culture (the foreign ministers’ op-ed does not use the word Islam at all). Turkey would complicate rather than “strengthen common European values and standards of democracy and rule of law all over the Continent.”

There are also better ways to secure energy supplies from Central Asia than engaging in a costly and politically high-risk E.U. expansion project that would stop where — Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan?

Indeed, the “safeguarding of the integrity and credibility” of the European Union requires a vision of building on strength and knowing where to draw the line — and the frontier.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Stockholm Bomber Denounced by Father-in-Law

The father-in-law of the Stockholm suicide bomber on Friday denounced the 28-year-old attacker as a brainwashed terrorist who rejected “all the good” that Sweden gave him.

In a letter to Swedish newspaper Expressen, Ali Thwany said his daughter Mona was not aware that her husband, Taimour Abdulwahab, was plotting an attack, though she grew suspicious of his frequent travels.

“I hereby declare that we reject him, and we have no link to him in any way,” Thwany wrote, according to the paper. “Everything that has happened is something he is personally responsible for. An unknown group has brainwashed him and lured in him into this.”

Abdulwahab killed himself and injured two people Saturday when some of the bombs he was wearing exploded among panicked Christmas shoppers in downtown Stockholm.

Police suspect the explosives went off by mistake near a pedestrian street, and that he had planned to detonate them in a place where they would inflict more damage like a shopping center or train station.

In an audio message sent to the Swedish security service and the TT news agency before the explosion, Abdulwahab referred to Swedish troops in Afghanistan and a Swedish artist’s drawing of the Prophet Muhammad as a dog, which angered Muslims. Abdulwahab also apologized to his family for misleading them, saying “I never went to the Middle East to work or to make money, I went for jihad.”

As a child, Abdulwahab and his family left Iraq for Sweden in the early 1990s but he spent much of the past decade in Britain, where he lived with his wife and three young children.

“And through his act he rejects all the good he has received from Sweden, Sweden that has received us. Sweden that gave us what no Arabic or Muslim country awarded us,” Thwany wrote in the letter, which Expressen said was translated from Arabic. “We distanced ourselves from his family three years ago, with exception for a few telephone calls.”

According to a resume posted online, Thwany is a 53-year-old Iraqi-born architect, who lives in a suburb of Stockholm. He didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment.

Expressen said it had been in contact with Thwany and his family since the weekend.

Referring to Abdulwahab as “Taimour the terrorist,” Thwany said his daughter didn’t know about his activities.

“He didn’t tell anything about his private life or contacts or his spectacular travels,” Thwany wrote, adding “we don’t feel any sorrow” over Abdulwahab’s death.

[…]

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Sweden’s Tolerance ‘At Risk’ Following Attack

While Muslims in Sweden have denounced the country’s first suicide bombing, experts warn that Sweden’s far-right may try to exploit the attack in a bid to polarise the nation, AFP’s Rita Devlin Marier explains.

A man strongly believed to be Taymour Abdulwahab blew up his car and then himself in a busy shopping quarter of central Stockholm Saturday. He killed only himself, but narrowly missed wreaking havoc among Christmas shoppers.

Abdulwahab had been living in Britain in recent years, where he studied at university, but media reports said he had arrived in Sweden from Iraq as a child, growing up in a small town a three-hour car ride from Stockholm.

The attacks were immediately and widely denounced by Sweden’s Muslim community, with condemnations from many Muslim groups and several small peace protests.

But the clearest message came perhaps on Tuesday, when Hassan Mussa, one of Sweden’s most influential clerics, issued a fatwa — an Islamic ruling — clearly condemning the attack.

“It is forbidden to accept what has happened or try to justify it,” said Moussa.

“Those who accept it or justify it are as guilty as the perpetrator himself,” he added, according to Swedish radio’s translation.

But the fact that a Swedish-raised man blew himself in the name of Islam — as he understood it — has challenged Sweden’s tradition of tolerance, said respected Islamologist Jan Hjärpe.

“This (attack) in Stockholm is used to point to all the Muslims in Sweden and say they are dangerous,” Hjärpe told AFP.

A report released Wednesday by Sweden’s intelligence agency Säpo suggested this kind of extremism was very are: it estimated only about 200 extremists with the potential for violence among the Muslim population.

On that evidence, Hjärpe insisted, they “do not represent the huge majority of the Muslims in Sweden.”

Even the audio message attributed to the bomber, sent out shortly before Saturday’s attack, appeared to acknowledge this lack of radicalism, said Hjärpe.

“You could hear he was quite angry that the Muslims in Sweden were not interested in going into a jihad,” he pointed out.

Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt while condemning the attack, warned against drawing hasty conclusions, and in his comments he stressed the tolerance that underscores Swedish society.

But Malena Rembe, chief analyst at Säpo’s counter-terrorism unit, warned that this tolerance was increasingly being challenged.

With the far-right, anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats entering parliament for the first time after September’s election, the country was moving towards greater polarisation, she cautioned Wednesday.

The increase in Islamophobic rhetoric from the far-right would put Sweden’s tradition for open, tolerant diaologue, under pressure, she warned.

“What we’ve seen in other countries where you have a more polarised debate — where you have more open xeonphobia or Islamophobia — is that it tends to push people into movements because they feel isolated in their own society and they feel included in these extremist environments,” she told AFP.

“An increased polarisation in discussions would perhaps further stigmatise individuals — and stigmatised individuals tend to be recruitable … It is extremely important to ensure a nuanced discussion,” she said.

Just days after Saturday’s attack, the Sweden Democrats called for a parliamentary debate on the problem of Islamic extremism: the other parties rejected the idea, reluctant to let them exploit the situation.

But the reluctance to confront extremist ideas carried its own dangers, said one analyst.

“It’s sort of reflective of the sensitivities of the issues, but also of the consensus nature of Sweden,” security expert Magnus Ranstorp, of Sweden’s defence college, told AFP.

Until recently, even problems surrounding immigration and integration were only marginally debated here, and the far-right’s entry into parliament came as a shock for many people, said Ranstorp, a specialist in Islamist movements.

“By avoiding the debate, you inflate the issues … If you stifle part of the debate it can become more bent up, many issues rolled into one,” Ranstorp said.

“Everyone is tip-toeing around the fire, and therefore you don’t discuss the issue realistically,” he added.

Thus the bomber, despite failing to create the carnage he was aiming for, might have achieved one of his goals.

“I see him as someone who come from the outside (Britain) in here and very deliberately targeted Sweden to create a lot of polarisation, a lot of reaction,” Ranstorp said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden Probes Suicide Bomber’s Facebook

Sweden’s intelligence agency said Friday it was looking at the Facebook account of the man behind the suicide bomb attack in Stockholm on Saturday in order to identify possible accomplices in the act.

“We look at all leads, including Facebook,” Swedish Security Service (Säpo) spokeswoman Maria Svensson told AFP on Friday.

Investigators have said they are “98 percent certain” the bomber is Taymour Abdulwahab, who grew up in the Middle East and became a Swedish citizen in

1992.

Säpo security chief Anders Thornberg could not say if Facebook had enabled the agency to determine if anyone had helped the bomber who blew himself up in central Stockholm on Saturday.

“It’s too early to say and even if I knew, I could not answer because of technical reasons related to the investigation,” Thornberg told daily Dagens Nyheter on Friday.

According to the daily, which quoted specialised Israeli website Haganah, Abdulwahab had one British-based Facebook “friend” who was friends with six of Samir Khan’s Facebook friends.

Samir Khan, a US citizen, is believed to be behind an English-language al-Qaeda magazine and a pro-jihad website which has called for the head of Lars Vilks, the Swedish artist who drew the prophet Mohammed with the body of a dog in 2007.

Abdulwahab — who according to media reports came to Sweden from Iraq as a child and blew himself up the day before his 29th birthday — had been living for the past few years in Luton, northwest of London, with his wife and three children.

He blew himself up near a busy pedestrian street early Saturday evening, killing only himself, but two people were slightly injured when his car exploded a few minutes earlier about 300 metres away.

According to a prosecutor on the case, he intended to kill as many Christmas shoppers as possible, but may have had a faulty bomb.

Police are seeking to determine what exactly happened on Saturday, how he became radicalised and whether he had any accomplices.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Med Students Perform Prof’s Autopsy

Medical students at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute (KI) set to perform their first-ever clinical autopsy were floored to discover that the corpse was none other than one of their former instructors.

According to the course coordinators, the incident was “extremely unfortunate,” but they assert that the name of the body is always communicated in advance of each autopsy.

A medical student’s first autopsy tends to be an intense and trying experience in itself. The revelation that the body was their former instructor made the occasion all the more difficult.

“I was super-shocked,” one of the students told the TT news agency about his reaction when he saw the body on the bench.

None of the students spoke up when the autopsy technician got to work. However, several testified that the mood was tense and they began whispering to each other.

They then tried to concentrate on the task at hand.

“The first autopsy is very emotional and we autopsied someone we knew,” another student told TT.

Several students admitted that they have thought a lot about the incident afterward and wonder whether it was really proper for them to have been exposed to such a situation.

“I spontaneously feel that something fell through the cracks in the procedures,” one student confessed.

Professor Birgitta Sundelin, the chief physician who was responsible for the course at the time, regrets the incident.

“It was extremely unfortunate. This is the first time I have encountered something like this,” she said.

She said that it is routine to tell the class the name of the person to be autopsied ahead of time and that the school did so in this case.

However, according to the students, they did not see the name until they could read it from the corpse’s toe tag.

In addition, no one at KI had informed the hospital that the students would possibly be offended by the subject whose autopsy they going to perform.

Professor Tina Dalianis, the head of the department, has been informed of the incident.

She said she sympathises with the students and that the incident must have been extremely difficult for them, but she does not think that the school has done anything wrong.

“It is really terrible, but it is part of education sometimes. Unfortunately, they must deal with it,” she said.

The president of Sweden’s Medical Students Association (Medicine Studerandes Förbund, MSF) was outraged by the school’s response.

“Very unfortunate. Students should not have to feel uneasy during their education,” said Maria Ehlin Kolk, who is also a medical student at Umeå University.

“It is important that an autopsy truly be the educational opportunity that it should be. The question is how much these students learned from the situation,” she added.

Kolk thinks it sounds like KI need to tighten up its procedures and tell students in advance that they have the right to speak up if they know the person on the autopsy table.

“All universities should work out such procedures and documents,” she said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘My Name’s “Go **** Yourself”‘: Bus Passenger Accused of Attempted Murder of Two Policemen Hurls Abuse in Court

Unemployed John Paul Onyenaychi, 30, is accused of stabbing Pc Paul Madden, 23, and Piotr Dolata, 27, a police community support officer (PCSO) on Wednesday.

The two officers were injured at a bus stop in New Broadway in Ealing, west London.

Mr Dolata’s life was saved by a quick-thinking doctor who was passing by and was able to stem the bleeding.

Onyenaychi, of east London, was also charged with attempting to cause grievous bodily harm against a second PCSO, Steven Constable.

Surrounded in the dock by 10 police officers at Brent Magistrates’ Court, Onyenaychi refused to confirm his name, date of birth and address before launching into an expletive-filled tirade.

Shouting at District Judge Margot Coleman when asked for his full name, he said: ‘My name’s ‘go **** yourself’ and where the **** is my solicitor?’

When his solicitor Aneurin Brewer appeared in court, he continued: ‘You’re not my ******* solicitor. You’re not representing me.’

The hearing continued in Onyenaychi’s absence after District Judge Coleman ordered he be taken back to the cell, before telling Mr Brewer, ‘He was being extremely abusive and I’m not prepared to tolerate that behaviour in my courtroom.’

Mr Brewer said he was prepared to represent Onyenaychi despite his objections, and confirmed his name, address and date of birth.

There was no application for bail and Onyenaychi was remanded on two counts of attempted murder and one count of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm with intent.

He will appear at the Old Bailey on March 25.

Mr Dolata was released from hospital after being treated for his injuries while Pc Madden remained in a ‘serious but stable condition’ after undergoing surgery.

The officers, who were based in Ealing Borough, were checking bus fares when they were attacked at around 3pm on the busy shopping street.

London mayor Boris Johnson said he was ‘shocked’ at the attack, writing on Twitter: ‘No place for this on the streets of London.’

Speaking after the incident, Chief Superintendent Andy Rowell said: ‘Whilst this is no doubt a shocking incident, it is extremely rare for police officers to receive injuries of this nature whilst on duty.’

           — Hat tip: Bewick [Return to headlines]



UK: BNP Leader Nick Griffin’s Propaganda Victory as He Fights Off Contempt of Court Case

BNP leader Nick Griffin has won a propaganda victory as he fought off a legal bid to have him declared guilty of contempt of court today.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission accused Griffin of failing to comply with a Central London County Court judgment ordering the removal of potentially racist clauses from the BNP’s constitution.

At the time of the contempt application in November, Mr Griffin was in hospital with suspected kidney stones and was described by a BNP spokesperson as being ‘in extreme pain’.

But Robin Allen QC, appearing for the watchdog, said the BNP was ‘playing with’ the Commission and its officials instead of obeying the judgment.’

But today Lord Justice Moore-Bick and Mr Justice Ramsey, sitting at the High Court in London, refused to to take action against Mr Griffin, BNP deputy Simon Darby and party officer Tanya Lumby.

The Commission was seeking fines against them for contempt, or possibly the sequestration of party assets.

The application stemmed from the county court’s ruling that the BNP constitution breached discrimination laws because of a clause banning non-white members.

The constitution underwent revision, but last March Judge Paul Collins ruled at the county court that the new version was indirectly discriminatory against those of mixed-race, because it required party applicants to oppose ‘any form of integration or assimilation of … the indigenous British’.

Another section required new members to submit to a two-hour vetting visit at their home by BNP officials, which Judge Collins ruled could be seen as ‘intimidatory’…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Essex Police to Follow Known Burglars 24 Hours a Day to Thwart Christmas Break-Ins

Following a few paces behind a man concealing his face with a hooded top and a jumper pulled over his nose, this is the ultimate in high-visibility policing.

Officers in an Essex town have identified a number of convicted burglars they believe are responsible for the majority of break-ins.

In an effort to slash the number of pre-Christmas thefts of gifts, they have launched Operation Bright Shadow — informally dubbed ‘Badger a Burglar’.

As well as trailing the known criminals round Basildon, sometimes wearing clip-on cameras to record their every move, they also walk into shops with them and follow their vehicles in marked cars.

It is hoped burglaries will plummet 90 per cent as a result, and yesterday Sergeant Paul Costin warned those who thought they could outwit the surveillance teams.

He said: ‘Stop committing crime, stop acting in an anti-social way, so you can enjoy Christmas and spend it at home rather than in custody.

‘Because if you do commit crime we will identify you and take the strongest action.’

The operation began on Monday after six known offenders, ranging in age from 15 to 33, were issued with letters telling them they would be watched.

Sergeant Fergus Caulfield said: ‘Our force solicitor said it does not infringe their human rights. It’s all been checked out legally.’

A similar operation in June last year saw burglary rates drop 44 per cent and raids on outbuildings such as garages and sheds fall 54 per cent.

One convicted burglar, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was monitored around his home in Laindon, Essex, on Thursday…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: George Medal-Winning Bomb Hero Was Paid Just £20 Extra a Day to Defuse 140 IEDs

An Army mines expert who has defused more roadside bombs than anyone else in history was awarded the George Medal yesterday.

Warrant Officer Karl Ley, 30, was paid only £20 extra a day for clearing 139 Taliban bombs during six months in Afghanistan.

He made safe twice as many improvised explosive devices as any other bomb-disposal expert, including 42 in one village in only 72 hours as insurgent gunshots and mortars landed less than 100ft away.

Award: Prince Charles presents the George Medal to Warrant Officer Karl Ley at Buckingham Palace

Yesterday the married father of three received his award from Prince Charles at Buckingham Palace.

His citation told of his ‘sheer determination, guile and awesome bravery’.

When his award was announced earlier this year he said: ‘If you’re being shot at, you get down on the deck. So you might as well get rid of the bomb while you’re down there!…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslims in Bomber’s Town Get £500,000 to Combat Terror… But Don’t Give Police a Single Tip-Off

Muslim groups in the town where the Stockholm suicide bomber lived have been handed more than £550,000 of taxpayers’ money to combat extremism but have failed to tip off police about a single terror suspect.

The grants were handed out to mosques, schools and women’s projects by Luton council to prevent young Muslims being radicalised.

Under the Home Office’s Preventing Violent Extremism scheme, Islamic organisations are given money to stop members turning to violence. The groups are urged to reveal the names of those likely to commit violent crimes so they can be put on an ‘at-risk’ list by police.

But the Daily Mail has learnt that — despite £554,000 being given to groups in Luton since 2008 — not a single name has been handed over.

It comes as the PVE scheme has been put under review by the Government for being ineffective after it was revealed a huge amount of the money simply went to sports and arts groups.

The Luton Islamic Centre, where Taimour Abdulwahab Al-Abdaly preached before being banned, refused to sign up as leaders did not want to inform on their ‘Muslim brothers and sisters’. Iraq-born Al-Abdaly studied in Luton for several years and became obsessed with extremism while in the UK. He blew up his car then himself in Stockholm last Saturday, the day before his 29th birthday. Swedish authorities said he ‘missed causing a catastrophe by minutes’.

Islamic Centre chairman Qadeer Baksh said: ‘The reason we didn’t take the Government money for the Preventing Violent Extremism scheme is that it requires us to inform on fellow Muslims.

‘If we had taken the money our members would have seen us as working for the Government. The young men with radical views would not have listened to us.

‘I have never called the police or authorities on anyone.’

The PVE scheme was set up by then Communities Secretary Ruth Kelly in 2007, with most of the recipients of its £86million fund being from traditional Labour areas such as Birmingham, East London and West Yorkshire.

It was revealed last year that £129,000 had been awarded to a theatre company, £79,000 for sports coaching, £20,000 for fashion courses and £20,000 to art workshops in areas with large Muslim communities.

Matthew Sinclair, director of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said the Government should focus on tackling terrorism directly rather than wasting money on community groups.

He added: ‘It’s shocking that the PVE grants given out in Luton seem to have achieved such poor results.’

Security minister Baroness Neville-Jones said that under the review the scheme should focus money on people who are at risk of extremism, such as Al-Abdaly, rather than sports groups.

A Luton Borough Council spokesman said: ‘The funding has been allocated against areas of work for women’s inclusion, working with local schools, project work with further and higher education and projects to work with vulnerable individuals.

‘All organisations funded are based in Luton and have a history of either community or youth development work.

‘Information acquired that relates to issues such as child protection, or a clear and present danger to community safety or national security, will supersede any confidentiality requirement.

‘No such issue has been identified.’

           — Hat tip: bewick [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Aid: Hopeless Charity Commission Whitewashes Yet Another Islamist Group

The Charity Commission, Britain’s most ineffective regulator, has once again whitewashed an organisation linked to fundamentalist Islam. In March this newspaper reported on allegations that the charity Muslim Aid, a close associate of the fundamentalist Islamic Forum of Europe, had channelled funds to eight organisations linked to the terrorist groups Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

Muslim Aid has admitted funding two of the organisations and has repeatedly refused to deny funding the other six. Now, however, the Commission has published what it is pleased to call a “regulatory case review” into the charity saying that allegations of terrorist links are “unsubstantiated.”

It has only been able to reach this verdict by completely ignoring the vast majority of the allegations made against Muslim Aid, and by redefining the single allegation it did choose to “investigate” in a way which allowed it to exonerate the charity. By its own admission, it did not even investigate seven out of the eight allegations which it now claims are “unsubstantiated.”

The allegations made against Muslim Aid were as follows: (1) that it had since July 2009 channelled money to six organisations linked to Hamas:

(a) the Islamic Society of Nuseirat;

(b) the Islamic Society of Khan Younis;

(c) the Islamic Centre of Gaza;

(d) the Islamic al-Salah, Gaza;

(e) the National Association of Moderation and Development; (f) the Khan Younis Zakat Committee.

The allegations were made by security sources, who provided us with documentary evidence of the dates and amounts. (2) that it in the year 2005 paid money to another Hamas-linked organisation, the Islamic University of Gaza. (3) that it had paid money to the al-Ihsan Charitable Society, linked to Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

(4) that it had extensively funded the Muslim Council of Britain, a UK-based political lobbying group. This is contrary to Muslim Aid’s declared charitable objects, which are “to relieve the poor, the elderly, children and all those who are in need in any part of the world as a result of natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes, droughts, famines, epidemics, poverty and plagues, to relieve those who are refugees fleeing from war zones and war victims.” Repeatedly asked by us before publication, over a period of more than a week, Muslim Aid refused to deny the security source allegations that they channelled funds to any of groups 1 (a) to 1 (f). Nor, to the best of my knowledge, has Muslim Aid subsequently denied these allegations. It has admitted both to us and the Charity Commission — see paragraph 14 of the Commission’s report — that it did fund al-Ihsan. It has admitted, and its own accounts state, that it funded the Islamic University of Gaza and the MCB.

In its report today, the Charity Commission states that it decided only to investigate Muslim Aid’s links with one of the groups, al-Ihsan. The report states that the Commission was “not provided with sufficient evidence to support the allegation that [the] other named organisations [1 (a) to (f) and 2 above] funded by the Charity had the alleged links [to terrorism].” Consquently, it “did not carry out further investigations into payments to them. Given the seriousness of the allegations made, the Commission required material evidence in support of those claims in order for it to consider taking regulatory action.” The Charity Commission’s statement that it was not provided with “material evidence” of the groups’ terrorist links is simply not true. Mindful of the extreme litigiousness of Islamist groups, we naturally conducted extensive pre-publication research on the links between the eight groups in 1,2 and 3 above and Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Our evidence, which runs to pages and pages, is shown at the end of this post. See whether you are convinced by it. I gave all this evidence to the Charity Commission (not that it ever asked me for it, by the way; indeed, I only learned that a regulatory case review had been opened into Muslim Aid by chance.)…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UK: Why Prince Charles is Too Dangerous to be King: Max Hastings Tells Why This Increasingly Eccentric Royal Could Imperil the Monarchy

The engagement of Prince William and Kate Middleton has given the British people a welcome fillip in a chilly season. Next April’s wedding will be a big success — even if we make a mess of some things, we’re ­jolly good at royal ceremonies.

The hard part comes afterwards: as the Queen gets older, growing ­attention and speculation is focusing on the ­monarchy’s future. Opinion polls show that most British people would like William to become heir to the throne, bypassing his father, the Prince of Wales.

But courtiers vigorously declare that’s not going to happen. When the Queen dies — as, like all of us, she eventually must — her son is ­determined to succeed her.

The Prince and his wife Camilla earned warm public sympathy last week when their car was assaulted by rioting student demonstrators in London. But many thoughtful people are alarmed by the prospect of a ­figure of such assertive eccentricity acceding to the British throne.

I heard one of the cleverest men in Britain, master of an Oxbridge ­college, quite calmly say the other night: ‘The best hope for the ­monarchy is that Prince Charles dies before the Queen.’

This seemed a brutal observation from a kindly and temperate man, but he went on to justify it: ‘We spend our lives here educating a new ­generation to understand that rational behaviour requires us to reach conclusions and make ­decisions by examining evidence.

‘Yet now we have the heir to the throne demanding — not in a ­throwaway remark, but in an entire book to which he has just put his name — that we should reject science and evidence in favour of following our instincts. This is surely disturbing.’

The Prince’s new book Harmony is indeed a startling piece of work. He begins it by writing: ‘This is a call to revolution. “Revolution” is a strong word, and I use it deliberately. For more than 30 years I have been ­working to identify the best solutions to the array of deeply entrenched problems we face.

‘Having considered these questions long and hard, my view is that our outlook in the Westernised world has become far too firmly framed by a mechanistic approach to science.’

He continues: ‘This approach is entirely based upon the gathering of the results that come from subjecting physical phenomena to scientific experiment.’

Though the Prince says he does not dismiss all science as bosh, his book is a call to arms against ‘the great juggernaut of industrialisation’ which he deplores.

Some of his phrases are ­messianic: ‘I would be failing in my duty to future generations and to the Earth itself if I did not attempt to point this out and indicate possible ways we can heal the world.’

Obsessively convinced of his own rightness, he views his ­critics with the weary ­resignation of an early Christian martyr: ‘It is probably ­inevitable that if you challenge the ­traditions of conventional thinking you will find yourself accused of naivety.’

Now, you may say it’s a fine thing we have an heir to the throne who cares passionately about the planet and is determined to do something about it. But what if his prescriptions are wrong?

At the heart of the Queen’s brilliant success for almost 60 years is that we have been denied the slightest clue as to what she thinks about anything but dogs and horses. Her passivity has been inspired, because her subjects can then attribute any ­sentiments they choose to her. She has never said a word to raise a hackle.

Prince Charles, by contrast, wears his heart on his sleeve. He outraged the medical ­profession by bullying the last government into providing NHS funding for his cherished homeopathic ­medicine. This, doctors pointed out, meant transferring tax­payers’ money from proven remedies to quackery — panaceas for which there is no scientific evidence at all.

A leading breast cancer ­specialist, Professor Michael Baum, wrote an open letter to the British Medical Journal after the Prince suggested drinking carrot juice and taking coffee bean enemas might help to ­combat cancer.

The Professor furiously wrote that his own 40 years of study and 25 years’ involvement in cancer research might be thought to offer at least as solid a basis for addressing this issue as the Prince’s ‘power and authority, which rest on an ­accident of birth’.

The Government is ­committed to trialling genetically modified crops, which many agriculturalists think offer the best hope of feeding the people of the world. But the Prince repeatedly ­condemns GM as the devil’s work — just as he opposes nuclear power and much ­modern architecture.

Constitutionally, it’s ­irrelevant whether his views are right or wrong: by wading into ­high-­profile controversies and using his status to influence government decisions, he may please green enthusiasts, but he also makes many enemies — some of them much more clever ­people than himself, who reject his ideas about how to better humanity.

In this way, he compromises the Royal Family.

A courtier recently said to me: ‘You shouldn’t worry about this. Charles knows that from the day he becomes King, he must keep his mouth shut.’ But in the same week, one of the Prince’s ­intimate circle privately said: ‘The nation is ready for a ­visionary monarchy.’

I believe that if the Prince and those around him think any such thing, Charles would hit trouble as fast and hard as a truck ­crashing into a wall when he’s the occupant of the throne.

Nobody doubts that he is an honourable man who wants to do good. His Prince’s Trust has made a remarkable contribution to helping the young get started in trades and businesses.

But Charles insists upon addressing a range of issues wider and deeper than any ­mortal man — unless he has a mind of genius, as the Prince certainly does not — can sensibly encompass. Some of his book reads like the ravings of a Buddhist mystic.

I once incurred princely wrath by suggesting to him that he would be judged by what he is rather than by what he does — that being heir to the throne is not a government office.

Jeremy Paxman makes the same point in his book on ­royalty: ‘The Prince had ­consistently misunderstood or ignored a basic truth at the heart of the relationship between ­royalty and the people.

‘He seemed to believe his significance lay in what he believed and did. The truth was simply that his significance lay in who he was.’

An acquaintance of the Prince argued to me recently that we should not worry about his behaviour because anybody who spends time with him quickly sees that he is potty, and thus harmless.

I would agree — if his ­eccentricities were confined to collecting matchboxes or ­dressing up as Napoleon.

But he is so set in his ways, so accustomed to not being contradicted — because those who argue with him are swiftly expelled from his counsels — that I am convinced that if he becomes King he will persist in trying to save the world, and thus precipitate a crisis.

He craves the return of what he thinks was a happier, ­simpler, more ‘natural’ world — for instance, he deplores inter­ference with primitive tribes.

He writes: ‘If we continue to engineer the extinction of the last remaining indigenous, ­traditional societies, we ­eliminate one of the last remaining sources of wisdom.’

He does not stop to ask what happens if the peoples of those indigenous societies want TVs and mobile phones, or even medicines to save them from some of the horrible diseases to which primitive man fell victim.

Rural grandees such as ­himself may have enjoyed times past, but peasants certainly did not.

The industrial growth which he hates has brought huge benefits to mankind. He seems oblivious to the ­tension between his grand vision about how others should live and his personal financial profligacy; his enthusiasm for using helicopters and keeping every light blazing in Clarence House at all hours.

Now, he is not a bad man, but I think he is a very dangerous one for the monarchy, if allowed to ascend the throne.

I remain apprehensive that his eagerness to become King derives from hopes of using the position to promote his dotty causes. A person who knows him well says: ‘I used to think Camilla could sort him out, but it’s too late. He’s a spoilt baby.’

The Queen’s triumph — and that of Prince Philip, whose achievement is often ­underrated — has been rooted in a ­discipline that Charles utterly lacks.

For they recognise that being royal, far from allowing crowned heads to do as they choose, makes it essential to exercise iron control over one’s ­every word and deed.

Prince Philip has occasionally committed indiscretions, but these are trifling in a lifetime as consort. Some unkind things are said about the royal ­couple’s failure as parents. Yet their ­contribution to our nation far outweighs any domestic shortcomings.

The argument in royal circles now ­concerns whether the Queen’s passive style of monarchy will suffice for a new age.

When she ascended to the throne in 1952, Britain was a homogeneous white country with a culture symbolised by beer, country churches, cricket, the Radio Times and Miss Marple. Today, however, the ethnic and cultural make-up of the nation is changing fast.

According to one projection, by 2051 the ‘white British’ ­proportion of the population will fall to 67 per cent, then decline to only 50 per cent by the end of the century. A significant proportion of the children of minorities will, meanwhile, become assimilated and adopt our traditional values, perhaps including respect for the monarchy.

But it seems rash to expect too much, when the ‘white British’ are diminishingly confident about what our values are.

They are scarcely churchgoing Christians. Even the Church of England is racked with doubts about its own beliefs. That other great British institution, the BBC, often seems more concerned with providing a platform for minorities than with articulating the views of the majority.

If I was advising Prince ­William and Kate Middleton, I would urge they confine their public remarks to politeness and platitudes. Even fish and chips are history. Tea is not the national opiate it once was — if you asked for a ‘cuppa char’ in many fast-food places, the Polish girl staring blankly across the ­counter might think you were making an indecent suggestion.

Some younger courtiers argue that a ‘more relevant’ monarchy will be necessary, to engage with the new Britain. I suggest that they are wrong.

The best hope for the future is to maintain the Queen’s great tradition, of being all things to all her subjects by remaining a smiling, but silent, monarch.

In the days when royal ­advisers occasionally sought my ­opinions as a newspaper editor, my ­counsel was always the same: ‘Say nothing, say nothing, say nothing.’ I thought the various­ confessional interviews by the Prince and Princess of Wales were ­suicidal. Charles’ book ­Harmony can promote only disharmony around the throne.

If I was advising Prince ­William and Kate Middleton, I would urge they confine their public remarks to politeness and platitudes. At all costs, I would ­forswear interviews and documentaries designed to reveal ‘the real William’ and ‘the real Kate’. For our sakes, as well as theirs, we should not go there.

Modern kings and queens must remain distant symbols of glamour, beauty and decency — or they become nothing. In the mid-21st century, as ever, once the public knows too much, the magic will be gone.

Happily for us all, there is every reason to suppose that the Queen will reign on for at least another decade. By then, it should be obvious that it would be madness to allow a quirky, stubbornly opinionated and contentious old man to assume the throne — that the best hope for Britain’s ­monarchy lies with William and Kate.

The most important task, meanwhile, is to prevent the media’s obsession with the young royals from tarnishing or destroying the couple.

I remain optimistic that the monarchy will survive. While many British people are indifferent to it today, few are actively hostile — a state of affairs which reflects the Queen’s achievement.

But anyone who reads the Prince of Wales’ new book will have little doubt that the chief peril to our royal institution in the decades ahead lies within his well-meaning, muddled, woolly head.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Western Europe’s Biggest Mosque Opens in Netherlands

Western Europe’s biggest mosque opened on Friday in the Dutch city of Rotterdam, five years behind schedule with organisers blaming obstruction from far-right politicians for the delay.

The mosque, which is built with two 50-metre (164-feet) high minarets, can accommodate 3,000 worshippers and will be a centre for charity, mutual understanding and forgiveness, said its chief adminstrator Abdelrazak Boutaher.

Construction began in 2003 and was slated to last for two years, but organisers said far-right opposition had delayed the project.

“This horrible thing doesn’t belong here but in Saudi Arabia,” said Geert Wilders, the Dutch far-right leader, on his Twitter account.

The mosque is funded by the Al Maktoum Foundation, a charitable organisation established by Dubai’s ruling family.

Immigrants account for about 25 percent of the Netherlands’ population, but anti-immigrant feeling is strong with Wilders’ Party for Freedom making strong gains in this year’s general election.

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



WikiLeaks Cables Show Importance of Dutch US Alliance

A number of cables from the Wikileaks website reveal the importance the US attaches to its relationship with the Dutch, the Guardian newspaper reports.

‘With the EU divided and its direction uncertain, the Dutch serve as a vital transatlantic anchor in Europe,’ one cable dated August 2005 said.

‘Dutch pragmatism and our similar world-views make the Netherlands fertile ground for initiatives others in Europe might be reluctant, at least initially, to embrace. Coaxing the Dutch into the spotlight can take effort, but pays off royally.’

JSF

The cables also talk about the problems surrounding the joint strike fighter jet and links that project to Afghanistan.

‘The JSF debate in the Netherlands remains politically charged, with the parliament nearly scuttling Dutch participation in JSF,’ according to a cable from September 2009. ‘The Dutch ministry of defence is using the successes of the JSF in Dutch industry as an argument to keep the JSF in the Netherlands.’

The Netherlands has agreed to buy one test aircraft and has put off a decision about buying more until after 2012.

Posturing

And a cable from February 2010 on the fall of the Dutch government blames ‘posturing’ over Afghanistan for the collapse.

‘Our efforts now turn to supporting foreign minister Verhagen’s search for a future Dutch mission in Afghanistan that will make a significant contribution to Nato requirements, the cable said.

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

Balkans


Carla Del Ponte Feels Vindicated by Kosovo Report

A draft Council of Europe report implicating Kosovo leader Hashim Thaci in organ trafficking has been welcomed by the former war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte.

In an exclusive interview with swissinfo.ch, the Swiss lawyer said she was torn between concern and satisfaction at the idea that these “heinous acts” would soon be brought to justice.

Del Ponte, now Switzerland’s ambassador to Argentina and due to retire early next year, was Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) from 1999 to 2007.

In 2008 she published a controversial book, The Hunt, in which she detailed evidence of the smuggling of organs taken from murdered Serb civilians after the end of the Kosovo war in 1999.

The ICTY said it had never seen evidence to substantiate her claims, and Thaci and the Albanian prime minister Sali Berisha publicly rejected them.

The Council of Europe report, drawn up by Swiss senator Dick Marty, who is to present it officially to European diplomats on Thursday, says Thaci headed a “mafia-like” organisation that dealt in weapons, drugs and human organs.

It says the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), which Thaci led, had secret prisons where Serbs and Kosovar Albanians were held in inhuman conditions, before being murdered for their organs.

“The information revealed in The Hunt led to this investigation,” Del Ponte told swissinfo.ch in an exclusive interview.

“Heinous acts”

Del Ponte’s book quotes witnesses saying internal organs had been taken from 300 Serbs deported from Kosovo to northern Albania.

She said in the interview she was “shocked and deeply distressed” by the findings — “namely that the killing of prisoners with the express purpose of removing their organs and selling them for profit was carried out by senior members of the KLA, including some individuals who hold top positions in the country’s current government”.

She said the claims in her book were backed by “credible and verifiable physical evidence” obtained by researchers from the ICTY and the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (Unmik) during a mission to Albania and in the presence of an Albanian government prosecutor.

“The reason I included these claims in my book was to provoke a serious follow-up, so that, if the findings warranted it, a criminal investigation would be launched,” she explained.

“Such a criminal investigation could not have been carried out by the ICTY because it had no jurisdiction in this matter. But Unmik and the local authorities in Kosovo and the Republic of Albania did have such jurisdiction, and also had the authority to undertake this,” she said.

“I know the reports cited in The Hunt led to an investigation by the Council of Europe, a draft of which was published on its website in March.”

Marty to be sued

Del Ponte said she was glad the Council had taken over the investigation, describing it as the “only credible one ever carried out by any competent body, either local or international”.

“Neither the Kosovo authorities nor the government or judiciary of the Republic of Albania have carried out any investigation into the statements in my book, and have now just dismissed the serious accusations contained in the Council of Europe report,” she told swissinfo.ch.

Indeed, on Thursday a senior Kosovo official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said Thaci had contacted attorneys to pursue a libel suit against Marty. The official said Thaci was also considering suing the London-based Guardian newspaper, which first published the report.

“So I beg the European Union, the United States, other interested countries and the United Nations to give Eulex [the EU police and justice mission] every political and material support to conduct a criminal investigation into these accusations and to bring to trial all those suspected of involvement in these crimes,” she said.

“Furthermore, I beg them all to redouble their efforts to build up and implement the necessary capacities for law enforcement and the eradication of illegal organ trafficking, in particular the harvesting of a person’s organs against their will.”…

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



Kosovo: European Rights Watchdog Committee Approves Report on Organ Trafficking

Belgrade, 16 Dec. (AKI) — The Council of Europe legal and human rights committee on Thursday approved a report on human organ trafficking in Kosovo, compiled by its investigator Dick Marty, which singled out Kosovo prime minister Hashim Thaci.

“I think we have revealed enough material to justify a thorough, serious and independent investigation and first of all to create conditions for witnesses to talk, because that is a problem,” Marty told a press conference in Paris after submitting the report.

“There have been cases during trials at the international tribunal for war crimes that witnesses, who agreed to testify, were killed,” he added.

“What particularly shocked me in this whole story, is that most facts revealed in this report have been known to numerous institutions and organisations, but they kept silent about it,” Marty concluded.

In the report based on a two-year investigation, Marty, a Swiss diplomat, refers to Thaci as being the head of a “mafia-like” group involved in human organ as well as drug and arms trafficking.

Kosovo officials have refuted Marty’s claims as “malicious, baseless and defamatory.” Kosovo government spokesman Memli Krasnici said on Thursday Thaci was consulting wtih lawyers and considering a lawsuit against Marty.

Thaci, who last Sunday won the first parliamentary elections since Kosovo’s declaration of independence from Serbia in 2008, was scheduled to hold a press conference in Pristina later on Thursday.

Natasa Vuckovic, a member of Serbian delegation at the Council of Europe, told media that there were attempts at a meeting in Paris to postpone a vote on Marty’s report for January, but most committee members decided the revelations were “too serious” to postpone.

After the committee approval, the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly will discuss Marty’s report and a draft resolution on Kosovo at its January session, Vuckovic said.

Marty said in the report that Thaci, a former commander of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) which started a rebellion against Serbian rule in 1999, and members of his Drenica group, were suspected of being key players in the criminal operations.

“Thaci and these other Drenica Group members are consistently named as ‘key players’ in intelligence reports on Kosovo’s mafia-like structures of organised crime.

“I have examined these diverse, voluminous reports with consternation and a sense of moral outrage,” Marty said in the report.

Thaci and his group are blamed for transporting Serb prisoners to northern Albania where they were killed. Their organs, mostly kidneys, were harvested and sold to western clients.

Marty criticised “faltering political will on the part of the international community to effectively prosecute the former leaders of the KLA” for political reasons.

Kosovo majority Albanians declared independence in February 2008, which has been recognised by seventy countries, including the United States and 22 EU members. Serbia opposes Kosovo’s independence.

Serbian foreign minister Vuk Jeremic said Marty’s report was a “great moral test for the international community” ahead of forthcoming talks between Belgrade and Pristina on a variety of issues.

President Boris Tadic said he would talk with “any legal representatives” of Kosovo Albanians. “But if the allegations concerning Thaci prove to be true, then the international community will have to take a stand on it and I will adjust my position accordingly,” Tadic said.

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



Kosovo: Organ Trafficking; Belgrade, About 500 Victims

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, DECEMBER 16 — Belgrade reported approximately 500 victims of the organ trafficking ring which the speaker of the Council of Europe Marty attributed to the pro-independence Albanians of the Kosovo Liberation Army (Uck).

The statement was made by the Serb prosecutor for war crimes Vladimir Vukcevic.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks: President Tadic Conspires Against His Own People

By Srdja Trifkovic

WikiLeaks releases have not prompted a major reassessment of the U.S. foreign policy thus far, but the documents are nevertheless helpful in upgrading some tentative conclusions into incontrovertible facts. An interesting case in point is the relationship between Serbia and the United States.

Two months ago I wrote that for some years now President Boris Tadic and his cohorts have been conspiring with their foreign mentors to give up on Kosovo while pretending otherwise, and that they have capitulated to Brussels and Washington on all fronts. The above assessment has now become a “known known” thanks to WikiLeaks: Tadic and his team are acting exactly as described. Particularly noteworthy is a report sent last February 10 by the U.S. Ambassador in Belgrade, Mary Worlick, on her conversation with Tadic’s foreign policy advisor Jovan Ratkovic a week earlier:

Serbia intended to continue its cooperation with the U.S. on sensitive intelligence matters and to increase defense cooperation … The Ambassador conveyed U.S. concerns about indications that Serbia would continue to take a confrontational approach on Kosovo … Dismissing the question of whether Serbia would seek an UNGA resolution calling for new status talks as a ‘mere tactical issue’ Ratkovic said the Presidency was focused on the bigger question … Tadic believes that Serbia cannot remain outside of NATO forever, but doesn’t say this often because of the political sensitivity of the issue.

JOINT CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE — To start with, it is evident that “the Presidency” is violating the constitution of Serbia, adopted in 2006, by usurping the powers to define and execute the country’s security, defense and foreign policies, all of which are explicitly reserved for the Government.

Tadic is also acting in violation of the National Assembly Resolution on Military Neutrality (December 2007), which precludes NATO membership. He is acting contrary to the overwhelming opposition of the people of Serbia to joining an alliance that illegally bombed Serbia for 78 days in 1999 before amputating a part of its sovereign territory and turning it into a hotbed of organ-harvesting jihadist criminality. He is acting contrary to his own public statements (“Serbia will remain neutral”), while at the same time his aides are providing conspiratorial assurances to the U.S. Ambassador that such words should not be taken seriously: the President is not telling the nation what he really thinks because the issue is so politically sensitive.

Worse still, Tadic is violating his oath of office which pledges him to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Serbia, including Kosovo as its integral part. The extent to which he treated the UN General Assembly resolution as a mere “tactical issue” became obvious on September 10. On that day Serbia effectively surrendered its claim to Kosovo when Tadic arbitrarily altered the text of the draft UN resolution — previously adopted by the Government of Serbia and duly approved by the Assembly — to exclude any mention of Kosovo’s disputed status. He acted unconstitutionally both by usurping the powers not vested in his office and by violating his pledge to defend Serbia’s territorial integrity.

SUPPORTING UNITARY BOSNIA — According to Ambassador Worlick, Ratkovic reiterated to her that the Serbian government supported the territorial integrity of Bosnia-Herzegovina “and would not be swayed by what he claimed was the desire of the majority of Republika Srpska residents to secede and merge with Serbia”:…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tunisia: Le Kef Region Hit by Snow

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, DECEMBER 16 — Snow has been falling in the high elevations of the Le Kef region (a mountainous region inland in Tunisia) since last night. Snowfall has affected the Sakiet Sidi Youssef and Tourief areas in particular, in addition to the city of Le Kef itself.

Farmers are particularly pleased with the situation, as they consider the snow to be a good fertiliser. Temperatures are relatively low across the rest of the country, with scattered showers. The sea conditions are rough and the adverse weather in general is expected to continue until Sunday.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Bloggers Claim WikiLeaks Struck Deal With Israel Over Diplomatic Cables Leaks

The lack of information damaging to Israel in the cables released by WikiLeaks has provided fodder for conspiracy theorists.

PARIS — It was only a matter of time before conspiracy theorists came out of the woodwork to suggest that Israel is behind the publication of the WikiLeaks trove — and is manipulating the information coming out to help Israeli interests.

“Where is the real dirt on Israel?” these conspiracy theorists — messaging back and forth in the blogosphere — are asking one another.

“The answer appears to be a secret deal struck between WikiLeaks’ … Assange … with Israeli officials, which ensured that all such documents were ‘removed’ before the rest were made public,” wrote Gordon Duff, an editor of the anti-war website Veterans Today, who frequently opines about what he believes is Israeli’s secret influence over world events.

Speaking to Haaretz, Duff added that “it sticks out like a sore thumb that WikiLeaks is obviously concocted by an intelligence agency. It’s a ham-handed action by Israel to do its public relations.”

Meanwhile, Al Haqiqa, an Arabic language webzine, citing disgruntled WikiLeaks volunteers, adds more details to the conspiracy, suggesting that this “secret agreement” between Assange and “the Mossad,” which allegedly took place in Geneva, involved Assange’s promise not to publish any document that “may harm Israeli security or diplomatic interests.”

“The Israel government, it seems, had somehow found out or expected that the documents to be leaked contained a large number of documents about the Israeli attacks on Lebanon and Gaza in 2006 and 2008-9 respectively,” adds an anonymous blogger on IndyMedia. “These documents, which are said to have originated mainly from the American embassies in Tel Aviv and Beirut, were removed and possibly destroyed by Assange, who is the only person who knows the password that can open these documents, the sources added.”

Remy Ourdon, who is in charge of the WikiLeaks project for Le Monde — one of the five international newspapers that were given advance copies of the cables by Assange — counters that it is incorrect to claim there are no cables of interest about Israel.

“Not everything has come out yet,” he tells Haaretz. “There are tens of thousands of cables and many surprises still coming. There is almost no country which does not have some cables emanating from it.”

Moreover, stresses Ourdon, contrary to the conspiracy theorists’ charges, Assange is not in control of which cables WikiLeaks publishes — that is determined solely by what the person who obtained the cables was able to access and pass along.

Other observers offer an alternative explanation for the lack — so far — of many insightful cables out of Israel. For example, Ed Abington, a former U.S. consul general in Jerusalem (1993-1997 ) suggests, on facebook, that it might have something to do with the level of information being offered out of the country…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Caroline Glick: Bringing Bibi Down

Over the past week, two writers published columns in foreign newspapers. One received wall to wall coverage in Israel. The other was completely ignored. The contrasting fortunes of the articles are a key to understanding the central challenges to Israel’s democratic order.

Last Friday, Saeb Erekat, the Palestinian Authority’s chief peace negotiator with Israel published an op-ed in Britain’s Guardian newspaper in which he declared eternal war on the Jewish state. This he did by asserting that any peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians that does not permit the immigration of some 7 million foreign Arabs to Israel will be “completely untenable.”

So as far as the supposedly moderate chief Palestinian negotiator is concerned, a peace deal in which Israel cedes Judea and Samaria and Jerusalem to the Palestinians as the Israeli Left desires will not be sufficient for the Palestinians. Unless Israel also agrees to commit national suicide by accepting 7 million foreign Arabs as citizens, the Palestinians will continue to wage their war. With or without a Palestinian state, as long as Israel exists, the Palestinians will continue to seek its destruction…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



For a Local Chief Rabbi, The Laws of the “Jewish” State Ought to be Subject to the Torah

The proposal is made during the Conference on the Laws of the Torah. The “state, as a Jewish state, must bring the Jewish law into account to a greater degree,” says Rabbi Ratzon Arusi. Consequently, every High Court of Justice should refer to religious law.

Jerusalem (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Kiryat Ono’s chief rabbi, Ratzon Arusi, said that every law in Israel should be evaluated from the perspective of Jewish law, which is “our duty as the Jewish state,” he said. Arusi, who holds a PhD in law, with his expertise being Jewish law, spoke at the 20th International Conference on the Laws of the Torah that began yesterday. His proposal generated a heated debate in the country.

During the opening session, attended by Israel’s Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi Yona Metzger, cabinet ministers and members of the Knesset, Arusi proposed a broader use of Jewish law, which besides the mandatory evaluation of Knesset bills, will determine that every High Court of Justice ruling must relate to Jewish law as well, and that all judges undergo special training in Jewish law.

“We must make up our minds if this is the Jewish state or not,” Arusi said ahead of the conference in a statement. “I won’t force every person at a court to be checked to see if he keeps kosher or is Shabbat observant, but that state, as a Jewish state, must bring the Jewish law into account to a greater degree.”

Last year, at the same event, Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman, who will also be attending Monday’s conference, raised a public outcry when he said, “step by step, Torah law will become the binding law in the State of Israel. We have to reinstate the traditions of our forefathers, the teaching of the rabbis of the Ages because these offer a solution to all the issues we are dealing with today.”

The Foundations of Law Act, passed in 1980, says that every question that comes before the court in which there is no existing law or precedent has to be adjudicated in accordance with Jewish tradition.

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



The Canary in the Gold Mine

It has become a cliché by this time that Israel is the canary in the coal mine, signaling to those still on the surface, that is, those who believe they are above the fray, the dangers that await in the future if precautions are not taken. And like all cliche’s, it articulates a general truth. As Eric Hoffer famously said in a 1968 article for the Los Angeles Times, “I have a premonition that will not leave me; as it goes with Israel, so it will go with all of us. Should Israel perish, the holocaust will be upon us.”

Echoing Hoffer, Dutch Party for Freedom (PPV) leader Geert Wilders affirmed in a speech delivered in Tel Aviv on December 5, 2010 in praise and support of the Jewish state, “It is here that our civilization is under attack…It is here that Israel has lit the light of freedom and that Europeans and Americans must help the Israelis to keep that light shining in the darkness.” For Israel is the West’s frontline army in the war against militant Islam, its “forlorn hope” (from the Dutch verleren hoop, soldiers placed in the most dangerous position or leading the charge).

As I wrote in Hear, O Israel!, “not until we can arrive at some understanding of the upsurge of Jew-hatred in the West and the red herring of anti-Zionism, whether in the form of public odium and acts of anti-Semitic vandalism or in the flagrant anti-Israeli drift of the media, the Academy, the Churches and the European polity, will we be in a position to confront our weakness and complicity.” Only when we realize that, in adopting the Islamic attitude vis à vis Jews and the Jewish state, we are seeking to conciliate instead of confronting the forces arrayed against us, which only renders us more vulnerable in the long run.

But although Israel remains a fixture in the press and elicits a disproportionate amount of public and official denunciation, few of us invest much time thinking about the canary as such and what it portends. On the contrary, it is often viewed as wholly expendable and, indeed, many of us are hoping that it will expire quickly, a climactic mistake to be redeemed by its disappearance. Clearly, the Jewish state may be the West’s sacrificial canary but that does not inspire gratitude. Israel can be happily relinquished to the noxious fumes of the Muslim Middle East, after which the West can either follow suit or, now forewarned, take appropriate measures…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Middle East


CIA Accused of Role in Iran Suicide Bombing

Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar charged on Friday the CIA was involved in the suicide bombing in southeast Iran as the death toll rose to 36.

“From the inspection of equipment obtained from the terrorist elements of this crime, it has become clear that the CIA and other spy agencies were involved,” he was quoted as saying on state television’s website. Najjar did not give details.

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, meanwhile, accused the West of working to divide the Muslim world.

“Our people know the objective of the enemy. They realise that the arrogance (West) does not want the Muslim world to be sovereign,” Khamenei said in a message read out at a funeral for victims of the attack.

“Enemies do not want to see the unity of Muslims,” he added. Iranian officials previously accused US and British intelligence services of having a hand in Wednesday’s attack in the city of Chabahar but without naming any specific agency.

The attack on a Shiite religious procession was claimed by Sunni militant group Jundallah (Army of God), which says it is fighting for the rights of the region’s Sunni ethnic Baluchi community against Iran’s Shiite regime.

Iranian media on Friday said the death toll has climbed to 36 from the suicide bombing during the annual Shiite mourning rituals of Ashura, while dozens of others were wounded.

Nine people linked to the bombing have reportedly been arrested.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Daughter of Turkish Premier Fuels Debate on Headscarf

When Sumeyye Erdogan, the youngest daughter of the Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, took a seat on the visitors’ balcony of a meeting room inside Ankara’s parliament building to listen to a speech by her father a few weeks ago, no one assumed the appearance was a coincidence or pure family business.

Recent sightings of Ms Erdogan, 29, at several of her father’s political meetings have triggered speculation in the media that she may be preparing to enter politics and run for a parliamentary seat at elections scheduled for June next year.

Although Ms Erdogan says her father does not want her to enter politics, the rumours swirling around her political ambition have a wider significance: in order for her to enter parliament, Turkey would have to lift the ban on the Islamic headscarf for parliamentary deputies.

Ms Erdogan wears the headscarf, as does her mother, her sister and millions of other Turkish women. Mr Erdogan, a devout Muslim who is accused by his opponents of following a hidden agenda to turn Turkey into a Islamic state, has refused to rule out changing the rules on the garment in parliament.

A long-time headscarf ban in Turkish universities, lifted only a few months ago, prevented Ms Erdogan from studying in her home country. With the financial help of Remzi Gur, a wealthy textile entrepreneur and a friend of the Erdogan family, Ms Erdogan went to the United States and to the United Kingdom to study political science and graduated from the London School of Economics in 2008.

Mr Gur has also paid for the higher education of Mr Erdogan’s other three children, Sumeyye’s older sister, Esra, and her brothers, Ahmet Burak and Necmeddin Bilal.

Unlike her siblings, Ms Erdogan has shown an intense interest in political affairs after her return to Turkey. She has accompanied her father on diplomatic trips in Turkey and abroad.

At the same time, she has been working as an “honorary adviser” to Mr Erdogan in his ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, as she said in the only interview she has given in response to the media speculation about her political ambition…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



FIFA Boss Sepp Blatter Sorry for Qatar ‘Gay’ Remarks

Fifa president Sepp Blatter has apologised for saying gay fans should “refrain from sexual activity” if they go to the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

Homosexuality is illegal in Qatar and Blatter’s original comments provoked outrage among gay rights groups who said he should apologise or resign.

Blatter said: “It was not my intention and never will be my intention to go into any discrimination.

“If somebody feels hurt, then I regret [it] and present apologies.”

Blatter sparked the controversy when, earlier this week, he apparently joked: “I’d say they [gay fans] should refrain from any sexual activities” if they go to the Gulf Nation for the 2022 tournament.

Then, speaking seriously, he said he was sure there would be no problems.

Fifa has come in for criticism after making the decision to take the World Cup to the Middle East for the first time.

Concerns were raised about hosting the tournament during the summer months in a country where temperatures can reach 40C to 50C and where current laws mean drinking alcohol in public is forbidden.

Gay groups are also worried about the acceptance of homosexual fans, and the Gay Football Supporters’ Network (GFSN) say Blatter’s original comments showed naivety about gay discrimination.

Former British basketball star John Amaechi, who is one of the world’s most high-profile gay athletes, was also critical of Blatter’s original comments, telling BBC Radio 5 live that it was the most childish response he could imagine.

However, Blatter, who is in Abu Dhabi for the Club World Cup, does not foresee any difficulties, saying: “You see in the Middle East the opening of this culture, it’s another culture because it’s another religion, but in football we have no boundaries.

“We open everything to everybody and I think there shall not be any discrimination against any human beings be it on this side or that side, be it left, right or whatever.

“If they want to watch a match somewhere in Qatar 2022, I’m sure they will be admitted to such matches.”

Qatar was the surprise winner of the race to host the 2022 World Cup, beating Australia, Japan, South Korea and the United States when the 22-man Fifa executive committee voted in Zurich on 2 December.

           — Hat tip: 4symbols [Return to headlines]



Iran Cuts Hezbollah Aid by ‘40 Percent’

Jerusalem 16 Dec. (AKI) — Iran has cut the annual budget it provides Hezbollah by over 40 percent, creating monetary difficulties for the radical Lebanese Shia organisation, the Jerusalem Post reported on Thursday, citing Israeli intelligence.

Tehran in recent years has provided Hezbollah with around 1 billion dollars in military aid but international sanctions have hurt the Islamic Republic prompting it to reel in direct funding, the report said.

A cut in funds may affect Hezbollah’s ability to buy advanced weaponry and to support a programme of training and paying operatives.

The cuts have stirred tensions between Hezbollah and the Hossein Mahadavi, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps officer whose responsibility it is to oversee the Lebanese group’s operations for its Iranian patron, according to the Jerusalem Post.

Hezbollah is refusing to accept Iran’s authority, the report said.

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



Iran Continues to Produce Disinformation

Abolghasem Bayyenat, reportedly a trade expert for the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Ministry of Commerce, and admittedly a former political officer in its Foreign Ministry, recently penned an article entitled “Economic Sanctions Against Iran”.1 In it, he claims that sanctions are counter-productive, causing pain only to the Iranian people and causing the regime further to resist efforts to find a diplomatic solution to the problem of nuclear proliferation. In his essay, Bayyenat suggests that Iran has successfully mitigated most of the effects of the sanctions, and that they are only hurting the innocent Iranian population.

Reports from Iran would seem to suggest that the truth is not quite as Bayyenat suggests. Yes, ordinary Iranians are suffering as the sanctions cause economic hardship, and yes, it is unlikely that the Khamenei-Ahmadinejad regime will relent and turn away from its pursuit of nuclear weaponry á la Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi, but to claim that these rounds of increasing sanctions are not affecting the Iranian regime is disingenuous at best. Even before the publication of Bayyenat’s article, Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran’s atomic energy agency, told the ISNA news agency on Wednesday, July 7th, that the sanctions could have some impact. “We cannot say the sanctions have no effect. Maybe they will slow down the work but they will not stop it, that’s certain,” said Salehi.2 The following day, Reihaneh Mazaheri, an Iranian economic journalist based in Paris, reported that as international sanctions mount, Iran is finding it increasing hard to find buyers for its oil, and is being forced to offer discounts in order to shift as much as it can to a falling number of customers.3

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Iraqi Christians Flee Baghdad After Cathedral Massacre

Thousands of Christians have been forced to flee in seeking refuge from militant attacks after the siege at a Catholic cathedral in October, the United Nations said today. .

The UN High Commission For Refugees said at least 1,000 families had fled Baghdad and Mosul since 1 September for the semi-autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. A further 133 families had registered with the organisation in Syria, as had 109 individuals in Jordan.

Father Hanna, the leading Assyrian Catholic priest in Beirut said that 450 recently arrived families had contacted with his office and plan to ask the UN for help.

The mass movement of Iraq’s Christians, the remnants of which make up one of the most ancient communities in the Middle East, was sparked by the brutal siege in a Baghdad Assyrian Catholic cathedral on October 31, which left at least 58 people dead and around 100 injured.

Since then, Christian families have been increasingly targeted in their homes, among them survivors of the church massacre. The violence is being driven by al-Qaida and its affiliates and is being seen as an attempt to ignite sectarian chaos after repeated attempts to lure Iraq’s Shias back into battle had failed.

“We have heard many accounts of people fleeing their homes after receiving direct threats. Some were able to take only a few belongings with them,” the UN report said…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Steven Spielberg Was Target of Arab League Boycott, WikiLeaks Cable

Steven Spielberg was blacklisted by the Arab League’s Central Boycott Office after making a $1m (£645m) donation to Isreal during the 2006 conflict in Lebanon.

A US embassy memo released by WikiLeaks reveals that during a meeting of the group in April 2007, diplomats or representatives from 14 Arab states voted to ban all films and other products related to Spielberg or his Righteous Persons Foundation.

At the confidential US briefing, the head of the Syrian regional office for the boycott of Israel, Muhammad al-Ajami, said that Algeria, Iraq, Lebanon, Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, the Palestinian Authority, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen had agreed to ban all Spielberg’s works.

Malaysia, Iran, Pakistan and Indonesia were also present at the meeting and voted in favour of the boycott. The memo from the US embassy in Damascus to Washington says that “they and other countries will likely implement their own bans” similar to that adopted by the Arab states.

At the same meeting, cosmetics giant Estée Lauder was added to the blacklist while financial services behemoth Merrill Lynch was placed on a “watchlist”.

The only Arab states which did not attend the meeting were those who have signed separate peace accords with Israel, namely, Egypt (which also has a thriving film industry and holds the annual Cairo film festival), Mauritania and Jordan. Djibouti and Somalia were not present at the meeting either.

Marvin Levy, spokesman for Steven Spielberg, said: “While we can’t comment on a leaked cable, we know that the films and DVDs have been sold globally in the normal distribution through all this time.”

But Chris Doyle at the Council for Arab-British Understanding said the boycott was an “understandable” reaction to Spielberg’s donation.

“It would be consistent with other decisions in the past over boycotting both companies and people who have done something equivalent,” he said. “The donation would have been seen as hypocritical, given the ethical stance Steven Spielberg has taken on other issues including Darfur, and would have caused a lot of anger.

“The depiction of Arabs in Raiders of the Lost Ark was very poor, cartoon-like and full of the usual stereotypes,” he added. “In a broader context, this applies to so many Hollywood films where Arabs for decades have been ludicrously depicted.”

The Arab League boycott is a systematic, pro-Palestinian effort by Arab League member states to economically isolate Israel and weaken the country’s economic and military strength.

Israeli boycotts by the League are, however, inconsistently enforced across the member states, with individual states often going their own way. Only Lebanon and Syria now adhere to it stringently.

Steven Spielberg set up the Righteous Persons Foundation in 1994. Using his personal profits from the film Schindler’s List and, later, Munich, the Foundation is dedicated to helping create a strong Jewish community in the United States.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Trial is Next Chapter in Clash Between Turkey’s Muslim Leaders, Secular Elite

The latest installment of civil-military confrontation in Turkey began Thursday with the opening of a trial of nearly 200 active and retired military officers on charges of plotting to overthrow the conservative Muslim government in 2003.

The indictment in the trial, which is being held in the town of Silivri, outside Istanbul, outlines an alleged plot to create instability that would pave the way for a military coup. The Turkish military has several times voiced its discontent with the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, since the party came to power in 2002.

According to the indictment, the plot, dubbed “Sledgehammer,” was drawn up in 2003 and would have begun with operatives setting off bombs in two mosques in central Istanbul and making it look as if Greek forces had shot down a Turkish military jet. It also allegedly made a list of journalists who would be jailed and a list of potential appointees to ministerial posts, according to Taraf, the daily newspaper that broke the story in early January.

The defendants have denied the allegations, saying that their activities were part of a military training exercise simulating scenarios of domestic strife. If convicted, the officers, who include serving generals and admirals as well as former air force and naval commanders, could face sentences of up to 20 years in prison.

The prosecution of such high-ranking military personnel would have been unthinkable as recently as 2007 in a country that still has a constitution written by the last military junta. But mass indictments of prominent military, media, academic and political figures have become common in Turkey in the past two years. Roughly 400 people have been charged with efforts to topple the AKP government, most of them allegedly as members of a shadowy organization known as Ergenekon, which prosecutors claim has been behind other efforts to overthrow or interfere with the civilian elected government.

The Turkish public remains divided over such indictments. Supporting the prosecutions are the economically emerging Muslim conservatives, who want to claim a greater space for Islam in public life, as well as opponents of the military who want to lessen its influence over the government. They point to Turkey’s history of military ousters of democratically elected governments in 1960, 1972 and 1980, as well as the soft coup of 1997.

For critics, the Sledgehammer case represents an increasingly open attempt to dismantle elements within the military that are viewed as unfriendly toward the AKP. Opponents include members of the military and a formerly ruling elite who adhere to a strict interpretation of secularism and view the new ruling Muslims as a threat. This case, they say, is a political move to retaliate against figures who have spoken out against the AKP, an accusation the government denies.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



UAE: Muslim World Claims World’s ‘Most Expensive’ Christmas Tree

Abu Dhabi, 17 Dec. (AKI) — The most expensive Christmas tree in the world stands at 43 feet tall in the heart of muslim Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates.

The energy-rich country has placed the 11 million-dollar tree, whose value comes from the over 130 gold, sapphire and diamond decorations that adorn it, in the opulent Emirates Palace hotel.

Hotel manager Hans Olbertz told Dubai’s Gulf News the aim was to create a “unique tree and experience for our guests this year.”

Christmas is commonly celebrated in Abu Dhabi, due to the large number of tourists and the expatriate population that fuel celebrations.

The hotel is considering bidding for Guinness World Records status as most expensive Christmas tree, according to Olbertz.

The current title for most expensive tree, cited on the Guinness website goes to a tree in Tokyo, Japan in 2002 which had a value of $10.8 million dollars and decorated with 83 pieces of jewellery.

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

Russia


Mufti Accuses Russian Authorities of Islamophobia

Moscow, December 17, Interfax — Head of the Russian Council of Muftis Ravil Gainutdin has accused the state of thwarting the unification of Muslims and attempts to “suppress Islam in Russia,” and called the members of a recently formed Russian Muftiyat (Islamic Council) “puppets” and “sleazy people.”

“In 2009, during the Kurban-Bairam (Eid al-Adha) mufti Talgat Tadzhuddin suggested a merger of three centralized Muslim organizations. After this proposal was studied, head of the Caucasus Muslims Berdiyev and I held a meeting with Talgat Tadzhuddin. We set up a working group and started the work of unification. However, the state did not like this decision. It was made known that the opinion of Tagat Tadzhuddin’s proposal was not consistent with the state policy,” Gainutdin said in an interview with the Tatar edition of Radio Liberty.

Ravil Gainutdin’s criticisms against the state were also prompted by the recent formation of the fourth Russian muftiyat — the Russian Association of Islamic Accord, aimed in particular to oppose the unification process.

“The newly made ‘pocket’ muftis, opposing the growth of Islam will become strident “puppets.” These puppets who are working in the government, such as Islamophobe Grishin [Russian Presidential Administration Advisor in charge of liaisons with Islamic organizations], for instance, will no doubt try to suppress Islam in Russia, particularly being aware that currently Islam in Russia is a big factor, and focusing specifically on this will attempt to stop the growth of Islam. This has already started to materialize,” Gainutdin said.

Commenting on the recent riots in Moscow, motivated by ethnic animosity, Gainutdin said that a very strong pressure is being felt in the capital where more than 2 million Muslims live.

“Due to the lack of mosques Muslims have to perform festive prayers on the street, on tram rails, even at church courtyards. Thus, the humiliation of Muslims, the discriminating policy against civil rights continues. All Muslims, the whole Islamic world can see that,” the Mufti said.

“The unrest in St. Petersburg, Moscow was prompted by attitudes towards Islam,” he said. “One might say that the disaster as a result of which so many people ended up in hospitals, and the violent clashes were the result of efforts to belittle the role of Muslims in Russia,” the Mufti said.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Nationalist Riots in Russia Spread Fear Among Muslims

Muslims gathered for Friday prayers at Moscow’s central mosque on Friday said they were afraid and angry at a nationalist riot last week that saw hundreds make fascist salutes beside the Kremlin walls. The chief imam at the mosque said that fewer people than usual had attended prayers, blaming fears after the violent riot, triggered by the shooting of a football fan in a fight with men from the Russian Caucasus.

Football fans and ultranationalists clashed with police on the central Manezh Square on December 11 in a protest ostensibly at police handling of the shooting of a Spartak Moscow football fan. The unsanctioned rally quickly turned into a riot with hooded youths chanting racist slogans and beating up people from the Russian Caucasus and Central Asia.

Usually, thousands of worshippers roll out prayer rugs on the pavement outside the cramped mosque. But this Friday, all the worshippers stayed within the gates.

“Because of this situation, on the ordinary days this week there have been fewer people,” imam Ildar Khazrat Alyautdinov told AFP. “Every day we can see there are noticeably fewer people. “Of course there are fears over safety,” said Alyautdinov. “There are fears for their lives, of course people are afraid.” He said he warned parishioners not to travel alone or go out at night. The mosque has an eclectic congregation, ranging from fur-coated Muscovites to Central Asian migrant workers in tracksuits and thin jackets. The service is in both Russian and Arabic. More than 20 million Muslims live in Russia, concentrated in Moscow and Saint Petersburg as well as in historically Muslim regions in the North Caucasus and close to the Urals. Migrant workers from Central Asia are another large group.

The sermon began with the preacher saying he was saddened by the riot and calling for Muslims to “move forward.”

“It’s sad, unpleasant because someone is trying to split up society, while we have always lived in a multi-confessional, multi-national society,” the imam told AFP, calling the attackers “frozen inside, empty.”

Following the riot, several people phoned the mosque warning of forthcoming skinhead attacks, the imam said.

“They are trying to scare us, but it won’t work.” One worshipper from Tajikistan, Mukhamed Musayev, said he had experienced several racist attacks.

“We are afraid to walk alone at night. I’ve already seen with my own eyes someone being killed. And I also have been attacked, there were six people, skinheads.”

Others said they wanted to fight back when they heard about the riot. Worshippers said they believed the riot was not spontaneous and that nationalists simply used the death of Spartak Moscow fan Yegor Sviridov to push their own agenda…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

South Asia


CIA Man Pulled Out of Pakistan Amid Drone Attack Storm

The CIA pulls its top spy out of Pakistan after an unprecedented legal action against him and threats to his life.

The man — named by the Pakistani journalist who brought the lawsuit as Jonathan Banks — is said to be responsible for ordering US drone attacks on tribal areas of Pakistan — one of which reportedly killed two white British Muslim converts fighting with al-Qaeda forces in the North Waziristan area earlier this week.

Banks — the CIA station chief in Islamabad — was pulled out of Pakistan yesterday after being named along with the CIA director Leon Panetta and the US Defense Secretary Robert Gates as being responsible for the deaths of the son and brother of journalist Kareem Khan in a drone attack on Mirali in December 2009.

Kahn’s application to register the case against Banks says: “Jonathan Banks is operating from the US embassy in Islamabad which is a clear violation of diplomatic norms and laws, as a foreign mission cannot be used for any criminal activity within a sovereign state.”

He also alleged that Banks was in the country on a business visa, which would give him no diplomatic status and thus not protect him from prosecution…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Indonesian Christians Say No to Christmas Protection by Muslim Radicals

In league with Indonesia’s police chief, Islamic Defender Front leader Risieq Shihab promises to protect Christians but only if their communities are authorised. Catholics and Protestants reject the offer because it would curtail religious freedom and negatively affect relations between Christians and local authorities, who alone have the right to provide security to churches.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Indonesian Christians have criticised the Islamic fundamentalist group Islamic Defender Front (FPI) for saying that it would protect Christian communities during Christmas celebrations. “Why would this radical group, which is notorious for its anti-Christian violence, want to be so nice to us? We say no to their offer,” a Catholic man from Semarang diocese asked.

“Let Christians celebrate Christmas in peace. It is their right and all Indonesian citizens should respect that,” said FPI chief Risieq Shihab during a meeting with Police Chief Timur Pradopo on Tuesday. However, the peace and protection he has in mind would only be for those Christian communities that respect Indonesia’s strict religious laws. In fact, the fundamentalist group Shihab leads would stop any Catholic or Protestant celebration held in violation of the law.

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



Pakistan: Radical Muslims Plan Mass Protest in Defense of Blasphemy Law

Radical Islamic groups in Pakistan are planning a mass protest on December 24 to urge the nation’s government not to release Asia Bibi from prison or to change the nation’s anti-blasphemy law. Bibi, a Christian mother who refused to convert to Islam, is in prison awaiting a death sentence for blasphemy.

The Pakistani bishops’ commission for justice and peace is expressing “great concern at the increasing tension, at the possible outcomes of the protest, and the situation in which religious minorities may be, especially Christians.”

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: The British White Converts Signing Up to Fight Against Our Troops for Al Qaeda

A string of white British Muslim converts have travelled to Pakistan to fight for Al Qaeda, defence sources said yesterday.

The claim comes after two white UK militants were reported to have been killed in a drone attack in the lawless border area of North Waziristan.

One of them was said to have been training extremists in using weapons and tactics in camps around the inaccessible tribal belt.

Drone attack: Two white Britons are reported to have been killed in Pakistan by a US attack — and are thought to be among a number of white Muslims who are fighting for Al Qaeda

A local official in the town of Data Khel, close to where the remote-controlled drone struck, claimed the surnames of the pair were Stephen and Dearsmith.

However, the Foreign Office made clear that there had been no official confirmation that Britons had died in the missile attack seven days ago.

Sources warned that the reports could be propaganda put out by the Taliban to encourage more British Islamists to the region to join the fight against coalition forces, including British soldiers, in neighbouring Afghanistan.

They also suggested that the Pakistani security services might have concocted the claims to stifle criticism of their failure to tackle extremism in the country.

But defence insiders admitted it would be ‘unsurprising’ if the allegations turned out to be true.

‘Do we know radicalised white British converts have travelled to Pakistan over recent years with the intention of joining the insurgency? The answer is yes,’ said one.

Traitor: John Walker Lindh is serving 20 years in a U.S. jail after he was found with Taliban prisoners in Afghanistan during 2001

If the reports are confirmed, the two men would be the first white British radicals to have been killed in the area.

British militant Abdul Jabbar, of Asian descent and thought to be from Birmingham, died in a drone strike in September. He was suspected of planning a string of commando attacks on European cities.

One of the latest pair was an Al Qaeda operative with a ‘previous history of operations with the organisation in Afghanistan’…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Scores Die as Drones Renew Attack on Pakistan’s Khyber

Nearly 60 people have been killed in a series of attacks by US drones in the past 24 hours in Pakistan’s Khyber tribal district, officials say.

At least 50 died in three unmanned air strikes in the Tirah Valley, a day after seven others were killed nearby.

Security officials say all the dead in the attacks are militants — a claim that cannot be independently confirmed.

Meanwhile, the CIA has withdrawn its top spy from Pakistan, amid threats to his life, US intelligence confirms.

The Islamabad station chief had been identified in a lawsuit linking him to drone strikes, and media coverage of the legal action led to his name appearing on placards during anti-US protests in the Pakistani capital.

‘Leaders killed’

US drone attacks in Pakistan’s tribal region have increased under the presidency of Barack Obama, often occurring several times every week.

But the US now appears to be expanding its campaign to other parts of the tribal belt, as most of these attacks have been in the Waziristan region, says the BBC’s Syed Shoaib Hasan in Karachi.

Drone attacks in Khyber are rare.

The first missile attack on Friday in the Tirah Valley is said to have taken place at 0800 local time (0300 GMT).

Seven Taliban militants died and 11 were injured when two vehicles were targeted in the Sandana area, a Pakistani security official told the BBC.

Those killed were militants from outside the Khyber tribal region, said the official.

Minutes later there was another attack in the Speen Drang area at a compound where pro-Taliban militants from the Lashkar-e-Islam group were holding a meeting.

At least 32 people, including senior leaders of the group, died, according to the official.

The Lashkar-e-Islam group is trying to enforce its hardline version of Sharia law in the area. A small number of its militants are involved in fighting Nato forces across the border in Afghanistan.

The third attack took place in the afternoon in the Narai Baba area, the official said.

“A compound was hit killing at least 11 militants,” the official told the BBC. “All were from Swat and were taking refuge due to the military operation there.”

On Thursday, at least seven more militants loyal to Taliban chief Hafiz Gul Bahadur died when several drone missiles demolished a house…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Far East


North Korea Warns South Korea to Stop Planned Artillery Drills on Disputed Island

North Korea has again warned its southern neighbour to stop planned artillery drills on disputed islands and said it would launch two retaliatory strikes if it failed to comply.

South Korea has said it plans to carry out a 24-hour live-fire drill on Yeonpyeong Island sometime between Saturday and Tuesday, depending on weather.

Pyongyang, which claims ownership of nearby waters and has said it considers the drills an infringement of its territory, responded to similar firing exercises last month by shelling the tiny island.

Tense: South Korean marines patrol on Yeongpyeong Island as the country announced it would stage further artillery drills over the weekend

That attack killed four people on the island, including two civilians, which is home to a fishing community and military bases.

An unnamed senior North Korean military official told the Korean Central News Agency that if the south carried out more drills ‘despite our military’s prior warnings, second and third unpredictable self-defensive strikes will be made’.

A notice sent to the South Korean military today added that the retaliation would be made ‘to safeguard our republic’s sacred territorial waters’ and that the ‘intensity and scope of the strike will be more serious than the November 23 shelling’…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Venus Probe’s Problems May Cause Japan to Scale Back

SAN FRANCISCO — The failure of a Japanese probe to enter orbit around Venus last week will likely cause the nation’s space program to dial back its ambitions a bit, a mission scientist said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Mauritania: Militants Against Slavery Arrested

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, DECEMBER 15 — Nine militants from an organisation that fights slavery in Mauritania were beaten and arrested on Monday after demonstrating to denounce the fact that two young girls aged 9 and 13 were being held in slavery in Nouakchott. The Foundation for Human and Humanitarian Rights (FONADH) has demanded the immediate release of the nine militants, including the director of the organisation President of the Resurgence of the Abolitionist Movement (IRA), Biram Ould Dah Ould Abeid. For its part, the police have stated that the militants attacked the security forces, injuring six officers, and that they then sacked the police station, shouting racist and abusive phrases. Photos of the policemen injured “by the throwing of stones and dangerous objects used by the demonstrators” were released to the media. FONADH has launched an appeal to the authorities for the case of the two girls held as slaves to be treated with the necessary speed. Ould Dah is used to accusing the Muslim scholars of being responsible for the continuing slavery in the country, a practice that was abolished in 1981 that persists in several parts of Mauritania. Last month the UN special envoy on forms of modern slavery stated that “there are still very serious cases” in Mauritania. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



South Africa: ‘It’s Like the Middle-East’

A quiet town is on the brink of a religious war after locals called the Muslim call to prayer a “nuisance” that will bring down their property value.

At the centre of the controversy is the Jaami Masjid Mosque in Church Street, Oudtshoorn.

The use of a loudspeaker for the athaan (call to prayer) has angered certain residents in the Karoo town.

Mufti Basheer Khan, the imam of the mosque, started using the PA system at the start of Ramadaan in 2010.

Since then, there has been an outcry from residents and the Ratepayers’ Association to silence the athaan.

Residents also say the mosque did not follow the proper procedures in getting approval from the municipality.

But Imam Khan denies any wrongdoing and says he followed the proper procedure and has documents to prove it.

He said: “I have taken away the early morning call to prayer so as not to disturb residents. The other call to prayer is during the day, before sunset and an hour after sunset. I cannot see how this could be a disturbance.”

But the Ratepayers’ Association says they are not condemning Islam but are totally against the use of loudspeakers for the call to prayer.

Chairperson Lizanne Pelham said: “It’s like living in the Middle-East. The imam said it would be a mosque without any call to prayer on a PA system.”

And her sentiments are echoed in letters to the municipality.

Tour operator Reinhold Hensel stays directly opposite the mosque.

He says in a letter to the municipality in May this year: “This mosque is not silent anymore since last September when the imam made the call to prayer over the speakers. This makes the lives of the local residents, including my family, unbearable.

“Not only am I personally disturbed by the call to prayer but my business, which is a bed and breakfast and a tour operation has been severely affected, to the point where I have to close my business.”

He goes on to write: “As there are historically no Muslim residents in the area, I can only assume that the reason for the mosque’s call to prayer with a complete lack of thought for local residents, is to chase out the existing community and lower the house prices so that these can be bought up by new Muslim residents.”

Law firm Cillers Odendaal representing a number of concerned residents and ratepayers state in a letter to the municipal manager: “The public address loudspeakers used to call prayers cause a nuisance to the surrounding property owners.”

But law firm Mahood Mai representing the mosque and Muslim residents states in a reply the Muslim community of Oudtshoorn have no wish to start a conflict with fellow residents with whom they have been living in peace….

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



WikiLeaks Cables: Sudanese President ‘Stashed $9bn in UK Banks’

Omar al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, has siphoned as much as $9bn out of his impoverished country, and much of it may be stashed in London banks, according to secret US diplomatic cables that recount conversations with the chief prosecutor of the international criminal court.

Some of the funds may be held by the part-nationalised Lloyds Banking Group, according to prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, who told US officials it was time to go public with the scale of Bashir’s theft in order to turn Sudanese public opinion against him.

“Ocampo suggested if Bashir’s stash of money were disclosed (he put the figure at $9bn), it would change Sudanese public opinion from him being a ‘crusader’ to that of a thief,” one report by a senior US official states. “Ocampo reported Lloyds bank in London may be holding or knowledgeable of the whereabouts of his money,” the cable says. “Ocampo suggested exposing Bashir had illegal accounts would be enough to turn the Sudanese against him.”

Lloyds responded by saying it had no evidence of holding funds in Bashir’s name. “We have absolutely no evidence to suggest there is any connection between Lloyds Banking Group and Mr Bashir. The group’s policy is to abide by the legal and regulatory obligations in all jurisdictions in which we operate.”

Details of the allegations emerge in the latest batch of leaked embassy cables released by WikiLeaks which reveal that:…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Asylum Seeker Aso Mohammed Ibrahim Who Let Girl, 12, Die Can Stay in UK

The decision to stop the deportation of a failed asylum seeker who ran over a child and left her to ‘die like a dog’ is to be appealed by the UK Border Agency.

Aso Mohammed Ibrahim knocked down Amy Houston, 12, and fled the scene without getting her any help — leaving her trapped under the wheels. He was driving while disqualified and after the little girl’s death he committed a string of further offences.

But the Human Rights Act — which David Cameron had personally pledged to scrap — has allowed Ibrahim to win his fight in Britain.

Immigration Minister Damian Green said: ‘We are extremely disappointed at the tribunal’s decision and are appealing.

‘He was convicted of committing an offence that led to the tragic death of a twelve year old child and it is our view that he should be removed.’

‘Ridiculous’: Aso Mohammed Ibrahim will be allowed to remain in the UK despite leaving Amy Houston, 12, dying under the wheels of his car in November 2003, because deporting him would ‘breach his human rights’

Earlier this year Mr Cameron wrote to Amy’s father promising reforms that would ensure ‘that rights are better balanced against responsibilities’.

He said the Human Rights Act would be replaced by a British Bill of Rights.

But yesterday immigration judges ruled that sending Ibrahim, an Iraqi Kurd, home would breach his right to a ‘private and family life’ as he has now fathered two children in the UK.

Last night Amy’s father Paul branded the Act an ‘abomination to civilised society’.

He said: ‘This decision shows the Human Rights Act to be nothing more than a charter for thieves, killers, terrorists and illegal immigrants.’

The ruling heaped pressure on Mr Cameron to reinstate a Tory pre-election pledge to abolish the HRA and replace it with a British Bill of Rights. He stated that pledge unequivocally in a letter to Mr Houston, written in January when he was still Leader of the Opposition, and shortly after the death of his son Ivan.

It began: ‘As someone who sadly has been recently bereaved, I do have a little idea of what you must have been through.’

Last night Mr Houston, a 41-year-old engineer, made a direct plea to Mr Cameron to think again.

He said: ‘He needs to take a long, hard look at himself and make the right decision for this country because as it stands the Human Rights Act is on the side of criminals, terrorists and thieves against law-abiding citizens.

‘He wrote to me to say he would bring in the British Bill of Rights but that appears to have been put in the back burner because of the Coalition.

‘I don’t want to see this matter sidelined. I think it needs to be placed very firmly on the agenda again. If he has got the courage of his convictions that is what he will do.

Angry: Paul Houston, father of Amy, said today: ‘This is a perversity of our society’

‘The law does need to be changed so that it properly represents everyone — not just this awful minority who ruin people’s lives.’

Mr Houston, of Darwen, Lancashire, said he was ‘absolutely devastated’ by the decision to allow Ibrahim to stay in the country indefinitely.

‘How can he say he’s deprived of his right to a family life? The only person deprived of a family life is me. Amy was my family.’

Amy was Mr Houston’s only child and for medical reasons he is unable to have any more children.

The case fuelled deep concern on the Tory backbenches. One MP branded the Act the ‘Criminals’ Rights Act’ and repeated calls for it to be scrapped.

Downing Street issued a statement ‘sharing Mr Houston’s anger’.

Ibrahim, now 33, arrived in Britain hidden in the back of a lorry in January 2001. His application for asylum was refused and a subsequent appeal in November 2002 failed, but he was never sent home.

In 2003, while serving a nine-month driving ban for not having insurance or a licence, he ploughed into Amy near her mother’s home in Blackburn.

He ran away, leaving her conscious and trapped beneath the wheels of his black Rover. Six hours later her father had to take the heartbreaking decision to turn off her life-support system.

But despite leaving Amy to die, Ibrahim was jailed for just four months after admitting driving while disqualified and failing to stop after an accident.

Since his release from prison he has accrued a string of further convictions, including more driving offences, harassment and cautions for burglary and theft.

‘The image of Amy taking her final breath, dying a foot away from me as I sat by her bedside holding her hand praying for a miracle, will stay with me till the day I die.’

He also met a British woman, Christina Richardson, and fathered two children with her, Harry, four, and Zara, three.

Border Agency officials finally began attempts to remove him from the country in October 2008.

Ibrahim’s lawyers argued sending him back to Iraq would breach Article 8 of the Human Rights Act, which guarantees his right to a private and family life with his children.

When the case first came before an immigration judge in June last year, Home Office lawyers said Ibrahim should be removed because of his persistent criminality.

Ibrahim told the court he had became a father figure to Miss Richardson’s two children from a previous relationship and was even helping them with their homework.

This account was dismissed as ‘clearly not credible’ after Ibrahim admitted he could barely speak English.

The judge accepted that Ibrahim’s behaviour was ‘abhorrent’ and branded his evidence ‘contradictory and unsatisfactory’. However he ruled that he had developed a ‘significant and substantial’ relationship with the children and was acting as their father.

Only child: Amy’s death deprived Mr Houston of family life as he is unable to have further children

Lawyers for the UK Border Agency argued that there was little evidence that he was living at the same address as his own children.

But yesterday the Upper Immigration Tribunal threw out the appeal, saying the judge had considered the case in a ‘legally correct’ way.

In a letter to the tribunal, Mr Houston made an impassioned plea for Ibrahim to be sent back to Iraq, saying his right to a family life with Amy should outweigh the rights of Ibrahim.

He wrote: ‘On the evening of November 23 2003, Mr Ibrahim struck Amy. He didn’t kill her outright, she was still conscious.

‘She was fully aware of what was happening around her even though she had the full weight of the engine block of the car on top of her, she was crying because she was frightened and in a lot of pain… he could have at least tried to help.

‘Amy suffered for six hours before the doctors advised me to switch off the life support machine … it was highly unlikely she would survive and if she was to live would be a “cabbage”.

‘The image of Amy taking her final breath, dying a foot away from me as I sat by her bedside holding her hand praying for a miracle, will stay with me till the day I die.’

Last night Mr Houston said: ‘No wonder asylum seekers are queuing up at the borders to get in when they see decisions like this.

‘They realise that whatever they do, be it burglar, rape or murder, they can use the laws to ensure they are able to stay in Britain. ‘The immigration judges have ruled he had a right to a family life…’

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Feds Save Millions After Undocumented Immigrants Lose Benefits

Rep. Christopher Herrod, R-Provo, said he was happy with the savings, even if it was not in state dollars. “It’s saving our children from additional debt,” said the legislator, who is married to a legal immigrant from the Ukraine. “It also goes to show there are costs associated with illegal immigrants.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Introduction of Immigration Cap Deemed ‘Unlawful’

A temporary cap on the number of skilled workers from outside the EU allowed into the UK was introduced “unlawfully”, the High Court has ruled.

Home Secretary Theresa May introduced the cap this summer as an interim measure ahead of a permanent cap.

But a legal challenge to it was upheld with judges ruling that ministers had “sidestepped” Parliamentary scrutiny.

The Home Office said it was likely to appeal and the verdict did not threaten its flagship immigration policy.

Officials insisted it would not apply to the permanent cap due to come into force in April.

Prime Minister David Cameron has called for net migration to be reduced from its current level close to 200,000 a year to “tens of thousands”.

Curbing numbers

As a first step, ministers introduced a temporary cap for non-EU skilled workers of 24,100 a month in June, in line with a Conservative election commitment.

But the measure was challenged by the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) and English Community Care Association, which was concerned over the position of immigrant care workers.

In Friday’s ruling, Lord Justice Sullivan and Mr Justice Burton concluded that the home secretary had not gone through the proper parliamentary procedures before implementing the cap.

As a result, it said no lawful limits were now in place for two tiers of job applicants from abroad.

The English Community Care Association said the temporary cap — which reduced by 5% the number of non-EU work visas issued — could have a potentially “catastrophic” effect on the care sector.

As 13% of those who work in care homes come from outside Europe, it said thousands of staff from the Philippines, India and South Africa could be forced to quit their jobs and this could damage continuity of care.

‘Disregard’

Vacancies created would not be filled by British staff, it said, as there was not sufficient demand for the jobs.

It argued the cap had been introduced with “complete disregard” for care providers and their staffing needs.

A Home Office spokesman said the ruling only applied to the interim cap, which was introduced to prevent a rush of immigration applications before the new cap came into force.

The BBC’s Political Correspondent Carole Walker said officials strongly rejected the suggestion that the entire policy was in doubt, saying the ruling was on a point of process not a point of principle.

The level at which the permanent cap will be set has been a source of tension within government, with Lib Dem ministers calling for the regime to be flexible as possible so as not to prevent firms from being able to recruit highly skilled labour.

           — Hat tip: 4symbols [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


European Commission Criticised for Omitting Christmas on EU School Diary

More than 330,000 copies of the diaries, accompanied by 51 pages of glossy information about the EU, have been delivered to British schools as a “sought after” Christmas gift to pupils from the commission. But Christians have been angered because the diary section for December 25 is blank and the bottom of the page with Christmas Day is marked only with the secular message: “A true friend is someone who shares your concerns and will double your joy”.

While the euro calendar marks Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Jewish and Chinese festivities as well as Europe Day and other key EU anniversaries, there are no Christian festivals marked, despite the fact Christianity is Europe’s majority religion.

Roman Catholic lobby groups and Christian Democrat MEPs have already complained to the commission about its Christmas card for this year which bears the words “Season’s Greetings” with no reference to Christianity.

Johanna Touzel, the spokesman for the Catholic Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Community, said the absence of Christian festivals as “just astonishing”.

“Christmas and Easter are important feasts for hundreds of millions of Christians and Europeans. It is a strange omission. I hope it was not intentional,” she said.

“If the commission does not mark Christmas as a feast in its diaries then it should be working as normal on December 25.” Martin Callanan, the leader of the European Conservatives, accused the commission of being concerned about sending propaganda gifts to youngsters than the true spirit of Christmas. “Given that 2010 was the year when the EU was haunted by its own ghosts of the past, present and future, it comes as no surprise that the commission is turning into a bunch of Euro Scrooges. “Why is the commission spending money sending calendars to millions of schoolchildren in the first place? I’m sure that the children could manage without a present of this nature.”

A commission spokesman described the diary as a “blunder” and said that in the interests of political correctness there would no references to any religious festivals in future editions.

“We’re sorry about it, and we’ll correct that in next edition. Religious holidays may not be mentioned at all to avoid any controversy,” he said.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Michael Moore Writes an Open Letter to Sweden Slamming Their Rape Laws

Presumably this is in response to the uproar Moore caused the other night on Keith Olbermann when he referred to the rape charges against Julian Assange as “hooey.”

In an open letter to Sweden posted last night Moore highlights some very depressing statistics about Swedish rape laws (rapists “enjoy impunity”) before accusing Sweden of bowing to U.S. government pressure (this, by the way, was the basis of his “hooey” charge on Olbermann): There’s just one thing that bothers me — why has Amnesty International, in a special report, declared that Sweden refuses to deal with the very real tragedy of rape? In fact, they say that all over Scandinavia, including in your country, rapists “enjoy impunity.” And the United Nations, the EU and Swedish human rights groups have come to the same conclusion: Sweden just doesn’t take sexual assault against women seriously.

[…]

Message to rapists? Sweden loves you!

So imagine our surprise when all of a sudden you decided to go after one Julian Assange on sexual assault charges. Well, sort of: first you charged him. Then after investigating it, you dropped the most serious charges and rescinded the arrest warrant.

Then a conservative MP put pressure on you and, lo and behold, you did a 180 and reopened the Assange investigation. Except you still didn’t charge him with anything. You just wanted him for “questioning.” So you — you who have sat by and let thousands of Swedish women be raped while letting their rapists go scott-free — you decided it was now time to crack down on one man — the one man the American government wants arrested, jailed or (depending on which politician or pundit you listen to) executed. You just happened to go after him, on one possible “count of unlawful coercion, two counts of sexual molestation and one count of rape (third degree).” And while thousands of Swedish rapists roam free, you instigated a huge international manhunt on Interpol for this Julian Assange!

Read the full letter here. Whether or not the Swedish government is being hypocritical here the resulting discussion over rape laws and how they are applied is without question an upshot to this whole mess.

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]



Serbia: Gender Discrimination Still Alive, Report

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, DECEMBER 13 — One year after Serbia passed the Gender Equality Law, there are still fewer women than men in the workforce, reports radio B92.

The number of women representatives in state institutions is also unsatisfactory, it was concluded at a round table dubbed The Law on Gender Equality — Implementation Possibilities and Challenges. According to Chairman of the government Council for Gender Equality Snezana Lakicevic, one of the reasons the implementation of the law has not been a complete success lies in the country’s patriarchal culture, in which a man is expected to have more rights than a woman. Daiana Falloni, Head of Democratization Department of the OSCE Mission to Serbia, said that the organization has been working on improving the state of gender equality in Serbia for a long time, pointing out it is an important factor for the country’s stability and development. By passing the Gender Wquality Law, Serbia has joined other countries in the region and through its implementation it will endeavor to advance gender equality, Falloni added.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Labour Candidate David Bradley Bombarded Gay Colleague Ed Bramall With Homophobic Texts After Losing Out to Him in Election

A Labour Party member bombarded a gay colleague with malicious text messages after losing out to him in a party election.

David Bradley sent rival Ed Bramall homophobic messages after members had selected Mr Bramall to fight a seat at this year’s local elections.

Bradley, who contested the Weston-super-Mare seat for Labour at this year’s General Election, sent 33 texts using references to homosexuals.

At Bristol Magistrates’ Court Bradley, of Warmley, Bristol pleaded guilty to a charge of harassment without violence by sending the text messages to Mr Bramall’s phone between March and August.

The 29-year-old’s actions have seen him suspended from the Labour Party and condemned by Gay rights charity Stonewall.

Prosecutors have also asked for a restraining order to be imposed preventing him from contacting Mr Bramall in any way whatsoever.

Mr Bramall, 33, who is openly gay said the only event that could have started the vendetta was him being chosen ahead of Bradley to represent Labour in Whitchurch Park.

‘I have not discussed it with him so I cannot be sure but in my mind that was it,’ he said.

‘He had a grudge because I got something that he wanted and he decided to display his displeasure by doing what he did.

‘Prior to that there had been no altercation with him, so it’s the only thing that makes sense.

‘I thought from the start it was him because it was clearly somebody that knew me and had to be annoyed with me in some shape or form and I don’t make a habit of going around annoying people.

‘His later texts made references to places and meetings so it made me think it was someone connected with the Labour Party. He just increasingly gave himself away.

‘I didn’t enjoy getting the messages and when my phone went off I was always wondering if it was another one.

‘They were unpleasant but had they been about “coming to get me” I would have been more concerned. I was not living in fear but it was playing on my mind.

‘I reported it in the end because they had stopped and then suddenly started again while I was on holiday and I just had enough.

‘He has always been a bit odd but you meet lots of people who are a bit odd and you give them the benefit of the doubt.

‘He clearly has some mental health issues. I don’t really hold any malice towards him. I just think it’s sad that he has done it and got himself in this situation.’…

           — Hat tip: DF [Return to headlines]