The Economic Slowdown Arrives in Tulsa

The following account was written by our frequent lurker in Oklahoma. He often sends his observations on life, politics, and the posts on Gates of Vienna. His reflections are frequently cogent and always entertaining. He can’t be lured into commenting live, however.

This chronicle of his business activities is informative. With some minor differences, it reflects the larger reality of commerce in this country at the moment.

I would tell you to read it and be concerned, but you already are. So may I suggest that we look at it and request a new reading at the end of next year? It may be the case that liquor stores are exceptions to the rules of the rest of the world of trade. If things are down now, will they not go up as folks get more and more despondent? Or will spirits be viewed as a luxury, something to be pruned from the household budget until “things improve”?

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Russian for 'be happy'


I’ve wanted to write this for some time. It is basically a description of some of the sales patterns of my store and what I think those patterns say.

My store, with an approximately 1600 sq.ft. sales area, is small by most standards for liquor stores. Stores built lately are about 5000 sq.ft.

I went into business in October 1994, and operated the store with part-time help until finally taking over on a full-time basis in December 1999.

When I first opened, my sales were pretty much split evenly among the principal forms of payment: cash, check, and credit card. But times change, and with them customer buying, and thus, payment options change as well.

But first allow me to digress and give you some background.

My store is in a small corner shopping center in far southeast Tulsa. It is located in the northwest quadrant of a four-way intersection bordering three communities. Broken Arrow is the southeast quadrant, Bixby is the southwest quadrant, and Tulsa is the northern half of the four-way intersection. Up until 1992, this area was considered rural with very little development.

In the vicinity of my store, one mile to the east is a private club and golf course. Two miles to the north is another private club and golf course. Two miles south and one mile east is yet a third private club and golf course. People who come into my store are news/weather/sports people on local television stations. Others own some of the bigger car dealerships in the city of Tulsa. Some of my customers are doctors & lawyers. Two regular buyers own interstate trucking companies.

What I am attempting to portray is an affluent area and neighborhood. Using hard numbers on median house prices wouldn’t be reliable as those vary so much from state to state. However, looking at customers’ jobs and professions gives you the context of this place.

Returning to the store itself:
– – – – – – – –
When I began full operation of the store, I started to pay closer attention to some of the finer details and some of the changes over the seasons. I’d noticed that the percentages of each method of payment would shift. Credit card and cash payments each comprised 40% of my income; checks accounted for the other 20%.

This pattern held through all months with the exception of December. In December, cash sales were about 50% of the total. Checks were still 20%, while the credit cards had dropped to 30% of total sales. It appeared to me that my customers were more frequently making Christmas purchases for liquor in cash, with money they had in hand. I am assuming here that they were using the credit cards for the really big stuff.

This pattern continued for several years. With each passing year, however, there was a change within the pattern of payment choice. This in itself was a pattern: payment by check decreased, with a corresponding increase in credit card sales. Cash purchases remained the same.

In mid-2004 I stopped accepting checks for two reasons. First off, too many checks were bouncing for insufficient funds. Second, customers were beginning to use the procedure to “kite”‘ checks – for example, writing the check and then requesting that I hold on to it until payday. It was more than inconvenient.

So with checks gone from the equation, the payment methods were pretty much evenly split now between cash and credit cards through the rest of the year and continuing into 2005 through most of 2007.

In December of 2007, an abrupt change occurred within the sales pattern: credit card sales increased substantially. Reviewing my numbers from that month two years ago, I can see that 64% of my sales were credit card purchases.

In January of 2008, this December 2007 sales pattern continued. Instead of being a seasonal fluke, credit card payments continued to dominate. The method of payment has never returned to an even split.

By December of 2008, another pattern emerged. Credit card sales increased yet again, this time to 76%. Cash now accounted for only 24% of sales.

The sales pattern reverted in January 2009 to a modified version of 2008. Now 66% of my sales were paid with credit cards, the remainder in cash. This pattern has varied little all year. Credit card sales are never below 64% and never above 70% of total sales.

These sales patterns are what I wanted to tell you about when you began writing the financial essays you posted at the end of 2008 and the beginning of 2009.

Now with November 2009 behind me I can see a larger picture and a different pattern of sorts. Not about purchase patterns (cash vs. credit) but about the variations in year-to-year sales.

The area in which my store is located has developed over the years. More and more people are moving here. And with the increased populations comes increasing sales. My usual growth rate was about 7% or 8% per year.

I also keep track of month/month comparisons from preceding years as well. For example, compared to the preceding year, January 2009 sales were up about 20%. February thru April were pretty much level. The period of May, June, July, and August saw increases in sales from 21% to 15% above the preceding year. September and October were back down to an increase of 8% and 7%, respectively.

Sales for the Thanksgiving week were about the same as last year’s Thanksgiving week. However, now that November is closed, my sales were down a full 10% from last year. Being busy with day-to-day operations, I couldn’t see it at the time, but now I know that during the month of November, something bad happened all over Tulsa.

The manager of a Wal-Mart super center comes into my store, and his black Friday was 10% lower than last year.

The general manager of a major air cooled exchanger manufacturer just came in. He bought a half-gallon of whiskey he said he was going to drink tonight because he’d just written an annual report to the owners in Germany and told them the truth. All he told me was, “it ain’t pretty”.

As I said, my store is a very small store. And I’m sure that the people on Wall Street couldn’t care less what I say is happening in my store.

However, it doesn’t matter what they think or what they think they know. Small businessmen across the country can tell them what people like me know without a doubt: the economic slowdown has finally arrived.

Hard times are headed to Tulsa.

Acid Attack in Brussels

Our Flemish correspondent VH has translated this brief account of a recent incident in Brussels. There’s no indication that cultural enrichment played a part in the crime, except for the modus opeerandi, plus the fact that it occurred in the Sint-Jans-Molenbeek district:

From Het Laatste Nieuws:

Woman in peril of death from acid-attack in Brussels

In the Brussels municipality of Sint-Jans-Molenbeek, yesterday afternoon a 45-year-old woman was seriously injured when corrosive acid was thrown in her face. The woman is severely burned and in critical condition in a hospital. A man (neighbor of the woman) with whom she had had a long dispute was arrested, but it is not clear whether he has confessed yet. This is what the Brussels public prosecutor made public.

The attack took place around 14.30 yesterday afternoon in an apartment building at the

Sippelberghlaan [map]. The woman, Carmen L., was in her apartment with a friend when an unknown man, wearing a motorbike helmet and suit, rang the doorbell and said through the videophone that he had a package to deliver for her. Carmen L. went down with the elevator to the entrance hall where the man threw the corrosive acid in the face. He then he pulled her hair and tried to poor the remaining acid down her neck.

– – – – – – – –

The woman started screaming, after which the offender ran off. Carmen L. managed to stumble out of the entry hall and seek help from a friend who worked in the adjacent building. She then was brought to a hospital with serious injuries. Carmen L. managed to declare that she had a long-running quarrel with a neighbor in the same apartment building. Police after a search of the apartment of the man and also arrested him there. He was remanded in custody by investigating judge Minot, but it is not clear whether he also has confessed to the facts.

Dutch Sausage-Making

Our expatriate Dutch correspondent H. Numan sent us an email today with an overview of the current state of political affairs in the Netherlands:

Dear Baron,

A very difficult election ahead.

We all look forward to seeing Geert Wilders becoming prime minister. Regretfully, that isn’t likely to happen. Not even when the PVV becomes the biggest party Allow me to me explain:

The Netherlands always has had coalition governments. No single party is big enough to form a majority government. The parliament holds 150 seats. For a majority government one needs at least 76 seats. It won’t be strong majority government with just 76 seats, though.

However, there is another factor that is usually left out of the calculation. The Netherlands is a monarchy. Normally the Queen is purely head of state and not much more.

But during elections the monarch has a special privilege: she is the one who will decide who will become informateur and later formateur. The monarch, nobody else, decide this. She does not have to explain herself why she choose a particular person. Just a very general statement will suffice.

The job of the informateur is to gather information, and present a list of likely coalition governments. Usually, but not always, the informateur becomes later on the formateur. The job of the formateur is to actually form a cabinet. Almost always the formateur will become prime minister.

The usual procedure is to choose the informateur from the biggest party. If the election is a clear one, no big deal. But more often than not the election results aren’t that clear. Suppose the Labor (PvdA) Christian Democrats (CDA) and Conservatives (VVD) are pretty much the same in size, it can to be tough to form a government. Especially if they all have conflicting non negotiable items on their agenda. It’s not unusual for negotiations to last over 6 months.

And now the real power of the monarch comes into play. If she prefers, say, a socialist government, she will appoint a socialist informateur. This has happened in the past under our previous queen Juliana. The PvdA came in second in the elections. It looked like a Christian Democrat-Conservative government was in the making. However, the Queen gave the job to Joop Den Uyl (PvdA) who was able to form a Socialist-Christian Democrat government.

All the queen had to say was that she thought it most likely Den Uyl would form a government.

This queen doesn’t like Wilders one little bit. Or the PVV for that matter. She made this — indirectly and not so indirectly — publicly known on several occasions.

– – – – – – – –

A week ago she invited 50 members of parliament for a nice cuppa tea at the palace. Just for some informal chitchat. What is discussed is confidential. Parliamentarians are not supposed to divulge what’s going on. But one did. Boekestijn (VVD) spilled the beans. Her Majesty talked about several subjects, one of them being to be very careful with new parties. Especially parties that cause damage to ‘social cohesion’.

Two days later Mr. Boekestijn resigned his position as member of parliament for the VVD. Completely voluntarily. (Want to buy a bridge?)

This royal tea party hasn’t taken place over a decade. All of a sudden it was revived. One can only wonder why.

Supposing the PVV can cross this hurdle, it isn’t in the government by a long shot. Because a coalition must be formed. And that won’t be easy.

The CDA is not a problem, provided they remain larger than the PVV. If the PVV gets bigger than the CDA they won’t play ball. They don’t have to be picky, as everybody is willing to join the CDA. The CDA controls the outcome of the coming elections no matter what.

The PvdA is desperate to remain in government. They have to, if only to save what little face they have left. So the PvdA will be amendable to any demand made by the CDA.

Likewise, the Socialist Party (ex-Maoists) and the Green Left party (GL) (ex communists) are getting desperate. They haven’t been in any government so far, and lower party cadre is getting tired. During municipal elections recently the Green Party won several seats in various cities. But they can’t fill those seats because their candidates declined to take them.

Femke Halsema (GL) made statements she will not be shy of government responsibility this time. She has to. It cost the GL dearly when they left the negotiations very early last time.

Do it again, and she might as well open a classic car dealer ship. Femke loves antique extremely polluting cars very much; she’s the proud owner of a Mercedes Diesel from the 70’s. No filters, the real McCoy.

Another player is D66. A kind of ‘what do you want this time’ party. It swells and it shrinks with the seasons. Last election they lost big time, just 3 seats left. But they are the most ferocious opponent of Wilders and that gives them about +20 seats in the polls. D66 announced no matter what, they won’t work with the PVV.

So, what’s left? The VVD. The party where Wilders came from. Not much left there: about 15 seats in the polls. The Christian Union, currently 6 seats, likely to remain stable. The CU are left-wing fundie Christians. Everything left over is small fry.

But there is more. Given the current crisis, the next government must be a government that will raise tax. Ever heard about a government that reduces costs? Neither have I. The present government is pushing legislation to raise the retirement age form 65 to 67. The PVV is diametrically opposed to both. They want to reduce costs and invalidate any legislation to raise the retirement age. Not much of an encouragement for the CDA to invite the PVV to the table, what?

Generally speaking we can have a CDA-PvdA-GL-SP government. A firm majority, but highly unlikely to happen. Too damn close to North Korea.

Another option is CDA-PVV-VVD-?? A weak majority. Will at best happen if the CDA is bigger than the PVV, which is doubtful.

CDA-D66-PvdA-CU is a very likely bet. A weak majority, but assured to carry on the good work of the present government.

There are more options possible, but as far as I can see the PVV is going to be in the opposition again. Looking on the bright side: if you think it’s difficult to form a government with three parties, try four. The coming election will likely create the need for a 4 party government. They are notoriously unstable. Few are able to sit out the ride.

I think Wilders is smart enough to prefer to wait a bit. Better to be the biggest and most aggressive opposition party than join a very weak government that will almost certainly collapse. You have seen what the PVV can do with just 9 seats; what can they do with 40?

Best regards,
— H. Numan

Gates of Vienna News Feed 12/2/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 12/2/2009A Chechen insurgent group known as the “Caucasian Mujahadeen” has claimed credit for last Friday’s train bombing in Russia. The explosion beneath the Nevsky Express derailed three cars and killed at least 26 people.

In other news, a mosque in West Sacramento, California was vandalized by persons unknown. The FBI and the Sacramento police are investigating what potentially may be a hate crime.

Thanks to Andy Bostom, C. Cantoni, Diana West, El Inglés, Esther, Fjordman, Insubria, JD, JP, Lurker from Tulsa, Sean O’Brian, Steen, TB, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Is a Newspaper Bailout in the Works?
 
USA
Another Spying Scandal at Gitmo
Be Scared: Obamacare Endangers Our Life Spans
Democrats Thrive on ‘Dead Zones’
Drawing Attention
International Officials Knew 9/11 Was Brewing
Is This the Challenger Who Will Eject Pelosi?
James Madison vs. Snotty Prof
Marine Faces Final Hurdle in Haditha Case
Obama: Transformational, Consequential and Catastrophic
On the Money Trail
See No Jihad, Hear No Jihad, Speak No Jihad
The Al-Qaeda Bar
West Sacramento Mosque Vandalized
 
Europe and the EU
Defending Popular Rights — by Limiting Them?
Denmark: Foreign Languages Banished From the Playground
Denmark: Party Wants to Ban Minarets
Denmark Rife With CO2 Fraud
First Impact of Minaret Ban Felt
France: Iraqi Shoe-Thrower Suffers Copycat Attack as He Has One Thrown at Him During News Conference
France: Barbe’s — an Update
Germany: Jewish Leader Says Swiss Vote Shows Europe’s Growing Anti-Muslim Views
Guantanamo: Tunisia’s Nasri at San Vittore Prison in Milan
Guantanamo: 2 Tunisians in Milan Investigated for Terrorism
Guantanamo Detainee Arrives in France a Free Man
Islam: Minarets; Maroni, People Have the Right to Decide
Italy: League Wants Minaret Referendum in Italy
Italy: Council Defies Court Ruling and Displays Crucifix
Italy: Mussolini ‘Sex Video Offered to Berlusconi’
Italy May Accept More Gitmo Detainees
Obama’s Visit — DKK 50 Million
Some Post-Communist Dos and Don’ts
UK: Lib Dems End EU Referendum Call
UK: Prince Charles: Alternative Medicine Must be Saved From New EU Rules
UK: Smart Meters That Only Save Families £28 a Year — to Cost £340 Per Household
UK: Special Report: Face to Face With the Muslim Fanatics Who Attacked Baroness Warsi
UK: The Best Savings Account You’ve Never Heard of
UK: The Burglars’ Code: Criminals Chalk Messages Which Pinpoint Targets for Other Villains
UK: Would-be Councillor in Queen ‘Vermin’ Slur Off List
UK: Woman Told to Repay £5 of Fraud
White Power Groups on the Increase: Report
 
Balkans
Kosovo: EU Police Investigate ‘Political Murder’ Claims
 
North Africa
Egypt: Village Changes Name After Algerian Clashes
Egyptian University Orders Veil Ban During Exam Sessions
Egypt: Weapons and Explosive Vests Found Near Rafah
Police Shoot: New Victim at Egyptian Border
 
Israel and the Palestinians
EU to Give East Jerusalem to Palestinians: Report
High Court Asked to Stop Building Freeze
Rabbis Slam Jewish Construction Freeze
 
Middle East
Dubai: Debt Restructuring Underway, Jump-Starts World Markets
Dubai and Abu Dhabi Stock Markets Down Again
Fr. Samir: Islam in Paralysis and War; The West Without a Memory
Iran Bans Make-Up for Women on TV
Iran: Women Banned From Wearing Make-Up on TV
Muslims Will Empty Their Swiss Accounts: Turkish Minister
Turkey-Syria: Erdogan in Damascus to Sign 42 Agreements
 
Russia
Video: Stalin Lookalike Treated ‘Like a Rock Star’
 
Caucasus
North Caucasus Group in Russia Train Bomb Web Claim
 
South Asia
Andrew Bostom: Pointed Islamic Hypocrisy: Religious Symbols for Thee, But Not for Me?
Danish Defence Chief on Foot Patrol in Helmand
Dhaka: A Jobless Catholic Widow in a Tragic Situation
Diana West: How Important is Marjeh?
Indonesia ‘Bans’ Film on Journalists’ Deaths in E Timor
NATO Chief: Nobody is Speaking an Exit Strategy
Obama Should Call Spain or Italy
Obama’s Afghan Surge is Not About Winning the War, But Managing Our Looming Failure
Pakistan: India Not Sincere About Talks, Says Gilani
Setting Timeline for Withdrawal in Afghanistan “Could be Fatal”, Warns Mercer
Taliban Pledge to Fight US Troop Surge in Afghanistan
Three Churches Attacked in Two Days in Tamil Nadu
UN Calls for ‘Transition Strategy’ In Afghanistan
 
Far East
Digital Tiger in Chinese
Growing Debt From Unpaid Credit Cards and Chinese Banks
North Korea to Stand Trial for Supporting Terror in Israel
Seoul: Filipinas Forced Into Sex Trade With Foreigners and US Soldiers
 
Immigration
Australia: New Liberal Leader Tony Abbott Says He Would Have ‘Removed’ Oceanic Viking Asylum Seekers
Cyprus House Ratifies Agreement With Lebanon
European Asylum Request Office on Malta
 
Culture Wars
Anti-Santa Claus Group Wins Support of Thousands
‘Cuz ‘Season’s Greetings’ Just Ain’t Good Enough
 
General
Bionic Hands ‘Just a Few Years Away’
Fight U.N. Censorship in Copenhagen
The 9/11 of 1859: Is Al-Qaeda an Abolitionist Movement?
The Other Idol-Breaker: Owen Barfield and the Plenitude of the Word

Financial Crisis


Is a Newspaper Bailout in the Works?

What might be the results of an old media, or Newspaper bailout? Well, FTC Chair Jon Leibowitz’s wife would likely stay employed, for one. . . .. I’d keep an eye on this one, folks. Government (read politicians) would love to be able to pick winners and losers in the news media…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Another Spying Scandal at Gitmo

The possible new spy ring involves several Arabic linguists, some also Egyptian and Syrian immigrants. They’re suspected of, among other things:

  • Omitting valuable intelligence from their translations of interrogations.
  • Slipping notes to detainees inside copies of the Koran.
  • Coaching detainees to make allegations of abuse against interrogators.
  • Meeting with suspects on the terror watchlist while back in the United States.

Officials say some of the suspected “dirty” linguists — who met privately in a locked mosque at Gitmo — have had access to 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed and other high-value al Qaeda detainees.

“Three years of investigations have revealed the presence of pro-jihad/anti-Western activities among the civilian-contractor and military-linguist population serving Joint Task Force Guantanamo,” states a copy of a classified Gitmo briefing, prepared in May for the FBI, CIA and Congress’ intelligence committees.

The report explains that dirty Arabic linguists have gathered classified data involving detainees, interrogations and security operations in an effort to “disrupt” Gitmo operations and US “intelligence-collection capabilities.”

It goes on to specifically finger the Muslim Brotherhood, a terrorist organization. The US operations and front groups of the Egypt-based brotherhood are the subject of my recently released book, “Muslim Mafia,” which first revealed the contents of the secret Gitmo report.

“These actions are deliberate, carefully planned, global, and to the benefit of the detainees and multiple terrorist organizations, to include al Qaeda and Muslim Brotherhood,” the briefing states.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Be Scared: Obamacare Endangers Our Life Spans

Much of the press coverage of the Democrats’ health-care legislation, now fiercely embattled in Congress, focuses on the public option, the actual long-term costs and tax increases, and the amendment barring funding for abortions, but the cold heart of Obamacare is its overpowering of the doctor-patient relationship — eventually resulting in the premature ending of many Americans’ lives for being too costly.

To call the dangers of this legislation “death panels” obscures the real-life consequences to Americans, not only the elderly, of a federal government-run health-care bureaucracy. In the Senate bill, for instance, Medicare doctors whose treatments of certain, mostly elderly, patients costs more than a set government figure each year, will be punished by losing part of their own incomes.

Not only Medicare doctors will be monitored for their cost effectiveness. In the House bill, as Cato Institute’s health-care specialist Michael Tanner explains (New York Post, Nov. 8), “111 government agencies, boards, commissions and other bureaucracies — all overseen by a new health-care czar,” the commissioner of Health Care Choices, will keep watch on what the president has called excessive, wasteful health-care expenditures.

Moreover, President Obama has made clear that eventually he desires a U.S. equivalent of the British National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), a commission that decides which drugs and procedures for patients are within the national budget for health care. The current baseline expenditure for each Briton, according to Michael Tanner, is $44,305 per year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Democrats Thrive on ‘Dead Zones’

Voters dependent upon federal social welfare to survive

America’s inner cities have become “dead zones” of predominately Democratic-voting African-American ghettos of poverty, Jerome Corsi’s Red Alert reports.

“It’s a reality that has become politically incorrect to discuss in an era where President Obama occupies the White House and the Democratic Party controls Congress,” Corsi wrote.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Drawing Attention

‘The Cartoons that Shook the World’ author taps background for insight

By Colleen Walsh

Harvard Staff Writer

Heightened censorship, both within the Arab world and the West, was one of the lasting repercussions from the crisis, with her own work a partial casualty, said Jytte Klausen, author of “The Cartoons that Shook the World.” After consulting with some authorities on Islam, officials at Yale University Press chose not to reprint the cartoons and removed all illustrations of Muhammad from her book.

In 2005, a Danish newspaper published a dozen editorial cartoons that would ignite an international controversy involving free speech and discrimination.

Many of the images depicted the Islamic prophet Muhammad. In the most memorable and inflammatory of the drawings, the religious messenger was seen with a bomb tucked in his black turban. The cartoons appeared with an editorial about the importance of tolerance by the Muslim community and the paper’s growing concern over self-censorship. The images ran under the headline “The face of Muhammad.”

Muhammad’s image has appeared in print for centuries, but many Muslims believe that depicting the prophet is blasphemous. Ensuing anger over the caricatures resulted in riots in several countries, and more than 200 people died.

It was largely political posturing that sparked the furor over the depictions of the Islamic prophet rather than universal indignation, said Jytte Klausen, a Brandeis professor of politics who recently wrote “The Cartoons that Shook the World.”

Klausen, who is also a research associate at Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, addressed a crowd Tuesday (Dec. 1) at the Barker Center about the upheaval, which she researched in detail for her new book, interviewing almost all of the key players. The center’s Islam in the West program sponsored the discussion.

“It very quickly became clear to me that I was in a unique position to write about this topic,” said Klausen, in part because of her Danish roots and familiarity with the newspaper that was always in her home during her childhood. “The sentiments that used to inform the paper were well-known to me,” she said, adding that in recent years the newspaper had adopted a much more libertarian leaning, in keeping with a trend in Europe toward a more populist form of conservatism, one focused on immigration as a key issue, with Islam and Muslims often viewed as a challenge to national identities.

Klausen had strong contacts in the Muslim community, having recently finished a book on politics and religion in western Europe, based on interviews with Muslim leaders there.

The Muslim outrage, argued the author, had two main sources, including the Egyptian government’s decision to make a “diplomatic issue” of the cartoons and complain to both the Danish government and the United Nations. With Egyptian elections pending, she said, officials in Cairo used the cartoons to “push back against the American agenda for democratization as a forward security strategy in the Middle East.”

For Egypt, said Klausen, the controversy represented an opportunity “to put on the record that the West abuses human rights as well.”

The other source of unrest, she said, was a group of imams and a coalition of religious activists in Denmark who were increasingly frustrated with what they felt was an unacceptable level of Muslim stereotyping.

“The cartoons were the last drop in a glass that was already pretty filled with bitterness,” she said.

But the violence and deaths occurred in faraway countries such as Nigeria, where preexisting tensions or “pre-existing theaters of war” were already in place, said Klausen, adding that the cartoons were not the real culprit.

The legacy of the cartoon controversy was a “sad and mixed one,” said Klausen. “Everybody was looking at the same 12 drawings … but people had very different interpretations of what they saw.”

Heightened censorship, both within the Arab world and the West, was one of the lasting repercussions from the crisis, she said, with her own work a partial casualty. After consulting with some authorities on Islam, officials at Yale University Press chose not to reprint the cartoons and removed all illustrations of Muhammad from her book.

In a final twist of irony, a technical oversight stranded the author without a projector to show the crowd her slides, which included the offending cartoons. She was left simply to describe the images to the audience.

Ultimately, Klausen said, her desire to instruct and educate outweighed her frustration and anger with Yale’s decision to remove the images, and she chose to publish the book anyway. Still, her anger over the censorship was evident in her voice.

“My argument is that in order to understand why Muslims were upset by these cartoons, we need to look at them and discuss them and understand. That cannot be done now,” she said. “I didn’t think it’s the sort of thing that would happen in the United States.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



International Officials Knew 9/11 Was Brewing

Evidence that may be used in terror trials suggests signals were there

There is evidence that officials at high levels in Syria, Germany and even inside the Central Intelligence Agency had information about the 9/11 terror hijackers’ hatred for Americans and their desire to attack the U.S. before the mass murders were carried out, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

Evidence suggests that authorities may not have known the specific plans to hijack passenger jets and turn them into flying torpedoes but they knew something was developing.

And some of the information, heretofore not even provided to the 9/11 commission, known as the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, could become available to defense attorneys for the civilian court trials Attorney General Eric Holder has planned for the confessed terrorists in New York, just blocks from where nearly 3,000 people were killed.

The information could be embarrassing for both the U.S. and Germany, and also could create ripples through the intelligence community because of the security classifications assigned to information involving links from Germany to Syria to Spain to Saudi Arabia and the U.S.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Is This the Challenger Who Will Eject Pelosi?

‘People in this district are getting just as sick of her as everyone else’

A libertarian conservative has declared his plans to “take out Nancy Pelosi” in the 2010 election to stop her from devastating the nation.

John Dennis, a businessman and real-estate investor in California’s 8th congressional district, told WND, “I’ve decided to run because the statist Pelosi agenda will destroy America.”

Rep. Pelosi’s district covers most of San Francisco, and Democrats have held the seat since 1949. Since first winning the House seat in a 1987 special election, Pelosi, 69, has breezed to re-election 10 times. President Obama received 85 percent of the vote there in 2008.

[…]

Dennis expressed deep concern over the “looming dollar crisis,” the nation’s “mountain of debt” and what he considers the federal government’s unconstitutional expansion of power.

He blasted Pelosi’s “disastrous” legislative agenda advocating government-run health care, cap and trade and the Cybersecurity Act of 2009, a bill that would give the president “emergency” control of the Internet.

“Everything that Nancy Pelosi has her hands on is anti-liberty and pro-government power,” Dennis said, with a laugh. “I defy anybody to show me a speech or a press release that says she’s going to somehow protect their liberties and reduce the size of government.”

[…]

Cap and trade: ‘Almost laughable’

Dennis blasted Pelosi’s support for the cap-and-trade bill, calling the legislation a “poor excuse for a new tax.”

“I’m very leery of the government,” he said. “When I read the Constitution, I see our founders writing the document when they are very concerned about the potential abuse of power from the federal government. Every time I hear of a new scheme like cap and trade, it makes me ask, where’s the constitutional authorization to do this? Of course, it’s not there.”

He called the science behind the climate legislation “almost laughable.”

“The people who are advocating this say it will maybe reduce global temperatures by half of a percent by the year 2100,” he said. “Good luck getting me behind that legislation.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



James Madison vs. Snotty Prof

Well, now. As Steve Martin used to say, “Excuuuuuuuse me!” All I did was ask University of Maryland political science teacher Thomas F. Schaller a simple question: “Where in the Constitution, sir, do you see it authorized that Congress can be involved with ‘health care,’ or fund ‘health care’? I added: “I am asking here about the Constitution, not any court rulings.” And the guy went bananas.

In a snide and snotty e-mail response, Schaller, a columnist for the Baltimore Sun who advocates federal “health-care reform,” said my “arguments” were “silly” — though I had not yet made any “argument.” He said my question was “absurd” and “irrelevant” and “bogus.” He said he always gets “a chuckle” out of constitutional originalists because, he implies, they are hypocrites who invoke the document selectively. He concludes his tirade: “So save me the insinuations that you’ve somehow caught me in a constitutional-historical trap, because you haven’t. You need a more nuanced view of how the Constitution does — and did, from its inception — work. …”

Wow. All this and more billingsgate just because I asked Schaller a simple question about the constitutionality of something he advocates. In any event, in a subsequent article prompted by my piercing question, Schaller writes about what he says are “absurd fallacies” about the Constitution. Remember now, this guy teaches political science — another example of why, literally, I thank God I never went to college.

Fallacy One: “First, there is the fallacy that anything not specifically prescribed by the Constitution is unconstitutional.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Marine Faces Final Hurdle in Haditha Case

Cleared of wrongdoing at every step, officer must fight accusations again

Four years after the so-called “Haditha Massacre,” cited by U.S. Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., to publicly accuse U.S. Marines of being cold-blooded killers, Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani faces a board of inquiry tomorrow, hoping to clear his name yet again of alleged wrongdoing.

As WND reported, Chessani was the highest-ranking officer charged in the Haditha incident, when insurgents attacked U.S. Marines in Iraq while using civilians as shields. A series of investigations found nothing wrong until Murtha publicly accused the Marines of murdering Iraqis.

Government prosecutors charging Chessani with criminal wrongdoing lost at every stage. The case was thrown out of military court, and an appellate court affirmed the decision.

But in this final trial, Chessani faces a board of inquiry in a military courtroom at the Marine base at Camp Pendleton, Calif., that doesn’t require the same standards of evidence and conviction as a criminal court. If found guilty of misconduct, Chessani could be compelled to retire from service at a lesser rank.

Richard Thompson, president of the Thomas More Law Center, which forms part of Chessani’s defense team, has consistently maintained Chessani’s innocence.

“I’m outraged at the obvious double standard the government used as it gave Army Major Nidal Hasson every benefit of the doubt because of political correctness. Yet, they had no problem persecuting this loyal Marine officer because he refused to throw his men under the bus to appease an anti-war politician and the Iraqi government,” Thompson said in a statement. “Any finding of misconduct handed down by the board of inquiry would be a miscarriage of justice because Lt. Col. Chessani did nothing wrong.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama: Transformational, Consequential and Catastrophic

I definitely lean toward defining his presidency as “catastrophic” in more than a general sense. I read a piece by Jacob Weisberg in Salon that managed to inadvertantly define the idelogocial rift between the right and left very well (not that it is any secret, but it is interesting to see it laid out so blatantly at times) and understand how catastrophic Obama could be to our existing way of life if not vigorously opposed.

In his article, Weisberg is essentially trying to explain away Obama’s lack of accomplishment in this first 10 months in office by saying that should he pass just one of his “transformational” agenda items before his first State of the Union address, he will be the most accomplished president in the last 70 years.

“If, as seems increasingly likely, Obama wins passage of a health care reform a bill by that date, he will deliver his first State of the Union address having accomplished more than any other postwar American president at a comparable point in his presidency. This isn’t an ideological point or one that depends on agreement with his policies. It’s a neutral assessment of his emerging record-how many big, transformational things Obama is likely to have made happen in his first 12 months in office.”

Of course Weisberg’s “neutral assessment” isn’t at all neutral. His assertion that what Obama is trying to accomplish are “transformational” implies that they’re also positive. And that’s the difference between the right and the left as we consider these “things” Obama wants passed into law. The right, of course, wouldn’t consider passing Obama’s agenda to be an accomplishment at all. In fact, the right considers that agenda to be destructive, not transformational. If the right was to use the term “transformational”, it would do so describe the agenda as destructive to the traditions which made America’s great. Or, more succinctly, the right sees his agenda as an erosion of freedom and liberty and a huge step toward the collectivism of America.

But how does Weisberg — and the left — see them?

“We are so submerged in the details of this debate-whether the bill will include a “public option,” limit coverage for abortion, or tax Botox-that it’s easy to lose sight of the magnitude of the impending change.. For the federal government to take responsibility for health coverage will be a transformation of the American social contract and the single biggest change in government’s role since the New Deal.”

Weisberg sees this huge expansion of government control as a feature, not a bug. This is a “good thing”, and he implies even more would be better. So there’s little doubt that he will consider such an “accomplishment” as wonderful and Obama as a “consequential” president in a most positive way. Meanwhile the right will also see him as a consequential president but in a catastrophic way — essentially changing forever the dynamic that has made America the exception in the world and instead turning it into another western European semi-socialist “paradise” destined for mediocrity and decline.

And guys like Jacob Weisberg will be standing on the sidelines applauding the whole way down. It is that applause, so to speak, that absolutely puzzles the right. We’ve yet to understand, given what this country has accomplished and done in its short history — its short exceptional history — why people like Weisberg want to so fundamentally change it and make it like the rest of the mediocre countries of the world. It’s simply unfathomable to most of us.

Interestingly, many of those who bought into the campaigning Obama’s promise to be “transformational” are finding his definition (and that of the liberal left) as put into practice to not at all be the transformation they were assuming when they supported him. They’re beginning to realize they were gulled. The problem, however, is now they’re stuck with him, can see the catastrophe on the horizon and can’t really do a whole heck of a lot about it. It’s like New Orleans with Katrina bearing down on it. Stuck in town without a bus ride and getting ready to see life become a whole lot worse than it is now.

Obama the political Katrina, about to lay waste to the exception that has been America and Weisberg and his ilk will tout the destruction as an “accomplishment” and be cheering it on the entire time.

That’s just wrong. It’s also why there can never be accommodation or compromise with the political left.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



On the Money Trail

ACORN current CEO and chief organizer Bertha Lewis claimed in October that ACORN had an “average budget” between “$20 [million] and $25 million a year for everything, all of the offices combined.”

ACORN national president Maude Hurd reported in the ACORN entry of Erica Payne’s handbook for liberal activists, The Practical Progressive, that ACORN’s annual budget last year was $50 million.

That’s double the figure quoted by Lewis, yet even $50 million seems impossibly low given ACORN’s lucrative ongoing corporate shakedown rackets and other revenue sources. The four main ACORN affiliates alone — ACORN Housing Corp. Inc., Project Vote, American Institute for Social Justice Inc., and ACORN Institute Inc — took in a total of at least $106.9 million in donations from foundations and individuals from 1993 through 2008. And ACORN takes in untold millions every year in member dues from its 400,000 members — a figure that has crept up to 500,000 in Bertha Lewis’s recent public statements.

In “Understanding ACORN,” an essay published earlier this year, ACORN founder Wade Rathke said ACORN’s annual budget was north of $100 million. “Each year we raise and spend over $100 million, of which a significant part comes from dues and internal fundraising, but big chunks come from campaign support and labor and corporate partnerships,” he wrote.

So, is it $100 million, $50 million, or $25 million?

No one seems to know just how large the entire ACORN network’s budget is. One of the reasons is that housing and community development grants administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) are difficult to track.

ACORN has received at least $53 million in federal funds since 1993, much of it through HUD. HUD often distributes the money to states and localities, which then allot the funds to many different nonprofit groups. Getting a total financial picture would require enlisting an army of Freedom of Information Act requesters and forensic accountants.

Complicating the accounting further, ACORN Housing Corp. Inc., one of the ACORN network’s largest affiliate members and ACORN’s primary recipient of federal funding, throws money around like a drunken congressman trying to get reelected.

Taxpayer dollars go into the ACORN network through ACORN Housing and then they somehow disappear. Some of the money leaves ACORN Housing in the form of huge cash transfers to other affiliates within the ACORN network.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



See No Jihad, Hear No Jihad, Speak No Jihad

Why government, media seem oblivious to widespread infiltration by Islamic radicals

Why do you suppose, whenever there’s a terror attack on American soil, the FBI always announces immediately — before it could possibly know — that the massacre is not terror-related?

Why do the media concoct the most moronic explanations for terrorism — such as Time magazine blaming post traumatic stress disorder for Hasan’s Fort Hood rampage (even though he was never deployed in a war zone) or the Associated Press’s revelation that the shooter was “lonely”? Or why did the press advance six different theories to explain the terror reign of Beltway sniper John Muhammad, but not one mentioned jihad as a possible motive?

Why does President Obama take every opportunity to criticize America and fawn over Islam — even calling America “one of the largest Muslim countries in the world” and bowing obsequiously before the Muslim king of Saudi Arabia? Meanwhile, Department of Homeland Security chief Janet Napolitano, who demonizes pro-lifers and war veterans as Tim McVeigh wannabes, appoints to her advisory council Kareem Shora, national executive director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, whose officials have labeled deadly anti-U.S. jihadists as “heroes” and opposed referring to Hamas as a terrorist organization.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Al-Qaeda Bar

by Rowan Scarborough

Some of the nation’s wealthiest and most powerful law firms have donated hundreds of millions of dollars in free legal services to terror suspects at the Guantanamo Bay prison.

Their work, bolstered by left-wing activists groups, has helped to free, or force the transfer, of hundreds of al Qaeda suspects to third countries. Some have gone back to terrorism and the job of trying to kill Americans.

The work of big American law firms on behalf of al Qaeda is drawing new attention since Attorney General Eric Holder decided this month that Khalid Sheik Mohammed, who orchestrated the murder of over 3,000 9-11, is coming to New York City for trial. Holder was a partner at Covington & Burling, which in 2005 gave one its attorneys an award for aiding 17 Yemeni suspects at Guantanamo.

It was the constant pressure of activist defense lawyers, in the courts and in public debate, that helped persuade the Obama administration to bring KSM, as he is known, to Manhattan from his Guantanamo Bay prison cell for a civilian, rather than, a military trial.

Andrew McCarthy, a former U.S. attorney who led the prosecution of the Islamist who planned the first World Trade Center terror attack in 1993, told Human Events the American lawyers are not only helping individual detainees. They are helping radical Islam.

“They can’t beat us on the battlefield so what they need to do strategically is move the battle to a place where they are more likely prevail,” McCarthy said. “And it’s a much more even playing field for them in the courts. By getting into the court, they’ve basically drained the resources and the public will necessary to wage the war effectively. It’s been a propaganda coup for them to switch the debate from the atrocities that they have committed to the purported violations of law that have been committed by the United States.”

The army of lawyers, number over 500 by some counts, tied up the commission system in series of law suits and appeals, making it impossible to put any of the war criminals on trial for years. They have used the courts to assault the commission system as unconstitutional, even though there is a history here and internationally of trying war criminals such as KSM in special tribunals.

In the process, some American lawyers have helped the image of radical Islamists.

Marc D. Falkoff, a college professor who aided Yemeni detainees while at Covington & Burling, edited a book of prison poetry, “Poems from Guantanamo: The Detainees Speak.” He spoke fondly of his terror suspect clients and poets.

One of them, Abdullah Saleh Al-Ajmi, a 29-year-old Kuwaiti, won release in 2005. He was aided by the firm of Shearman & Sterling, who represented 11 other Kuwaiti detainees. Falkoff read al-Ajmi’s poetry at a public event, but did not include it in his book.

Last year, al-Ajmi remerged, not as a poet, but as a deadly suicide bomber in Iraq, killing 11 Iraqi security forces in Iraq.

Al Qaeda’s courtroom advocates generally have fought two battles: filing habeas corpus petitions to gain jurisdiction in federal courts; and defending detainees within the military tribunals.

A former U.S. government attorney told Human Events law firms have devoted “hundreds of millions of dollars” in pro bono, or free, legal services.

Said McCarthy, “I certainly think it’s in the tens of millions. A lot, a lot of money.”

There were once over 800 detainees in Cuba, compared with just over 200 today. Intelligence sources tell Human Events there is evidence that more than 100 released suspects have gone back to terrorism.

Advocates say the pro bono work for al Qaeda and Taliban operatives, is in the best legal transition of America where every defendant, no matter how vile, gets his day in court.

But there are critics who say the defense has gone beyond court room advocacy.

One is Debra Burlingame, who has a campaigned to keep America safe ever since 9-11. Her brother, Charles F. “Chic” Burlingame III, was the pilot of American flight 77, which al Qaeda crashed into the Pentagon.

“When you consider the billable hours donated to enemies of America by some of the top firms and legal talent this country has to offer I think that is deeply disturbing,” said Burlingame, who refers to the al Qaeda bar as “Gitmo’s guerrilla lawyers.”

“We’re at war,” she said. “We’re a country at war. We have men and women that we’ve sent out into the world into some of the most dangerous places in the world. Iraq and Afghanistan. They are shedding blood. They are taking fire with the very people these law firms are defending. I find that an absolutely perversion. I can’t think of a precedent in the history of our country in all the wars we fought where you would have civilian lawyers donating their time to help secure the freedom of our enemies so they can go back to the battlefield and kill more of our soldiers.”

McCarthy believes the lawyers are wrapping themselves in the Constitution to make an otherwise odious exercise look patriotic.

“One of the things I think is primarily wrong with it is the way it has been pitched to the public, which is that everybody is entitled to counsel and they’re just fulfilling constitutional obligation,” McCarthy said. “Therefore they created a fictional narrative that they’re not really representing the enemy, they’re representing the Constitution as they put it. It’s a fairy tale and it’s not true. Most of these cases are detainee cases. They’re detention under the laws of war. They’re habeas corpus cases in which people are not entitled to counsel…

           — Hat tip: Lurker from Tulsa [Return to headlines]



West Sacramento Mosque Vandalized

WEST SACRAMENTO, CA — The FBI and West Sacramento Police were investigating a case of vandalism Monday at the Sacramento Islamic Community Center on Glide Avenue.

Investigators say someone broke into the building and overturned a bookcase that held Korans, ruined windows and religious ornaments. An outside air conditioning unit was also vandalized.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Defending Popular Rights — by Limiting Them?

Switzerland’s system of direct democracy has won it praise in the past, but a vote to ban minarets has led many to question the much vaunted ideal.

Much of the feedback swissinfo.ch received on the vote has focused on this aspect of the Swiss political system, which means that ordinary people have the right to shape laws.

But the history of direct democracy over the past 150 years is one of slow evolution and adaptation, and the result of the minaret vote has resulted in calls for change.

In the opinion of many lawyers, the decision to ban minarets is a clear infringement of articles of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), to which Switzerland is a signatory.

The problem is that there is currently nothing to stop an initiative being submitted to a popular vote which cannot legally be implemented if it is accepted.

At the moment the only grounds on which an initiative can be declared invalid before a vote is held is if it violates “peremptory norms”, in other words norms which are obligatory under international law. These include such things as the prohibition of crimes against humanity, genocide, slavery and torture.

The provisions of the ECHR are not regarded as peremptory norms — but Switzerland is nevertheless obliged to follow them.

Two years ago Daniel Vischer, a Green Party member of the commission on political institutions of the House of Representatives, submitted a parliamentary motion to make popular initiatives invalid if they violate fundamental rights.

Vischer wanted to avoid situations where voters are invited to make changes to the constitution which cannot be implemented.

His proposal is currently making its way through Switzerland’s complex parliamentary system.

Incompatible demands

Vischer is not the only person to be concerned about the anomaly in the law governing direct democracy.

“We must find how we can prevent people from launching initiatives that directly violate internationally guaranteed human rights,” Andreas Auer, professor of constitutional law at Zurich university and director of the centre for democracy in Aarau, told swissinfo.ch.

Such a move would not call direct democracy into question, he stressed.

“We defend it to the last, and it’s precisely because we defend it that we must recognise that there are some limits to it.”

He pointed out that popular votes at cantonal level have for years had to be compatible with federal law and with human rights requirements. The same should apply at federal level, he believes.

How exactly this is to be done is something that still has to be worked out but needs to be discussed, he added.

Auer thinks that the government and parliament could examine proposals that are put forward, but that they should not have the final say on whether a vote can be submitted to the people or not.

“It must end up in a court. This is my conviction. These questions cannot be decided by political bodies like parliament or the government, but by judges. Human rights questions are delicate questions.”

What’s this?

People’s initiative

No contradiction

But for Ulrich Schlüer, member of parliament for the rightwing Swiss People’s Party and a member of the committee which proposed the anti-minaret initiative, there is no contradiction between human rights and direct democracy. The opposite is true, he assured swissinfo.ch.

“Not only human rights, but rights and democracy are twins, in my view. Rights which come out of the decision-making process in direct democracy are the most stable and most recognised law,” he said.

For him, asking courts to decide on the legitimacy of popular initiatives would be the end of direct democracy.

He accused the “establishment” of wanting to change the system because they had lost the vote. “But in a democracy, and a direct democracy, the people are allowed to decide the opposite of what the government wants.”

Bruno Kaufman, the president of the Initiative and Referendum Institute Europe, told swissinfo.ch that direct democracy had evolved. In the “pre-modern kind” the people could decide everything, he explained, but the world has changed.

The current case of the minaret ban raises the question of where exactly the limits are for direct democracy, he explained.

“A modern direct democracy has to consider the limits of its own powers, which all other institutions in a modern democracy also have to do.”

Basic principles

Auer says that the debate now sparked about the issue is in fact a reminder of fundamental principles.

“We are not pushing human rights above direct democracy,” he said. “Everyone agrees they are there. The people have never had the right to violate human rights. We just want to remind those who have provoked this decision that human rights are something we must not fail to respect.”

Despite Schlüer’s conviction that the minaret ban does not infringe the rights of Muslims, numerous legal experts expect appeals against it to be lodged with the European Court of Human Rights.

That is something that Auer hopes can be avoided in the future at least. Any amendment to the current system would have to be voted on by the people — but he hopes they would accept.

“It’s a patriotic measure to say we want to do this at home. These are our problems, it’s our direct democracy, and we should have the procedures that allow us to solve these problems before a court because there is no other solution.”

Julia Slater swissinfo.ch

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



Denmark: Foreign Languages Banished From the Playground

School enacts a Danish-only rule in an effort to prevent harassment through foreign languages

A school principal has been reported to the police for violating the constitution after banning students from speaking anything but Danish during their lunch breaks.

Carsten Høyer, the principal of Seden School in the Funen city of Odense where about 30 percent of the pupils have Danish as a second language, introduced the Danish-only rule after a number of instances of pupils yelling at and harassing other pupils and teachers in other languages.

Students aged 13-16 are affected by the rule, which takes effect until 15 January, and if they break it, the principal has warned, there will be consequences.

‘If the students speak a language other than Danish they will be reprimanded by the teacher. If it happens again the teacher will contact their parents, and as a last resort we will call the parents in for a meeting,’ Høyer said to Fyens Stiftstidende newspaper.

National student association, Danske Skoleelever, called the move childish and said that it was not the best solution to the problem.

‘I don’t understand why they can’t just do it [call the parents] if students are yelling at teachers in general than doing it for when students speak Arabic. It’s a sign of powerlessness and shows the school doesn’t have a handle on its integration policy,’ said association chairman Troels Boldt Rømer.

School board member and parent to a pupil at Seden School, Brit Bremer Christoffersen raised concerns about the move saying it was acceptable to require students to answer teachers in Danish, but the new rule was on the edge of what should be allowed.

And concerns outside the school have resulted in a police report being filed by political and social blogger, Flemming Leer Jakobsen.

According to Jakobsen, the decision by the principal violates the constitutional right to free speech, which should also apply to children.

‘It’s worrying that a principal, who’s supposed to educate students to be citizens in a democracy, would introduce measures to limit freedom of speech. That doesn’t belong in a democracy and is something typically seen a police state,’ Jakobsen said.

It was not possible to reach the school principal for comment.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Party Wants to Ban Minarets

The Danish People’s Party wants a referendum on minarets in Denmark.

The Danish People’s Party Leader Pia Kjærsgaard has congratulated Switzerland on the result of its weekend referendum in which a majority of 57.5 percent voted to ban minarets in the country.

“Outstanding that you can have referendums in which people can say what they think. On this issue, the Danish People’s Party will table a bill in Parliament so that we can have a referendum in Denmark too,” says Pia Kjærsgaard.

The Swiss vote was forced through by the right wing Schweizerische Volkspartei (Swiss People’s Party) which collected the 100,000 signatures required by Swiss law in order to force a referendum. Switzerland currently has four minarets in the country.

Denmark has no mosques with minarets. There are, however, plans for grand mosques in Copenhagen and Roskilde.

“We oppose plans for grand mosques in Denmark and believe that a large number of voters agree with us,” says Pia Kjærsgaard.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Denmark Rife With CO2 Fraud

Authorities in several countries investigate VAT tax fraud stemming from the Danish CO2 quota register

Denmark is the centre of a comprehensive tax scam involving CO2 quotas, in which the cheats exploit a so-called ‘VAT carrousel’, reports Ekstra Bladet newspaper.

Police and authorities in several European countries are investigating scams worth billions of kroner, which all originate in the Danish quota register. The CO2 quotas are traded in other EU countries.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



First Impact of Minaret Ban Felt

Muslims in the eastern town of Wil will not apply to build a minaret for their planned Islamic centre, after Sunday’s anti-minaret vote.

Hisham Maizar, chairman of the umbrella organisation of the Muslim community of eastern Switzerland and Liechtenstein, told German-language radio on Monday that the town’s Islamic association had taken the decision of the Swiss people into account.

The association would not pursue the matter in the courts, he said.

The announcement of the project in 2006 had sparked a flurry of protest in the area.

However, the situation in Langenthal in canton Bern is less clear. Muslims had been given planning permission for a minaret, but an appeal against it by opponents is still pending.

The minaret opponents say Sunday’s vote puts an end to the proceedings, and Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf has also said that the minaret cannot now be built.

However, a lawyer for the Muslim community said they were ready to take their case to the European Court of Human Rights if necessary.

He said that under Bernese law, applications are to be judged according to the legislation in force when they were submitted — in this case three years ago.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Iraqi Shoe-Thrower Suffers Copycat Attack as He Has One Thrown at Him During News Conference

He became a hero across the Arab world when he angrily hurled a shoe at George Bush in Baghdad.

But Muntadhar al-Zaidi obviously upset someone.

The Iraqi journalist got a taste of his own medicine yesterday as he was was nearly hit by another shoe thrower at a news conference in Paris.

Al-Zaidi was able to duck and the shoe hit the wall behind him.

The identity of the new shoe-thrower — and his motivation — were not immediately clear, but he appeared to be an Iraqi.

‘He stole my technique,’ Al-Zaidi later joked.

It was not known if the intruder was a journalist or just pretended to be one to attend the news conference at a centre for foreign reporters.

Whatever his motive, the confrontation didn’t stop there.

Al-Zaidi’s brother, Maithan, then chased the attacker in the audience and pelted him with a shoe as he left the room.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



France: Barbe’s — an Update

A few weeks ago I posted an article on the takeover of Paris streets by Muslims on Friday afternoons during prayer. The Muslims praying in the streets of the ghetto of Barbe’s were an indication of the fact that the French authorities turn a blind eye to what is clearly a violation of the rights of citizens living in the city, not to mention a violation of the 1905 law on “laïcité” that separated Church and State.

The website that provided the information and photos, Riposte Laïque, is pursuing its mission to expose this practice. It has posted a long article by Maxime Lepante, accompanied by photos and videos, on the collusion between the police and the Muslims of Barbe’s. Here is a condensation…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Jewish Leader Says Swiss Vote Shows Europe’s Growing Anti-Muslim Views

An official from the German Jewish Council warned on Wednesday that Switzerland’s vote to ban mosques with minarets was an expression of Europe’s deep-seated aversion to Islam that was aggravating the integration of Muslims.

The council’s general secretary, Stephan Kramer, said that the referendum in the Alpine country on Sunday could be “neither euphemised nor re-interpreted.”

“With relative certainty, there’s not a single country (in Europe) that doesn’t have more or less similar fears of Muslims and they would have had similar results in a referendum,” he said.

Kramer encouraged a more open discussion about how such a referendum on basic rights could even come to a popular vote. The Swiss, Germans and others were not “born to hate foreigners or fundamentally against Muslims,” he said, adding Europeans were not engendering an atmosphere of trust.

“Those who want integration instead of assimilation, and really means it, must create a climate of mutual respect, acknowledgement and trust,” he said.

Ideas such as the “integration contracts” like the one proposed by Germany’s integration commissioner last month, headscarf bans and other “legal condescension” do not achieve this purpose, he said. Instead they are “damaging populist activism.”

While Muslims are regularly accused of an unwillingness to integrate or engage in dialogue, the majority of European society does “very little” to be hospitable or respectful, he said.

“A climate of trust can only happen if Muslims are naturally entitled to the right to their own religion, culture and language, and cultural diversity is considered to be a benefit and enrichment to our country and not a threat or burden,” Kramer said.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Guantanamo: Tunisia’s Nasri at San Vittore Prison in Milan

(ANSAmed) — MILAN, DECEMBER 1 — Riadh Nasri, the suspected Tunisian Islamist terrorist, held since 2001 in Guantanamo and extradited today to Italy after a hearing before the Milan magistrate Guido Salvini was transferred to San Vittore prison in Milan. The other Tunisian prisoner who arrived from Guantanamo, Ben Mabrouk Adel, is also to be held in the same prison after a hearing to take place tomorrow before another magistrate. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Guantanamo: 2 Tunisians in Milan Investigated for Terrorism

(ANSAmed) — ROME, DECEMBER 1 — Two suspected terrorists have arrived in Italy, Milan, after having been held in Guantanamo. They are Adel Ben Mabrouk and Ben Mohamed Riadh Nasri, both taken into precautionary custody by Italian judicial authorities and now in prison following the agreement signed in September between the heads of justice of the two countries, Alfano and Holder, after the political commitment taken by premier Berlusconi to collaborate with Obama for the super-prison’s closure. Nasri, in particular, is accused together with another 8 people for criminal association, favouring illegal immigration and other crimes aimed at terrorism, for events that happened between 1997 and 2001. The group, according to the prosecution, supplied logistical support to a cell of a Salafite group that preached combat and recruited people destined for martyrdom in the countries where conflicts were taking place. In the order signed by Guido Salvini, in particular, Nasri — or Abou Doujana — is accused of having organised “logistics for mujaheddin coming from Italy” in Afghanistan and sending them into the field “where they were trained in weapons use and the preparation for suicide attacks”. Nasri was described as “head of Jalalabad Tunisians in Afghanistan, where he kept close and constant relations with structures in Italy and Milan”. Moreover, he reportedly organised and financed, as the order claims, “the re-entering of Mujaheddin to the West and in particular Italy and Milan”. Nasri, before reaching Afghanistan “lived in Bologna and was also sentenced in Italy for circulating counterfeit bank notes in 1997”. It was the same Bologna magistrate to issue the warrant for cautionary custody in 1998 as a part of the investigation ‘Winds of War’. Nasri, who is also accused of having promoted and gathered “funds from Italy aimed at financing” activities “for training and logistical aspects”, was captured in Afghanistan during a US military operation. Ben Mabrouk Adel, the other former Guantanamo detainee, is one of the recipients of a warrant for cautionary custody issued by a Milan magistrate on May 18 2005 as a part of the investigative tranche carried out by Carabinieri entitled ‘Bazar’. He was a barber at the mosque in Viale Jenner in Milan. Towards his cell and other components of the extremist cell based in Milan, the contested accusations are for international terrorism, falsification and receiving of documents to favour illegal immigration, drug trafficking and robbery. They were also reportedly a part of a group of Islamic extremists: the investigation permitted the discovery of terrorism projects and support activities, financing, proselytism and recruiting of fighters to send to training camps, primarily in Al Ansar and in Iraq. When the warrant was issued, Ben Mabrouk Adel was not captured because he was already a prisoner in Guantanamo. According to a investigator reconstruction, in 2001 he went to Afghanistan where he was captured by coalition forces. “The positive carrying out of the prisoner transfer, which occurred in full respect of European regulations defined last June, stated the justice minister, shows the close and positive collaboration that has developed between the United States and Italy in the process of Guantanamo’s closure provided for by Obama with a presidential decree on January 22 2009”. The agreement reached between Italy and the US provides for the arrival in Italy of 3 Guantanamo detainees, all Tunisians. In addition to Nasri, the names of Abdelkader Fezzani have been circulating, investigated with the same proceedings and for which the Milan prosecutor’s office has already requested for extradition from the United States, together with Abdul Bin Mohammed Ourgy, who is facing an arrest warrant from a Milan magistrate for connections with people who recruited volunteers for Iraq and Afghanistan.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Guantanamo Detainee Arrives in France a Free Man

An Algerian man who spent eight years in custody in the US detention centre in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was released Monday, and arrived in France Tuesday, according to the French Foreign Affairs Ministry. He was transferred out of Guantanamo in a plane with two Tunisians who were handed over to Italy for prosecution.

Saber Lahmar, 39, who was ordered to be released by a judge in November 2008 because of insufficient evidence, was one of five Algerians arrested in Bosnia in 2001.

His lawyer, Robert Kirsh, told the AFP news agency that Lahmar has looked into the kind of work he can do in France, to “rebuild his life as a free man.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Islam: Minarets; Maroni, People Have the Right to Decide

(ANSAmed) — VARESE, DECEMBER 1 — “Switzerland has done well in asking the people for their opinion on important issues like the minarets; sovereignty is of the people” said Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni during a conference in Varese, regarding the referendum held in Switzerland about the construction of minarets. “This is not a matter of city planning” he continued, “but a matter that regards deeper issues. Yesterday I spoke with the Swiss minister, who confirmed that this is not about religious freedom. One of Islam’s unresolved problems is the close relation between religion and politics, so that religious symbols also have a political meaning, a symbol of power and of control over an area”. Maroni added that “this is a problem that the Swiss people have understood”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: League Wants Minaret Referendum in Italy

Proposal finds little support from government allies

(ANSA) — Rome, December 1 — A proposal from the right-wing Northern League for a referendum banning Islamic minarets in Italy was rejected on Tuesday by allies in the center-right government.

Seizing on the vote in Switzerland this weekend, which came out favor of banning the construction of new Muslim spires, Simplification Minister Roberto Calderoli on Monday suggested Italy hold a referendum of its own.

But leading members of Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party (PdL) came down on the side of the Catholic Church, which condemned the referendum as an attack on the religious freedom of Muslims.

Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said the move would represent “a step backwards in interfaith dialogue”.

“Right or wrong, the referendum in Switzerland sent a message of mistrust to Muslims around the world”.

“I say that as a Christian, who wants Christians in other countries to be able to profess their religion freely”.

Also critical of the proposal, lower house PdL whip Fabrizio Cicchitto who warned against “falling into the same trap of fundamentalism that we see in repressive Islamic states”.

But Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, another Northern League heavyweight, said he too would have voted to stop new minarets from being built.

“The Swiss people didn’t vote against religious freedom, they voted against a symbol charged with political meaning”.

Maroni claimed that politics and faith were so intertwined in Islam that minarets were not just religious symbols, but signs of “power and control”.

“That’s the problem with Islam and the Swiss people understood that,” he said.

Maroni added that he had “no objections to the idea of letting the Italian people decide on such an important issue”.

“I’m confident a similar referendum in Italy would be approved by an even wider margin than in Switzerland,” he said.

The League’s proposal sparked a chorus of outrage from the center-left opposition.

Summing up their objections, shadow immigration minister of the largest opposition group, the Democratic Party (PD) launched a counterproposal for a bill protecting religious freedom.

In an open letter on her website, Livia Turco said that “any state that values peace and prosperity must guarantee the freedom of its religious minorities to worship in accordance with their beliefs”.

Italy has around 1.2 million Muslims, making Islam the second religion after Catholicism.

According to a recent report by L’Espresso magazine, there are around 759 mosques in Italy, only four of which boast minarets.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Council Defies Court Ruling and Displays Crucifix

Catania, 1 Dec. (AKI) — The council in the Sicilian city of Catania has defied a ruling by the European Court of Human Rights and endorsed a proposal to display a Christian crucifix from Wednesday. The move is a direct response to a decision by the court which last month ruled that the symbol could not be displayed in public premises, in particular state schools.

“Before being a testimony of faith, the cross is a symbol of civilisation for Europe and the West,” said a statement approved and signed by the city’s municipal council.

The proposal was approved by the council and only one councillor opposed the move.

The European Court of Human Rights ruled on 3 November that placing the crucifix in classrooms infringed parents’ right to educate their children “in conformity with their convictions”.

“The State was to refrain from imposing beliefs in premises where individuals were dependent on it,” said the court’s verdict.

“The compulsory display of a symbol of a given confession in premises used by the public authorities…restricted the right of parents to educate their children in conformity with their convictions, and the right of children to believe or not to believe.”

The court ruling has sparked fierce debate in overwhelmingly Catholic Italy where the Vatican earlier this month strongly rejected the ruling, saying it was “wrong and myopic” to exclude a symbol of charity from education.

The case was launched by Soile Lautsi, a Finn married to an Italian who opposed the display of a Catholic crucifix at her children’s state school in Abano Terme, a small town outside the northern city of Padua.

Lautsi was also awarded 5,000 euros in damages by the court.

According to a survey released on Tuesday, 69 percent of Italians want the crucifix to remain in schools, while 29 percent are opposed it.

The survey was carried out by one of the leading business associations in Italy, Confeserscenti-Swg.

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



Italy: Mussolini ‘Sex Video Offered to Berlusconi’

Rome, 30 Nov. (AKI) — A sex video purportedly showing Alessandra Mussolini, granddaughter of Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, was reportedly offered to Palazzo Chigi, the office of prime minister Silvio Berlusconi. A report published in the Italian media on Monday said the video was offered for one million euros.

Alessandra Mussolini is an MP for Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party or PdL.

Palazzo Chigi, located in the centre of Rome, is where the cabinet or council of ministers, led by Berlusconi meets.

Last week, the Italian daily Il Giornale — owned by the Berlusconi family — reported that it had been offered the video of Mussolini having sex with the leader of a small extreme right-wing party, Roberto Fiore, by a security camera at the headquarters of Berlusconi’s defunct Forza Italia party in Rome.

The daily refused to buy the video, saying they weren’t even interested in seeing it.

Fiore and Mussolini used to be political allies in the former far-right group called Alternativa Sociale, or Social Alternative, through which Mussolini was elected to the European Parliament in 2004.

Mussolini, a mother of three, called the existence of the video a ‘ridiculous hoax’ spread by an ‘unreliable source’.

On Monday, Berlusconi’s PdL party leader at the Italian senate, Fabrizio Cicchitto, said he wanted an end to the media attacks against Mussolini.

“Enough with the media attack against Alessandra Mussolini. What’s happening is absolutely indecent and uncivil,” said Cicchitto.

Reports about the Mussolini video surfaced a month after the former governor of the Lazio region Piero Marrazzo resigned from his post after a video emerged that apparently showed him with a transsexual prostitute.

Later, reports surfaced about another, longer and allegedly more compromising video of Marrazzo with cocaine.

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



Italy May Accept More Gitmo Detainees

ROME — Italy is considering taking in other prisoners from Guantanamo to help President Barack Obama close down the prison, the country’s foreign minister said Tuesday, a day after Italy accepted two former detainees.

Premier Silvio Berlusconi promised Obama at a White House meeting in June that Italy would accept three people as part of the U.S. administration’s bid to close down Guantanamo.

Obama said last month that he would miss his January deadline to close the prison, partly because he cannot persuade other nations to take the detainees.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Visit — DKK 50 Million

President Obama’s decision to come to the UN Climate Summit early will be costing at least DKK 50 million extra.

The cost of President Obama’s decision to visit Copenhagen early on in the Climate Summit, rather than with the rest of heads of state and government, will be costing the Danish taxpayer some DKK 50 million extra, according to several sources.

The extra cost is a result of police and other services having to go on maximum alert a week earlier than planned.

“We will have to start up motorcade services earlier than planned as well as putting surveillance of particular areas, bodyguards and roadblocks in place earlier,” says Copenhagen Police Ass. Comm. Mogens Lauridsen.

Apart from extra costs for police readiness, other departments are also to advance their plans. These include the defence forces as well as departments dealing with nuclear and chemical issues within the Danish Emergency Management Agency and the Board of Health.

Changing tactics

President Obama’s decision to come to Copenhagen early will in all likelihood also require the Danish government to change its negotiating tactics, which had included collecting heads of state and government on December 18 in Copenhagen in order to sign an agreement.

The likelihood of Obama returning to Copenhagen, however, is slim and the government is hoping to be able to use the speech that he is expected to hold as leverage in bringing about a political agreement.

Obama will be visiting Denmark the day before an EU summit in Brussels. The hope is that the American president will repeat his targets for reduction or even provide help in financing the agreement, allowing negotiators at the EU summit to pressure more ambitious goals out of EU leaders.

Chastising Obama

The President’s early visit to Copenhagen has already caused disarray in international circles. A day after Obama’s decision to visit the summit early, China announced it will not be sending President Hu Jintao, but Prime Minister Wen Jiabao instead.

President Sarkozy of France is also unhappy with the decision.

“The decisive moment is the 17th and 18th of December. If some come at the beginning and some at the end, will we be able to take decisions?” Sarkozy says. Archive.

“The decisive moment is the 17th and 18th of December. If some come at the beginning and some at the end, will we be able to take decisions?” Sarkozy says.

In announcing his decision to visit Copenhagen, President Obama said that the United States is prepared to reduce its CO2 emissions by four percent in 2020, something that Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister Michael Somare has criticised.

“Obama’s offer is irresponsible and dashes our hopes for an agreement in Copenhagen. Deep inside, President Obama is aware of this. Why would he otherwise plan to escape from Copenhagen before any of the other world leaders arrive?” Somare tells Politiken.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Some Post-Communist Dos and Don’ts

Jobs, government, infrastructure: in the wake of 1989, the countries of the former communist block had to re-invent themselves. As Czech daily Hospodárské Noviny notes, the different strategies they chose resulted in some initiatives that were well-prepared and some that were wholly unsavoury.

In the course of the last two decades, it has been easy to identify political measures that have worked well in Western Europe. However, closer to home, in countries where governments had to contend with the aftermath of communism, it is much more difficult to tell the wood from the trees. Looking back on 20 years of post-communist rule, we can now see that they did succeed in cooking up a few successes, though other projects have remained semi-toxic failures. But before, we embark on an inventory of the more notable projects in the ex-Soviet bloc, it is worth bearing in mind that the situation in the Czech Republic remains the exception rather than the rule, and non-reformed communists no longer form a parliamentary group or even a political party in most of the post-communist countries of the European Union. In countries like Hungary, Poland and Lithuania, they have been assimilated as social-democrats. In other states, like the former Baltic Republics and Slovenia, their influence is spread across a range of political creeds on the Left and the Right, and across a range of issues from defence to national sovereignty.

Dynamic Poland

The reforms implemented by Poland in the early 1990s, amounted to a period of shock therapy, with an unemployment rate that affected up to 20% of the population. Many people became dependent on a range of State pension systems (mainly small farmers and those who benefited from early retirement). Capitalism resulted in a much greater measure of austerity in Poland than it did in the Czech Republic, which prompted Poles to make much greater efforts to find work both at home and abroad. A year ago, it was estimated that two million Poles were currently working in other countries of the EU. The Poles were also distinguished by their enthusiasm for the European Union, with a population that was united in the belief that EU membership and access to European funding represented an unprecedented and historic opportunity to build a new society. This trend was clearly confirmed by the marginalization of nationalist and populist parties in the country’s most recent general elections in 2007.

Slovakia’s non-profit sector

In Slovakia in the 1990s, Vladimír Meciar and his authoritarian regime contributed to the emergence of non-governmental or “third-sector” research institutes and foundations, whose experts later figured large in the teams appointed by the Dzurinda governments to conduct reforms in several sectors, most notably in the fields of health care and taxation. More generally, Slovak society was marked by a gradual shift towards new political perspectives and initiatives that were independent of the government in office. The work of a wide range of non-governmental organizations also played a major role in the landslide result of the May 2003 referendum on Slovakia’s accession to the European Union [a 92.46% “yes” vote], and these bodies continue to provide a ideological counterweight to the current left-wing nationalist government led by Robert Fico.

Estonia’s eGovernment

Estonia’s digital democracy or “eGovernment” is a perfect illustration of what can be achieved through government collaboration with non-governmental organizations. The country has now established a comprehensive Internet voting system, which was implemented for local elections in 2005 and general elections in 2007. When traveling abroad, Estonian ministers vaunt the merits of paperless cabinet meetings, where discussions can proceed without the piles of documents that encumber their foreign counterparts. The “eGoverment” initiative has also resulted in greater participation in a democratic process. Proposed legislation is now submitted to public debate on the Internet, and government officials are obliged to take their fellow citizens remarks into account.

Hungary’s motorways

The Czech media often complains about the extraordinary cost of new motorways in the Czech Republic, which are allegedly the most expensive roadways in the world. However, many of the citizens of Hungary-where the recent history of transport infrastructure has been marked by the construction of private motorways that remained unused by local drivers unable to pay the excessive toll charges-also lay claim to this dubious distinction. At the end of the day, the state was obliged to step in to take over the beleaguered concerns, and Hungary now has seven modern motorways that are open to the public at a reasonable price. Apparently, the price of an efficient motorway network is not confined to construction costs, but must also include kickbacks that surround calls for tender. In Hungary, the running joke among political journalists is that the system for “the sharing of funds” from these brown envelopes remains the only issue on which representatives of the Left and Right can agree. It is even said that the country’s two main political parties, the former communists and Fidesz, have appointed special secret teams for the collection of motorway funds.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



UK: Lib Dems End EU Referendum Call

The Lib Dems have ended their campaign for an “in or out” referendum on UK membership of the European Union.

The pro-European party had argued that instead of a vote on the Lisbon Treaty a referendum was needed on Britain’s broader relationship with the EU.

But ex-leader Sir Menzies Campbell said there was no “public appetite” for a vote now that the treaty was ratified.

He said it was now time to concentrate on making Europe work better post-ratification.

He told BBC Two’s Daily Politics: “When the issue of whether or not there should be a referendum on Lisbon came up then we said it would be much more sensible to have a referendum on ‘in or out’ but the Lisbon Treaty is now history.”

Referendum campaign

He added: “The one thing about the Lisbon Treaty is that there is no appetite of any kind whatsoever, for the foreseeable future, for any other treaty change in Europe.

“Now all of the effort and energy has got to be directed towards making Lisbon work and that’s the real issue now.”

But Lord Pearson, the new leader of the UK Independence Party, which campaigns for Britain’s exit from the EU, said there “jolly well is an appetite” for a referendum among the public.

He told The Daily Politics: “We should have a referendum on in or out. I actually put an amendment down an in the Lords during the Lisbon proceedings in the hope that the Lib Dems would support it and, blow me down, they didn’t.”

On Tuesday, UKIP will launch a national campaign for a referendum on EU membership.

When he first called for an “in or out” referendum in 2007, Sir Menzies said the public deserved an “honest debate” on Europe.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



UK: Prince Charles: Alternative Medicine Must be Saved From New EU Rules

Prince Charles is urging the Government to protect the future of alternative medicine and ensure the safety of its patients.

A long-standing enthusiast of complementary therapy, the Prince has held talks with health Secretary Andy Burnham to persuade him to introduce safeguards for practitioners and their remedies. His call comes before a crackdown by the EU that could prevent anyone who is not a registered health practitioner from selling remedies.

The Government is consulting on the Brussels plan, due to come into force in April 2011. Campaigners are calling for a licensing system to be established earlier amid fears that small practitioners could be forced to close under the EU directive. They also want “reputable” practitioners to be licensed sooner than 2011 to protect patients.

A source close to the Prince said: “This is a very pressing issue and the Prince is very worried about the health impact of inadequately regulating herbal medicine. Regulation is needed to safeguard the public health of millions. The people who regularly use these products are not going to stop using them. This is a particular issue in London.”

The Prince’s intervention puts him at odds with eminent scientists who regard Chinese herbalism as “quackery”. The Royal College of Physicians is against statutory regulation on the grounds it would make such treatments “respectable”.

Britons spend about £1.6 billion a year on alternative remedies. There is currently no official system of regulation in the UK, meaning anyone can treat, but there are codes under which practitioners use remedies manufactured to recognisable standards.

The Prince’s Foundation for Integrated Health charity has submitted evidence to the Government warning that failure to regulate will put patients at risk. Dr Michael Dixon, medical director of the foundation, said Charles did not see the submission, adding: “We fear that we will see a black market in herbal products.”

The Prince’s Duchy Originals range is not affected by the new EU regulations. A Clarence House spokeswoman confirmed that Prince Charles had a “routine” meeting with Mr Burnham.

Professor David Colquhoun, an expert in pharmacology at University College London, said: “The Prince wants his own ineffective sort of regulation. Proper regulation should be on whether these products work. It seems deeply unconstitutional [for him to comment].”

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



UK: Smart Meters That Only Save Families £28 a Year — to Cost £340 Per Household

The Government is pressing ahead with plans to roll out smart meters even though the £9billion scheme will help people save just £28 a year.

Power suppliers, rather than distribution networks, will be responsible for installing the meters for gas and electricity in all homes by 2020 at a cost of about £340 per household.

But the devices will save the average household just £28 a year off a typical annual duel fuel bill, meaning it will take around 12 years just to recoup the initial installation costs.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Special Report: Face to Face With the Muslim Fanatics Who Attacked Baroness Warsi

With egg yolk dripping through her hair after being attacked by demonstrators, Britain’s most prominent Muslim woman politician took refuge in the sweetly named Memsaab Boutique in Luton. Baroness Warsi could have been forgiven for saying she would never put her well-heeled foot in the Bedfordshire town again.

Minutes earlier, as darkness fell on Monday evening, the Tory peer had been cornered by a group of finger-jabbing young Islamists who had pelted her with eggs, accusing her of causing Muslim deaths in Afghanistan.

The mob chanted: ‘Shame on you!’ and one protester yelled loudly: ‘This woman doesn’t represent us’.

[…]

Yesterday, Baroness Warsi said there were only about ‘seven, eight or maybe ten’ protesters who did not represent the true feelings of the thousands of moderate Muslims in the town.

But are they a tiny minority, or was the outbreak of violence a symptom of a wider problem: the failed integration into society of a group of Muslim extremists (many British-born)?

After all, it was in Luton in March that a similar group of young Islamic protesters shouted obscenities at members of the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Anglian Regiment taking part in an Afghan war homecoming parade.

Such is the extent of the problem that government ministers are spending large amounts of money in Luton for a project called ‘Preventing Violent Extremism’. More than £600,000 has been put into a ‘hearts and minds’ campaign to try to prevent young Muslims joining the fanatics.

[…]

To understand the roots of their movement, one must go back a decade to the time when the radical Islamic preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed was making inflammatory speeches in Britain.

The self-styled sheikh was head of an organisation called Al-Muhajiroun, which endorsed suicide bombings and was virulently anti-Semitic.

In one of his most vile statements, the London-based preacher said the West would suffer many attacks like that of 9/11 if it did not change its policies in the Middle East.

Later, in 2001, Al-Muhajiroun was outlawed on university campuses by the National Union of Students. Its activities waned and the Government banned Omar Bakri from returning to Britain after he made a trip abroad. Enlarge Egged: Yolk drips down Baroness Warsi’s coat

As a result, many believed the group had disbanded, but the truth is his extremist movement is alive and well. Islamic activists still claim membership, and splinter groups have formed. Together, they continue to glorify terrorism and suicide bombers and spread hatred against any Muslim who does not support their views.

One of the groups is Islam4UK, run by a friend of Omar Bakri called Anjem Choudary, who has vowed that the flag of Islam will fly over Downing Street in 20 years’ time.

Detectives fear that home-grown extremists leading apparently normal lives pose the greatest threat to Britain’s security. And key players behind this ‘enemy within’ are Al-Muhajiroun and its splinter groups, busily sucking in alienated young men, then brainwashing the more impressionable into becoming promoters of violent jihad.

According to a leaked intelligence report earlier this year, Luton remains a ‘magnet’ for extremists and a focus of concern for anti-terror police. Other hotspots include Beeston in Leeds and parts of Birmingham and London.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Best Savings Account You’ve Never Heard of

By John Fitzsimons

Everybody is searching for the best place to put their savings, but this account may just have slipped off your radar…

I’m on the hunt for a savings account at the moment. The trouble is, some cracking accounts, including the old ING Direct savings account, have been withdrawn.

So if, like me, you want a reasonable return on your money you might need to look beyond the usual suspects and check out an account that probably won’t have appeared on your radar before now.

The Islamic Bank of Britain

One of the best savings accounts around comes from the Islamic Bank of Britain. Now, don’t despair if you aren’t a Muslim — these accounts are available to everybody, but simply abide by slightly different rules. More on that later — first, let’s look at why the account is so good?

The simple reason is that with its two-year fixed term deposit account, you can expect a whopping return of 4.5%.

While there are a stack of two-year bonds paying 4.25% AER, from providers as diverse as SAGA, the Post Office and the AA, you simply will not be able to get the same rate as that on offer from the Islamic Bank of Britain.

Even better, the Bank has cut the minimum deposit size, so you can now open the account for as little as £1,000.

However, there are a few things to keep in mind

You aren’t getting interest!

While you will get a return of 4.5%, that won’t be paid as interest, as Islam prohibits the payment or receipt of interest.

Instead, to ensure the account is Sharia’a compliant, your cash will be placed into ethical trading activities (for example, the money won’t be put into gambling or tobacco companies) which the bank believes will provide the agreed profit (i.e. 4.5%) over the agreed term.

Now, when I first read that, I’ll confess alarm bells went off in my head. Handing your savings over to be gambled on investments that you have no idea about sounds suspiciously like what started the whole banking mess in the first place.

So how safe is your money?

However, there is one crucial difference with the Islamic Bank of Britain’s Fixed Term Deposit Account. The bank monitors how your funds are doing compared to the target profit rate on a daily basis to keep abreast of how likely they are to hit the required rate.

And if at any time they believe that market volatility is likely to hit your return, they will inform you immediately. You then have the choice to close the account, or accept a lower rate of profit. All of the profit achieved up to this point by your funds is protected by the bank, as is the initial sum you deposit.

In other words, you won’t lose a penny, but you might get a slightly lower return than expected. It’s also worth noting that the bank claims that, to date, it has always achieved its target profit rates, while the fact that it is a member of the Financial Services Compensation Scheme should also provide a bit more reassurance.

You also have the option of receiving your profit every three months, or retaining it in the account to be invested with your deposit. But you can’t make any withdrawals during the two-tear term.

Clearly going for a saving product like this is a little bit of a gamble, but if you are hell bent on getting a great return on your money then it’s a cracking option. Islamic finance options may be out of the mainstream, but they certainly merit serious consideration.

Fancy a Sharia’a mortgage as well?

If the Islamic way of doing things appeals, then you should also consider a Sharia’a mortgage . Again things work in a slightly different way to a mainstream mortgage. Basically, you buy the property alongside the bank (they will stump up 70%-80%). Then, over the term of your mortgage , you make monthly payments towards the bank, buying its share of the property over time.

Compare loans

And the products do look pretty attractive — for a deal of up to 80%, you will be facing an effective interest rate of 4.99%.

The lowest rate you can get elsewhere at that loan-to-value is a tracker from Royal Bank of Scotland at Bank Base Rate plus 2.39% for two years, which is obviously much more attractive, but far more of a risk should Base Rate start to move upwards. It will also set you back £1499 just to get hold of it, compared to £299 for the Sharia’a deal.

In truth, the best thing to compare the mortgage to is a long-term fixed rate . And the best five-year fixed rate at 80% loan-to-value, from Nottingham Building Society, comes at 5.59% and will cost the best part of a £1000 in mortgage fees.

           — Hat tip: El Inglés [Return to headlines]



UK: The Burglars’ Code: Criminals Chalk Messages Which Pinpoint Targets for Other Villains

Burglars are scribbling chalk marks outside homes to let fellow criminals know which properties to target.

The symbols — dubbed ‘the Da Pinchi Code’ — may indicate that a home is wealthy, has already been burgled or may have nothing worth stealing.

Police have revealed the signs are being drawn outside sprawling homes in advance of them being targeted by criminal gangs.

Detectives released information on the plot yesterday after a number of properties across the affluent Tandridge district in Surrey were targeted in recent weeks.

Residents have been warned to report any unusual markings on low-rise walls, pavements or kerbs to police.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Would-be Councillor in Queen ‘Vermin’ Slur Off List

A Labour election hopeful who called the Queen “vermin” has been removed from the party’s list of candidates.

Would-be local councillor Peter White was axed by party bosses after being forced to apologise for an online rant about the monarch’s diamond jubilee.

Mr White, who had been due to fight for a seat on Havering Borough Council next year, also described the Queen a “parasite” in a post on Facebook.

He appeared before a regional Labour Party panel earlier.

‘Totally inappropriate’

His comments were posted on the Facebook page of Tory MP Andrew Rosindell, who is campaigning for the royal milestone to be marked with a public holiday.

Mr White posted: “What is the point of celebrating the diamond jubilee of someone who is born into a position of privilege, she is a parasite and milks this country for everything she can.”

He went on: “Don’t get me wrong, I have no problem with a public holiday but lets (sic) have one that means something, rather than celebrating vermin.”

In a statement issued via the party after the Facebook item appeared, Mr White said: “The way I expressed myself was totally inappropriate.

“I regret what I said and apologise unreservedly.”

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



UK: Woman Told to Repay £5 of Fraud

A woman who stole £41,000 from her 95-year-old war hero great-uncle has been ordered to pay back just £5.

Hayley Price, 42, of Blaenavon, Torfaen, cooked and cleaned for D-Day veteran Arthur Edwards, while writing herself 154 fraudulent cheques.

She was given a year’s jail, suspended for two years, at an earlier hearing at Cardiff Crown Court.

A proceeds of crime hearing was subsequently told all the money has been spent and Price had no assets.

Judge David Wynn Morgan ruled that Price must repay £5 to Mr Edwards by next week.

He had previously told her: “You did a wicked, wicked thing.”

Price’s trial heard she went shopping for her frail uncle and visited him every day for 11 years.

The court was told that during a police interview, she said: “I was greedy and had Christmas coming. I hold my hands up to it. I thought I could get away with it.”

The jury heard that all the money was spent on herself, her son and her dog.

She admitted 12 counts of forgery.

Mr Edwards, a corporal in the South Wales Borderers, won the Kings Medal for Gallantry for saving the life of a doctor during the D-Day landings in World War II.

After the proceeds of crime hearing on Wednesday, Mr Edwards’ family said it had been a “very difficult time” for the veteran soldier who now lives in a care home.

His niece Jayne Edwards said: “He will never see his money again and the fact that a member of his own family stole from him is very sad.

“I’m disappointed for my uncle that the system doesn’t allow for him to get the money back.”

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



White Power Groups on the Increase: Report

Sweden’s white power movement is in the midst of a transformation, according to a new report, which also found right-wing extremist organizations within the movement have been more active recently than in previous years.

The first annual report on the Swedish white power movement, presented on Wednesday by the Expo Foundation, found that 39 white power groups were active in Sweden in 2008, with 25 of the groups having been created in 2007 or 2008.

“This is a movement which saw an increase in activity in 2008,” Kenny Hjälte, one of the report’s authors, told the TT news agency.

The Expo Foundation, which publishes a magazine of the same name, was founded in 1995 with the express aim of mapping right-wing extremist and racist trends in Sweden.

The Expo report also found that 1,946 actions were carried out by white power groups during the year, roughly 800 more than the year before.

The most common activity was the dissemination of propaganda, followed by various types of demonstrations and lectures.

Almost all actions can be tied to one of four organizations: the National Socialist Front, which later become the People’s Front (Folkfronten); Info 14 and the associated network of Free Nationalists (Fria nationalister); the Swedish Resistance Movement (Svenska motståndsrörelsen); and the Nordic Union, with its associated Resistance (Motstånd) network.

“The biggest apparent change are the activist groups of the type created by Info 14, for example, and which are the most dynamic independent groups we see today. It’s a new form of activism,” said Hjälte.

He said that 2009 has been marked by a fracturing within the white power scene.

“Previously they’ve had large National Day events which were cancelled this year and these organizations held their own events around the country,” said Hjälte.

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

Balkans


Kosovo: EU Police Investigate ‘Political Murder’ Claims

Pristina, 1 Dec. (AKI) — European Union police in Kosovo have detained an ethnic Albanian who claims to have participated in political murders ordered by prime minister Hasim Thaci’s Democratic Party of Kosovo (DPK). Kosovar media said on Tuesday, Nazim Blaca, a former member of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) was arrested late Monday.

He claims to have taken part in 17 murders, attempted murders and threats to political opponents that were ordered by the DPK.

Blaca, who was a member of the KLA’s intelligence service SHIK, has given EULEX a computer disk which he claims substantiated his allegations and EULEX spokesman Christopher Lamfalussy said police and prosecutors were looking into the case.

The KLA began a campaign for independence from Serbian rule in 1988 and Kosovo eventually declared independence last year.

Blaca claimed the murders took place after Serbian forces were pushed out and Kosovo was put under United Nations control in 1999.

He said most of the victims were members of the Democratic Alliance of Kosovo (DAK) of late president Ibrahim Rugova, who spearheaded the drive for Kosovo’s independence from Serbia.

Blaca said he also took part in the bombing of Rugova’s house in Pristina in March 2004. After Rugova’s death in 2006 he was succeeded by the current president Fatmir Sejdiu, whose party is a coalition partner in Thaci’s government.

Blaca told journalists he regretted the murders, but carried out the orders because he thought it was “for the well being of the motherland, but it didn’t turn out that way”.

He said the murders were ordered by a former KLA member and Thaci’s close aide Azem Sulja, DPK member of parliament Dzavit Hailiti, and other DPK officials.

As the scandal hit the front pages of Pristina’s newspapers, Thaci held an urgent meeting with Sejdiu and EULEX chief, French general Yves de Kermabon on Monday.

Thaci later told journalists the scandal was “threatening national security” and the matter would be investigated thoroughly.

DPK spokesman, Blerand Stavileci, has refuted the accusations, saying they were just “an attempt by some parties to make political gains”.

But Blaca’s claims were also supported by Gani Gaci, a MP of the opposition Democratic Alliance of Dardanija.

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

North Africa


Egypt: Village Changes Name After Algerian Clashes

Cairo, 1 Dec. (AKI) — An Egyptian village called al-Jaza’ir, which means Algeria in Arabic, has decided to change its name after recent clashes between the two countries in an elimination match for the 2010 World Cup in November.

Egypt was eliminated from advancing to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa after Algeria’s win in the Sudanese capital Khartoum.

Residents of the village located in the Wadi al-Jadid district, in southwest Egypt, have asked local authorities to rename the village Mubarak al-misriyin in honour of the Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak. The name means ‘Mubarak for Egyptians’.

According to a report in the local newspaper, ‘al-Ahram’, the proposal was immediately endorsed by local authorities as a “nationalist gesture”.

Egypt’s national football team threatened to pull out of international competitions after complaining to football’s highest body, FIFA, over the behaviour of Algerian fans, following the team’s victory over Egypt in Sudan.

“Egyptian fans, officials and players put their lives at risk before and after the game, under threat from weapons, knives, swords and flares. We have stated most seriously in the complaint to FIFA to restore moral discipline to the world of football.”

After the match many clashes were reported in Cairo and Algiers. Hundreds of people took to the streets and headed to Cairo’s upscale neighbourhood of Zamalek where the Algerian embassy is located.

The Egyptian fans did not reach the embassy and instead damaged cars and stores in the area.

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



Egyptian University Orders Veil Ban During Exam Sessions

A leading Egyptian university has banned female students and teaching staff from wearing Islamic veils during the winter examinations session, which will start in January, Al-Ahram newspaper said on Tuesday.

“President of the [Ain Shams] university Ahmed Zaki Badr prohibited the wearing of a niqab inside the university during the [exams] session,” the university administration was quoted by the paper as saying.

According to the document, the ban “concerns not only female students of all years of studying and all departments, but also the teaching and other university staff.”

Ain Shams University has become the second Egyptian university to introduce a partial ban on wearing Islamic veils. The move is widely seen as part of the Egyptian leadership’s crackdown on resurgent ultra-conservative elements in the country.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Weapons and Explosive Vests Found Near Rafah

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 2 — Weapons and explosives including two vests for suicide attacks were found by the Egyptian police north of Sinai in the Rafah area, the town on the border with the Gaza strip. According to investigative sources, the explosives were prepared in Gaza and taken to Sinai to for attacks or to be taken to Israel. Other than the vests there were also six grenades and five explosive charges. In a separate operation police arrested six young Palestinians who entered Egypt through an underground tunnel under the border to bring good to the Gaza Strip. The men arrested are between 16 and 25 years old. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Police Shoot: New Victim at Egyptian Border

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, DECEMBER 1 — There was another victim today on the southern Sinai border of Egypt, where police killed a young African who was trying to enter Israel illegally. Of the victim it is only known that he was 22 years old and that he was hit by two bullets, in the stomach and the arm, and died on the scene. The body was taken to hospital in Rafah. Up to present there have been some 20 immigrants killed by police since last May, when surveillance measures were increased, the most recent victim was just two weeks ago. The police explain that sometimes there are traffickers that accompany them to the border (usually Eritrean, but sometimes Ethiopians and Sudanese) that shoot at police. In any case Amnesty international has recently asked Egypt to exercise more control over security forces to avoid opening fire on immigrants. Recently trafficking in illegal immigrants has increased in the area due to obstacles implemented along other routes, like that which passes through Libya.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


EU to Give East Jerusalem to Palestinians: Report

The official proposal is set to be put forward by EU foreign ministers on Dec.7 when they will call for Jerusalem to be divided to serve as capitals for both Israel and Palestine, Israel’s Haaretz reported, citing a copy of the draft document it obtained.

The document is also said to “imply” that the EU will recognize a unilateral Palestinian declaration of statehood, a move which the Palesitnian Authority said last month they would seek from the United Nations.

The draft seeks to offer a solution one of the core obstacles to peace and although changes favorable to Israel were made there is reportedly “no chance” of preventing the EU from proposing the division of Jerusalem.

The Europeans hope the draft will help encourage the Palestinians to return to the negotiating table amid a tense row over Israel’s continued and defiant settlement building, often seen as land grabbing, in both the West Bank and Jerusalem.

The draft calls on “all parties to refrain from provocative actions” and stating the EU Council “has never recognized the annexation of East Jerusalem. If there is to be a genuine peace, a way must be found to resolve the status of Jerusalem as capital of two states.”

The draft states a goal of establishing “an independent, democratic, contiguous and viable state of Palestine, comprising the West Bank and Gaza and with East Jerusalem as its capital.”

The document also rejects changes made by Israel to the 1967 borders and said the EU would “be able, at the appropriate time, to recognize a Palestinian state.”

The paper reported that Israel was outraged by the document and had already launched a diplomatic campaign to keep it from being endorsed but added that “diplomats close to the EU deliberations believe it is almost inevitable.”

“The process being led by Sweden [EU presidency] harms the European Union’s ability to take part as a significant mediator in the political process between Israel and the Palestinians,” Israel’s Foreign Ministry said.

Haaretz quoted senior Foreign Ministry officials as saying that Sweden is taking “an explicitly anti-Israel” line and therefore rendered Europe “irrelevant” to the peace process.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



High Court Asked to Stop Building Freeze

Jerusalem, 30 Nov. (AKI) — A conservative Israeli action group has asked the country’s High Court to end government plans to freeze construction of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank.

According to the Israeli daily Haaretz, the organisation which calls itself the Legal Forum for the Land of Israel lodged a formal appeal with the court after Israel’s defence minister Ehud Barak ordered his ministry to appoint 40 supervisors in the Palestinian territories to ensure no new construction takes place.

“Setting building limitations only on Jewish settlements is a form of racism reminiscent of the dark eras in Jewish history,” says The Legal Forum for the Land of Israel in a statement on its website.

“And for a country established in response to racial discrimination, it is completely unacceptable, immoral and illegal.”

Representing the organisation, lawyer Yossi Fuchs said the government and not just the cabinet should have made the decision.

“A decision likely to bring serious harm to the assets of Israeli citizens and is unrelated to security cannot be made in an underhanded, covert way, by a secret security cabinet or predetermined without any chance for ministers to appeal,” said Fuchs cited by Haaretz.

On Sunday, Barak called the cabinet’s move an “unprecedented step”.

However, hardline prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the move last week.

“This step was not carried out in the (Ehud) Olmert government or in the (Ariel) Sharon government, not in my government and not in Yitzhak Rabin’s government either,” said Barak.

“The real significance is that for the first time, we are suspending all new construction for an extended period and therefore giving peace negotiations a chance.”

However, the moratorium does not apply to areas in the West Bank that Israel annexed after the 1967 Six-Day war.

The first Jewish settlements — considered illegal under international law and a thorny issue between Israelis and Palestinians — were erected after the Six-Day war inside the so-called Green Line, demarcating a border between the West Bank and Israel.

Israeli human rights group, Peace Now, said in a report earlier this year that at least 285,000 settlers live east of the 1967 Green Line that separates Israel from the West Bank.

The figures exclude East Jerusalem settlers which number over 191,000.

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



Rabbis Slam Jewish Construction Freeze

Warn Netanyahu’s move ‘will cause bloodshed in the region’

JERUSALEM — A group of hundreds of prominent Israeli rabbis here today slammed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to freeze Jewish West Bank construction as an “irresponsible move that will only cause bloodshed in the region.”

[…]

The Palestinian Authority, however, immediately rejected the freeze and demanded more.

Nabil Abu Rudaineh, a top aide to PA President Mahmoud Abbas, told reporters the Palestinians “reject returning to peace talks without the complete cessation of settlement activities in the West Bank and Jerusalem.”

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat urged the U.S. to pressure Israel to freeze all construction activity completely in both Jerusalem and the West Bank.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Dubai: Debt Restructuring Underway, Jump-Starts World Markets

(ANSAmed) — ROME — The beginning of negotiations to restructure 26 billion dollars of Dubai World’s debt breathed life back into the international stock markets, but in the Gulf region declines continued today. This occurred despite reassuring announcements from several high ranking officials in the United Arab Emirates, who said that reactions were excessive and the economy in the area is still healthy. After days of high tension on the international markets, panic over Dubai’s possible default and potential consequences seems to have slowly but surely dissipated, so much so that today both on the European and Asian markets, and at opening in New York, substantial earnings were reported. Yesterday’s announcement of a restructuring plan for Dubai World subsidiaries including real estate giant, Nakheel, had little effect on the markets in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, which declined today by 3.6% and 5.6% respectively, also affecting the Qatar Stock Exchange, which plummeted losing 8.3%, and Kuwait (-2.7%). The markets in Dubai and Abu Dhabi will be closed again tomorrow for four days for a national holiday. Today’s stock market collapses seem to have not taken into account statements made by UAE President, Sheikh Khalifa ben Zayed al-Nahyane, who assured that the country’s economy, “is healthy” and is demonstrating signs of recovery in the fourth quarter as well as others by Dubai governor, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, who is also Vice-President of the UAE and Premier and Defence Minister, who said that the global reaction demonstrated a “lack of comprehension”. “We are strong and perseverant,” he assured. Dubai World, whose total losses amount to around 60 billion dollars, announced that its debt restructuring plan will cont involve the financially stable division, which include Infinity World Holding, Istithmar World, and Ports & Free Zone World. Dubai World will evaluate alternative possibilities to cut its debt, including selling off assets. The situation of the international banks seems to be under control. Europe’s exposure to Dubai World “seems to be at a reasonable level,” said Swedish Economic Minister, Anders Borg, current Ecofin President. While Fitch announced that the four main British bank, HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds, Barclays, and Standard Chartered currently do not seem to run any particular risks due to their exposition to Middle Eastern markets. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Dubai and Abu Dhabi Stock Markets Down Again

Losses reach 6 per cent in early trading to rebound to — 5.6 and 3.57 respectively. Dubai World is trying to restructure part of its debt. The government of Dubai announces it will not guarantee all of Dubai World’s debts. Abu Dhabi announces it will not guarantee all of Dubai’s debts.

Abu Dhabi (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Stock markets in Dubai and Abu Dhabi tumbled for a second day in a row, down 6 per cent in early trading, after yesterday’s losses. They rebounded during the day with the Dubai Financial Market losing 5.61 per cent and Abu Dhabi’s ADX index dropping by 3.57. Banking and real estate were the worst hit. Market analysts say investors are unhappy by the Dubai government’s efforts to restructure some of its debt.

Dubai World, which is linked to the emir of Dubai, wants to restructure US$ 26 billion, including its main property firms, but leave other companies, which it described as “on a stable financial footing”, untouched.

Last week, Dubai World announced that it was asking for a six-month delay in repaying its debts (US$ 59 billion).

Yesterday, the Dubai government said that Dubai World was not part of the government and that it would not guarantee the company’s debts.

Abdulrahman Al Saleh, director general of the Emirate’s Finance Department, said that the company received financing based on the “viability of its projects, not on government guarantees.”

On Sunday, the UAE central bank said it was setting up a facility to provide extra liquidity to all UAE banks as well as foreign banks operating in the Emirates.

For its part, Abu Dhabi said that it would rescue Dubai but will “pick and choose” how to assist its neighbour, insisting that this does not mean it “will underwrite all of their debts”.

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



Fr. Samir: Islam in Paralysis and War; The West Without a Memory

The situation in the Middle East is stagnant: a crisis of Islam drags everything into a fatal paralysis. The crisis also affects the West, oblivious to its Christian roots. Yet Islam and the West need each other. A study by our expert on Islam, in preparation for the Synod of the Churches of the Middle East.

Vatican City (AsiaNews) — Benedict XVI has called a synod of the churches in the Middle East for October 2010. To prepare for it with care we must to try to understand the situation that surrounds this part of the world, and then move on to the problems that churches are suffering there.

In general, the situation in the Middle East appears stagnant and without fruit. In November last year a Catholic-Muslim symposium was held at the Vatican, that gathered dozens of highly qualified figures from the Muslim and Christian worlds. The result was a declaration containing many valid points for the defence of religious freedom, the condemnation of terrorism, the choice of coexistence. But a year on we have yet to see any results, any follow up. Last year even Saudi Arabia, had launched a number of important messages, with steps toward dialogue with other religions, but the situation inside the country with regard freedom of religion or cult has remained unchanged.

Islam in paralysis

Our whole world is waiting and the Islamic world is in a state of paralysis. This paralysis is due to division. The Islamic world is divided on the issue of Israel — Palestine. More reasonable states say that dialogue is the only way forward. On the other hand, Israel offers no possibility for dialogue, and other states — that press for a tougher policy — are also paralyzed.

The situation in Iraq has not improved. There is an ongoing struggle that often takes on the form of war between Sunnis and Shiites. On a broader level this division is reflected in the struggle between Iran and Saudi Arabia, the nations that represent the two Islamic currents.

In recent weeks they have even exchanged threats. Iran says that the Iranians need to take advantage of the pilgrimage to Mecca to revive the jihad to liberate Palestine, the very next day Saudi Arabia said that it will not entertain any gathering or gesture that is not spiritual during the pilgrimage. It was a clear threat to Iran, though without naming it. The war on the border between Saudi Arabia and Yemen is also a war between Sunnis and Shiites. Saudi Arabia’s sentencing to death of Ali Hussein Sbat, Lebanese from al-Ain in Beqaa, on charges of witchcraft, was interpreted as Sunni revenge against Shiites.

Palestine is paralyzed by the division between Gaza and the West Bank, Lebanon for more than 4 months has been without a government — an unprecedented phenomenon. It is a general paralysis.

In this stillness, the only one to move is Israel, which continues to build new settlements in the Occupied Territories, to strike at the heart of the Palestinian problem. By the way they are conceived these Jewish settlements in the future will not allow any geographical contiguity between Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank, making it difficult for a future Palestinian State with East Jerusalem as its capital. All of this is unfolding in the silence — with some milder forms of criticism — of all Islamic and Western nations including the United States. It is the complete defeat of law.

Even the Iranian issue is very delicate. It is clear that Iran is playing cat and mouse, saying it is willing to talk and then taking steps toward nuclear power, even war.

But then, how can we condemn Iran when other states in the region (including Israel) have the atomic bomb? How can anyone accept that one forbids another to take the steps which they have already taken? The only justification that is given is: “we are good, you are evil”. But who can promise me that after you there will not be some “bad”?

All solutions seem to be stuck with no way out.

Violence is the malaise in Islam

There is also a fundamental problem: the Muslim world feels this paralysis even more severely. In newspapers and on the Internet Muslims ask: What have we produced in all these centuries? What contribution have we made to civilization? The only thing we have is something that we did not create ourselves, namely oil. For others the answer is: we have faith in God but this is a good that is difficult to estimate …

Thus a feeling of anger against themselves and against anyone is born. Looking at the Islamic world, I have the impression that the only events that make news are those of violence. It happens in the Philippines, the political struggle between the two Muslims leaders; in Iraq, where bombs are now no longer launched against the Americans, but amongst themselves, in Sudan, Somalia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, in Iran, where Iranian counters Iranian . The whole Islamic world is suffering a lack of freedom in Iran as in Tunisia.

We only need to think of the outcome of the football match between Algeria and Egypt, which also ended in violence … In the end it seems that the only thing Islam is capable of producing is killing and violence.

All of this is the result of a deep malaise of Islam in the Middle East, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, etc..

Now we can no longer lay the blame for this on the colonial past. The countries of which we speak have long conquered structures that are more or less solid, more or less democratic. We can no longer hide this crisis in the cultural, social and political life of the Islamic world.

The only thing that progresses is religious radicalism, not only in devotion, but in visible forms: the veil, the beard, the obligations …. Muslims returning to Egypt after many years, say they no longer recognize their country for the rigour with which they live everyday life. It is true that mosques are fuller, also of younger age groups, but the doctrine that is offered is not intellectual or spiritual Islam. It’s more a crescendo of hatred against others, against pagans and less radical Muslims.

The crisis of the West

Faced with this crisis of Islam, does the West have a clear conscience and balanced view of its identity? It appears to me to be less and less the case. An event that points to this was the decision by the European Court of Human Rights that unanimously — something rare in these cases — condemned the display of crucifixes in Italy because it does not respect the neutrality and secularism of Europe.

Even putting religion aside, this symbol is part of Italian culture (which obviously has a religious dimension). How, therefore, can they say that the exposure of the cross violates freedom? One statistic of a few years ago said that 77% of Italians appreciate the exposure of the crucifix. Even the philosopher and politician, from Venice, Massimo Cacciari, an agnostic, spoke of the crucifix as the most important symbol that we have of a love that is gifted to save another.

The decision of the European Court, in denying the crucifix, denies itself; it is an attack against itself. If you deny the Shoah it is a historical negation, this decision is a denial of European culture. The ominous fact is that at a European level — excluding Italy — nobody reacted.

In the West there is also another approach, equal and opposite, that asserts itself by denying the identity of the other, that of neo-Nazism. These attitudes go hand in hand, one raises the other. But this is because people have less and less self-awareness.

We are therefore faced with two crises: the culture of the Islamic world and that of the Western world, both in paralysis. The only possible relationship between the two stagnant and closed structures and is one of force or exclusion.

The West tends to emerge from this immobility with the idea of tolerance and multiculturalism: my identity — it says — is all cultures. But this is a conceptual attitude: I can appreciate all the cultures only with my own culture as my foundation; if I say that “I am” all cultures, it means that I have nothing. Instead, if I know who I am, then I am peaceful, serene, proud. Only in this way can we talk. But if there is nothing, only those who shout the loudest wins or who have more material power.

Signs of hope in Islam

The only hope that I see in my middle eastern world, is the attitude of those who say “Enough!”. People do not want to be teased, used as pawns. This is evident in Iran, with the “green” demonstrations, but also in Egypt, where there is even a party that is called its “Kefâya”, i.e Enough! This party was born as a critique of the Mubarak “dynasty”, who after 28 years of reign wants to put his son Gamal in his place. The same can be said in Algeria, Senegal …

The reaction is also seen in the multiplicity of forums that appear on the Internet, or printed media. Of course, several internet sites claim some new Muslims perspectives; there are Muslims, atheists, reformers, etc. .., but no one supports them. Each of them sends a message, a cry, one, ten times, but then gets tired and falls back into silence.

A month ago in Berlin there was a conference of “progressive Muslims”, the Muslim liberals. It involved Muslim feminists, a group of exegetes of the Qur’an (including Nasr Hamid Abu Zaid), and other politicians. The conference was very clear and lively. But later, when they all returned to their homes, they did nothing because they are only a drop in the ocean. There are one billion 200 million Muslims in the world, these liberal minds who write and think, maybe count for 10 thousand, 20 thousand: less than 1 per thousand.

Imams and the fatwa

The reaction is certainly growing and one day maybe will result in an explosion, as happened in the case of the Soviet Union, but it will take a long time. The difference between Eastern Europe and us is that here there is no Berlin Wall, rather a wall of ignorance. The sad fact is that the leaders of Islam are unable to solve problems, instead they enhance them. Most of them were trained in the world’s oldest Islamic university, Al Azhar, where every year up to 150 thousand imams enrole. But in what are they formed? To repeat the old, not to deal with modernity. The only thing they propose is to return to the seventh century. By dint of repeating, they even succeed, but perhaps only 1% of them can discuss modernity with you, evaluating pros and cons, positive and negative values.

What is spreading is recourse to the fatwa, a method that allows no-one to think. If I have a problem I ask the Imam by phone, I pay 1 or 2 euro, and tomorrow I have the answer.

Imams fetter the faithful to what Islam says in the first centuries and lack the moral authority to help me to address my situation today.

A Muslim businessman living in Germany asked if he can have a business lunch with some Christian friends. The responses of his imams muftis were multiple and diverse; one told him that according to the Koran to eat with Christians is “halal”, lawful. Another — the famous Imam Yusuf Qaradawi of Qatar — has forbidden him to do so because the Germans today “are not true Christians”. The person who passed these judgments is not a person who has lived together with Westerners to understand and evaluate them: the verdict is taken from a text and enhanced by prejudice.

By itself, the fatwa is a good tool in advancing Islam and allowing for the modernisation of the religion. But it also runs two risks: first, of blocking development because it often refers back to ancient models; secondly of creating infantilism among the faithful, who do not reflect personally, but look for ready made answers from mufti.

Signs of hope in the West

In the West there are signs of hope, which are critical of inaction. There are those who fight for a more liberal ethic (which sometimes borders on permissiveness), but at all levels, there is a debate about values, on issues with different positions.

Take, for example, immigrants in Europe. Among you there are those who struggle to give them the right of residence, to vote, etc, and others who remain cautious. March 1st next in France, all immigrants go on a general strike, to show how much they weigh in the economy and demand more rights.

But in our middle eastern world, immigrants are treated like animals, without any rights and have no one to defend them. One can say every point the West discusses, it questions itself, it explores philosophical and spiritual values, in depth. Among us in the Middle East there are only a political discussion, but otherwise there is silence. Last January, during the attack against Gaza, invited to participate in a conference by a Shiite Islamist group, I mentioned the Israeli-Palestinian issue, stressing that dialogue was urgent. I was stopped and told that that theme was not to be touched.

Islam and the West need each other

Dialogue between the Islamic world and the West is almost non existent. Yet it is increasingly clear that we need the each other in cultural and economic terms.

The crisis is thus also an occasion for deeper reflection. But the condition is a clear awareness of self and the perception that whatever must be done, must be done together.

The Muslim world can not stand alone, because it risks being left behind by modernity and engulfed by violence. The West can not do it alone either, because even more educated in intellectual terms, it has no arms to work, because of the fall in population. Here emerges the image of St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 12: “The eye can not say I’m better than you” and what is the eye without the rest of the body?

The globalization of the world, the mortgage crisis in America, has created a worldwide tidal wave. What happens in the economy, also happens in culture, ideology, faith, we are in the same boat if the boat sinks, we all perish.

Wisdom means listening to what Muslims have to say, what their grievances are, what is good in their proposals and what is not applicable. And vice versa.

Dialogue is fundamental to the current situation in Europe, where increasingly there are Muslim communities. But it is also an opportunity for Muslims to rethink what it means to live in the West, in an environment of acceptance, but also as a minority. And in being a minority they can not behave as if they were in an Islamic nation, where they are the majority.

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



Iran Bans Make-Up for Women on TV

“Make-up by women during television programs is illegal and against Islamic sharia law … There should not be a single case of a woman wearing make-up during a program,” Ezatollah Zarghami was quoted as saying by the reformist Etemad newspaper.

Zarghami, a former member of the elite Revolutionary Guards who has been re-appointed by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, also ordered that women guests should “preferably” be hosted by women.

Speaking at a conference of network directors, he also called for cutting down on music during programs and urged his staff to take a cue from Western action movies, which have “excellent and calm music.”

“I do not mean that we should become like them, but we should use positive points. Therefore we (should) put on the agenda the reduction and refining of music,” he said.

“As of today, you in the production department should launch new supervisory methods … I do not want to tell you to filter, but you should be vigilant that nothing inappropriate happens,” Zarghami said.

Zarghami told directors they should also prohibit “repulsive jokes” between men and women on television or radio, Etemad and Fars news agency quoted him as saying.

When he reappointed Zarghami to a second term last month, Khamenei reportedly told him it was essential to make an “outstanding representation of morality, religion, hopefulness and awareness” in state media programs.

The Islamic republic’s state television has eight TV channels and 15 radio stations.

It has seen different periods of strict or relaxed dress and make-up codes.

Women on television do not expose their hair, but have been indulging in heavy make-up in recent years.

Television is under close scrutiny and observes strict guidelines to an extent that even some local movies have been censored before being aired.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Iran: Women Banned From Wearing Make-Up on TV

Tehran, 2 Dec. (AKI) — Iranian women should no longer be allowed to wear make-up when they appear on state television, according to a senior Iranian executive cited by the reformist Etemad newspaper. “Make-up (worn) by women during television programmes is illegal and against Islamic Sharia law … There should not be a single case,” said the head of the state broadcaster IRIB Ezatollah Zarghami, during a conference of network directors.

Zarghami, a former member of the Revolutionary Guards, has been re-appointed by the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

He also stated that female guests should appear on TV shows “preferably” hosted by women.

Zarghami said that network directors should also prohibit “repulsive jokes” between men and women on television or radio.

According to media reports, women on Iranian TV do not expose their hair and wear heavy make-up.

Iran’s state television has eight TV channels and 15 radio stations.

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



Muslims Will Empty Their Swiss Accounts: Turkish Minister

AFP — A Turkish minister said he expected Muslims to withdraw their money from Swiss banks in response to a referendum vote that banned the construction of minarets in the country, in remarks published Wednesday.

“I am certain this (the vote) will prompt our brothers from Muslim countries who keep their money and investments in Swiss banks to review their decision,” State Minister Egemen Bagis, who is also Turkey’s chief negotiator in EU accession talks, was quoted as saying in the mass-selling Hurriyet daily.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Turkey-Syria: Erdogan in Damascus to Sign 42 Agreements

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, DECEMBER 2 — Syrian ambassador to Turkey said on Wednesday that Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan would visit Syria on December 22, and the two countries would sign 42 new agreements on education, health, transportation and politics. Turkey and Syria started to implement a mutual visa exemption procedure on September 18, and now Turkish and Syrian citizens are able to travel to each other’s countries without visas. In regard to indirect peace talks between Israel and Syria, Syrian Ambassador Nidal Kabalan told Anatolia news agency that Syria would never leave alone Turkey. “Israel clearly said that it does not want Turkey as a mediator. But Syria will continue to its path with Turkey,” Kabalan said. Erdogan would visit Syria on December 22 and a meeting between prime ministers of Turkey and Syria would take place, Kabalan said. “Prime Minister Erdogan’s visit will be a turning point,” he added. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Video: Stalin Lookalike Treated ‘Like a Rock Star’

John Sweeney has travelled more than 5,000 miles through the old Soviet Union — from Joseph Stalin’s birthplace in Georgia to a former labour camp in Russia — to find out if one of the 20th Century’s most notorious mass-murderers is really being rehabilitated.

In Georgia he meets a Stalin impersonator who claims to receive a rapturous welcome wherever he goes.

This World: Stalin’s Return will be broadcast on Wednesday, 2 December, at 1900 GMT on BBC Two.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


North Caucasus Group in Russia Train Bomb Web Claim

A North Caucasus Islamist group has claimed responsibility for a bomb that killed 26 people on a Moscow-to-St Petersburg train, a website says.

The website claim on Kavkazcenter.com said last Friday’s attack was carried out by the “Caucasian Mujahadeen” on the orders of its leader, Doku Umarov.

He is described as one of Russia’s most wanted rebels, but it was not possible to verify the claim’s authenticity.

Moscow had earlier described the Nevsky Express attack as an act of terrorism.

Doku Umarov, a Chechen, is considered the leader of the Islamist insurgency in the North Caucasus. He says he is fighting to expel Russian forces, and to turn the region into an Islamic emirate.

Wednesday’s web statement said Friday’s attack was an “act of sabotage”, and part of a series of operations targeting strategic sites in Russia.

“Today, we carry out sabotage operations on electricity transmission lines, oil-and-gas-wires. Many of the operations are under preparation status.

“We intend to conduct such diversions in future, which are the just acts of vengeance… These diversions will continue for as long as the occupants in the Caucasus will not stop its policy of killing ordinary Muslims purely on religious grounds.”

Kavkazcenter.com has carried statements before by North Caucasus groups claiming responsibility for attacks on Russia that have turned out to be correct.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Andrew Bostom: Pointed Islamic Hypocrisy: Religious Symbols for Thee, But Not for Me?

How Christian “Symbols,” i.e., Churches, Are Treated in Muslim Pakistan

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]



Danish Defence Chief on Foot Patrol in Helmand

Denmark’s new defence chief Knud Bartels has been on reconnaissance patrol in Helmand.

Denmark’s Defence Chief General Knud Bartels has been in Afghanistan to visit Danish troops there and as part of his visit took part in a foot patrol with scouts of the 2nd Light Reconnaissance Squadron.

Bartels’ foot patrol as part of a CIMIC patrol with the troops took place across fields and irrigation channels in the Gereshk area. CIMIC is part of the Civilian Military Cooperation which refers to the interaction between NATO-led forces and civil actors in Alliance-led operations.

“I was confirmed in my view of the high calibre of our soldiers’ training. And there’s another thing I would like to point out after having been in front with them. We must never forget the courage of soldiers in the efforts in Afghanistan,” Bartels says in a news release.

Crown Princess

Apart from their defence chief, soldiers in Afghanistan have also been visited by Crown Princess Mary, who arrived back in Denmark today after a two-day visit during which she and Defence Minister Søren Gade visited Camp Bastion and Forward Operating Bases Armadillo and Price.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Dhaka: A Jobless Catholic Widow in a Tragic Situation

Gunmen assassinated Laili Costa’s husband on14 July. Police are not pursuing the case because she cannot afford bribe money. Shortly, she will be kicked out of her home, whilst her daughters are malnourished. Now she has but one desire: “celebrate Christmas with my children.”

Dhaka (AsiaNews) — Laili Costa is homeless and out of a job. Her husband was killed under obscure circumstances and her daughters might starve to death. Ms Costa is a Catholic woman in Dhaka who only wants “to celebrate Christmas with her children.” She spoke to AsiaNews about the hardships she has experienced since her husband’s death.

“The landlord of our first house kicked us out. We found a second place but we will have to leave there soon,” she said.

Her oldest daughter “left school because I could not pay the tuition fees.” The second suffers from severe malnutrition and “could die any time.”

Her family’s troubles began after her husband Joacem Costa (pictured at their wedding) was killed. He was a small businessman but was gunned down on 14 July by a group of armed men. Joacem’s brother filed charges but now fears possible retaliation from the criminal gang.

She said she cannot pay bribe money to Mohamed Moinul Islam, the official in charge of the investigation into her husband’s murder. For this reason, she has not had any justice.

For the policeman, the case is “shrouded in mystery;” still police continues ‘to follow the matter to shed light on it.”

Human rights activities and Catholic clergymen have expressed their solidarity to Laili Costa. However, no one has yet to offer her a job or a place where she can move with her family.

“I am afraid that I will not even be able to celebrate Christmas with my daughters,” she said.

Catholics in Bangladesh are a tiny minority. Out of a population of 143 million, Muslims represent 90 per cent of the total. About 9.5 per cent are Hindu, and Christians constitute only 0.3 per cent.

In the past, members of religious minorities have often been victims of attacks, violence and persecution.

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



Diana West: How Important is Marjeh?

Prezident Obama gave his big Afghanistan speech last night, and it was, of course, a mess.

It was rhetorically deceptive — what with the 9/11 jihad further attributed to “men” from al Qaeda, a “group of extremists who have distorted and defiled Islam, one of the world’s great religions” — and it was symbolically diabolical, what with the lives of those dewy-faced cadets in the audience in the balance. The point of it all? The 44th POTUS ordered up 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan to begin bringing them all home by 2011.

Madness.

More depressing still, however, was the conservative reaction, which was all about seeing its glass half full. (Make that three-quarters full.) The futility of “nation-building” anywhere in the Islamic world lost on these poor infidels, they are now saying the president’s message is correct — sending a big chunk of troops as requested by Commander On-the-ground to carry out the chimerical “counterinsurgency” — even if it was marred by an exit date.

In other words, the leftist White House and conservatives are pretty much on the same stupid page when it comes to this suicide pact to sink ourselves ever deeper into the Islamic Pit — I mean, Republic (I get them confused) — of Afghanistan.

For no achieveable thing…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Indonesia ‘Bans’ Film on Journalists’ Deaths in E Timor

Indonesia has banned the film Balibo, which depicts the deaths of six foreign journalists in East Timor, the head of the foreign correspondents club said.

The club cancelled a screening of the film on legal advice that they could face charges.

The journalists died as Indonesian troops invaded East Timor in 1975.

Jakarta maintains they were killed accidentally in cross-fire. But an Australian coroner found in 2007 that the journalists had been executed.

The journalists — two Australians, two Britons and a New Zealander — were killed in the border town of Balibo as Indonesian forces entered East Timor.

A sixth Australian journalist was killed in Dili shortly after when Indonesian troops entered the city.

Successive Australian governments have accepted the Indonesian stance but Australian police announced earlier this year they were opening a war crimes inquiry into the deaths.

Balibo depicts the journalists, working for Australian TV networks, being brutally murdered by Indonesian troops as they attempt to surrender.

Diplomatic fears

The head of the Jakarta Foreign Correspondents Club (JFCC) told an audience gathered for a private screening on Tuesday night that Indonesia’s Film Censorship Agency had banned the movie.

“I haven’t received anything official but after consulting with our legal advisers, we decided it would be too risky because, while this is a private screening, it would be in a public place thus violating the law,” said JFCC president Jason Tedjasukmana.

Organisers for the Jakarta International Film Festival (Jiffest) said they had also cancelled their planned screenings of the film.

“They told us that we cannot show the movie,” said Jiffest manager Nauval Yazid.

“The reason was not really clear. It is likely because of concerns that it will affect relations with East Timor and Australia.”

Indonesian military figures welcomed the ban.

“It will only hurt many Indonesians,” military spokesman Rear Marshal Sagom Tamboen told the Jakarta Post.

“The movie will only do irreparable damage to the ties between Indonesia, Timor Leste [East Timor] and Australia.”

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



NATO Chief: Nobody is Speaking an Exit Strategy

Fogh Rasmussen said the best way to overcome the widespread public opposition in Europe was by demonstrating progress in the war. This can be done by starting to transfer to Afghan control parts of the country where the security situation is good, he said.

He said the alliance may hand over 10 to 15 districts to the Afghan authorities next year, the first step in a wider transfer of responsibility for security to the Kabul government.

“Nobody is speaking an exit strategy, what we are talking about is a transition strategy, a transition to Afghan lead,” he said. “We will not leave Afghanistan behind, we will stay until the Afghans are able to run the country themselves.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Obama Should Call Spain or Italy

From Dutch: The Dutch Labor Party says that the Netherlands will not send soldiers on a new Afghan mission. MP Martijn van Dam said that it’s now the turn of others, and if Obama or other NATO members call, he’ll tell them to call Spain, Italy, France, countries which haven’t done much in Afghanistan in recent years.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Afghan Surge is Not About Winning the War, But Managing Our Looming Failure

The decision by President Obama to dispatch a further 30,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan represents the biggest gamble of his presidency. Two years from now, he will be starting his campaign for re-election. This commitment makes Afghanistan ‘his’ war. If Obama has nothing to show for it by 2012, he will be in deep trouble with the American people.

Of course Britain, too, is raising its stake. There will soon be 10,500 of our soldiers in Afghanistan, including special forces — SAS and SBS.. The objective of the White House, with Gordon Brown trailing in its wake, is to accomplish an extraordinarily delicate juggling act. By sending reinforcements, the national leaders are satisfying the demands of their generals.

Obama is appeasing America’s hawks — the Republicans — and also attempting to persuade the Taliban that he means business. But the real intention of making ‘one last heave’ is to establish a framework for withdrawal. Nato forces are now planning for a six-year presence. In the immediate future, they hope the additional U.S. Marine Brigade and army units, together with British reinforcements, can provide population security in some key threatened areas, especially Kandahar province.

Thereafter, the emphasis will be on training the Afghan army and police units, while seeking progressively to cut Western troop numbers. Obama deems it essential to be seen to be bringing some of his men home by the U.S. midterm elections, less than a year from now.

Gordon Brown seems to have decided that his foremost political priority, in advance of our own general election, is to be seen to give British forces the support they need, which his government has so conspicuously failed to provide in the past. The plan is fraught with tensions, difficulties, indeed contradictions. Some military commanders see a real prospect of using the expanded troop commitment — which brings the total Nato force to 140,000 — to turn the tide against the Taliban and secure large areas of the country.

Many politicians and diplomats are much gloomier, however. One of them, explaining to me last week just how bad things have got, pointed out that the Taliban has established ‘shadow’ administrations in 33 out of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. Popular hostility both to the Karzai government and to the foreign military presence is deep-rooted. Progress with training and expanding the Afghan Army is erratic, to say the least. More than a third of Afghan troops go missing as soon as their units are ordered to deploy in the serious fighting areas in the south and east of the country.

[…]

Almost no responsible person advocates simply packing up and quitting Afghanistan tomorrow. We are too deeply committed. But it seems to me that the West is in the business of managing failure, struggling to salvage something from a host of past mistakes. We should reduce our troop strength as soon as we reasonably can, while sustaining economic and diplomatic support for Pakistan and Afghanistan. Through this week’s fog of political double-speak, I believe that is President Obama’s perception and intention, too..

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: India Not Sincere About Talks, Says Gilani

Berlin, 1 Dec. (AKI/DAWN) — Pakistan’s prime minister Yousaf Raza Gillani said that India was not sincere in resuming talks with Pakistan, adding that attempts by Pakistan to normalise relations between the two nuclear powers were being stalled.

“India is stalling the dialogue process and the European Union must play its role to bring it back to the negotiating table for resolving all outstanding issues, including the core issue of Kashmir, between the two countries,” said Gillani during a meeting with German foreign minister Guido Westerwelle, on Monday after arriving for a two-day visit.

The prime minister said that improvement of ties between the two countries was crucial for stability in South Asia.

Gillani’s visit comes on the eve of the golden jubilee of economic relations between the two countries.

Pakistan and Germany are likely to sign a new bilateral investment treaty to enhance cooperation in defence, economy and education sectors.

Briefing the media after the meeting, a foreign ministry official said that Germany had agreed to provide an additional 45 million euros to Pakistan for development assistance in addition to the annual funding of 80 million euros.

He said that details were being worked out and a major chunk of the German pledge would be in grant.

According to the foreign ministry official, Gillani also called for completely lifting a ban on defence-related equipment which was partially lifted in 2004.

The German minister promised that the issue would be reviewed soon.

Westerwelle, he said, praised Pakistan’s role and sacrifices in the war against terrorism and assured that Germany would continue to support Pakistan in its fight against militants.

However, talking to reporters accompanying him on board his plane, Gillani said that the US and UK had not shared intelligence about the presence of top al-Qaeda leaders in Pakistan.

He said the government had no information about the presence of al-Qaeda leaders, including Osama bin Laden, in Pakistan and the powers which were fighting the war on terror had not shared any intelligence in this regard.

Gillani also rejected British prime minister Gordon Brown’s statement that top al-Qaeda leaders were in Pakistan and said there was no information about them, about their presence in Pakistan or somewhere else.

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



Setting Timeline for Withdrawal in Afghanistan “Could be Fatal”, Warns Mercer

Mr Mercer warned that setting a timeline for withdrawal in Afghanistan “could be fatal”. “I think it could be fatal, I really do. The Prime Minister last week used that dangerous phrase a timeline. He added President Obama’s mistake had been “fatally mentioning a time, 2011 — it’s a maxim of warfare of any support that you achieve surprise. This is a mistake.”

He went on to say that there will be little fighting in Afghanistan whilst the snow is falling, but there was a question over who would take control in Helmand once the expected spring offensive began. “(The question is) when will command and control move from British hands onto American hands. The general military maxim is the majority shareholder takes control,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Taliban Pledge to Fight US Troop Surge in Afghanistan

The Taliban have vowed to step up their fight in Afghanistan, after pledges by the US and its allies to send large reinforcements to the country.

A Taliban spokesman said such moves would “provoke stronger resistance”.

US President Barack Obama, announcing a long-awaited strategy on Tuesday, said another 30,000 American troops would be deployed quickly in Afghanistan.

Nato’s secretary general said non-US members would contribute at least 5,000 extra troops next year.

“Obama will witness lots of coffins heading to America from Afghanistan,” Taliban spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahamdi told AFP news agency.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Three Churches Attacked in Two Days in Tamil Nadu

Church buildings belonging to the Church of South India are targeted. Christian leader says attacks are unwarranted against a minority that wants to “live in peace.” He pleads with the authorities to provide protection.

Coimbatore (AsiaNews) — A group of Hindu extremists attacked a new Christian Church, the Church of South India, in Sulur, in suburban Coimbatore, a city in the southern Indian State of Tamil Nadu. The attackers struck yesterday. After they broke the church’s windows, they threw stones inside the building. A bag containing a bottle of petrol, a diesel can and cotton waste was found after the incident. It is evidence that the attackers were planning to set fire to the place of worship.

Local Christian leaders believe that the goal was to create panic among local non-Hindus. “This attack in the wee hours of Monday is the third of its kind in two days in Tamil Nadu,” Sajan George, national president of the Global Council of Indian Christian (GCIC), told AsiaNews.

On Sunday, a bomb ripped through a wall at a CSI church at Thammathukonam. Late on the same day, “a statue of St Francis Xavier was desecrated by fundamentalists at Konamkade near Colachel, Tamil Nadu, when the local congregation was preparing an Advent procession.”

“These attacks against India’s Christian minority are a shame for the country’s secular soul,” he said. “Christians live in and want peace. These incidents should lead the authorities to take the necessary measures to guarantee the security of places of worship.” (NC)

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



UN Calls for ‘Transition Strategy’ In Afghanistan

United Nations Stressing that a transition policy is needed in Afghanistan against an exit strategy, a top UN official has asked the international community to “re-assert” a long term commitment in the war-torn country.

The strategy would involve building Afghan institutions and handing over greater responsibility to domestic authorities.

“I think we should talk about transition strategy, which is something completely different,” said Kai Eide, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Afghanistan.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Far East


Digital Tiger in Chinese

Tiger Woods and his car kerfuffle have been brought to digital life on the newscast above, from Taiwan’s Apple Action News. If you’ve ever wondered if the world cares much about Woods’ woes, take a look at the breathless computer-graphics recreation of what this newscast speculates might have happened.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Growing Debt From Unpaid Credit Cards and Chinese Banks

An increase of 126.5% in the first 9 months. The bad debt of banks in China amount to an estimated 43.2 billion euros.

Beijing (AsiaNews / Agencies) — The unpaid debt of credit cards in China has increased by 126.5%. According to the Central Bank of China, at the end of September, debts (with a six month delay in payments) was 7.43 billion Yuan (about 724 million Euros), warning that “bad debt should be carefully observed.” Unpaid debt represents 3.4% of all the debt created by credit cards that have been popular in China since 2000.

At the end of September, in China there were 175 million credit cards. In the first nine months expenditure using cards increased by 39.7%, reaching to 1240 billion Yuan (about 121 billion Euros).

Chinese banks have a reputation of being very exposed to bad debt. At the end of June 2009 these debts amounted to 443.6 billion Yuan (about 43.2 billion Euros), with a continuous growth of loans to the economy triggered by the aid package launched by the government.

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



North Korea to Stand Trial for Supporting Terror in Israel

(IsraelNN.com) The government of North Korea, for the first time, will face charges in a United States Federal Court on Thursday for supporting terrorism against Israel. The trial will begin in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

The case arose from a lawsuit brought by the families of victims of the 1972 terror attack at the Lod Airport, where 26 people were killed and 80 injured. The court complaint alleges that the government of North Korea trained and financed the terrorists who perpetrated the massacre.

Most of the victims were Catholic pilgrims from Puerto Rico who had come to visit the Holy Land for the first time. The families are represented by Shurat HaDin director Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, and lawyers from New York and Puerto Rico.

In May 1972, terrorists from the Japanese Red Army (JRA), working in league with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), placed automatic weapons, ammunition and grenades in their check-in luggage on a flight from Italy to Israel.

After their bags arrived at the Israeli airport arrivals hall, they took out the weapons and opened fire in every direction, mowing down passengers, flight crew members and airport workers. They also attempted to blow up airplanes on the ground using hand grenades. Two of the three attackers were killed and a third, Kozo Okumoto, was captured, tried and sentenced to prison in Israel.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs will argue that in the months leading up to the massacre the leaders of the JRA and PFLP met with each other and with North Korean officials, who allegedly provided funding, intelligence, training and other material support for the terrorists.

The attack was part of the JRA’s declared strategy, approved by the North Korean government, of taking their anti-Western violence and plans of communist revolution to other parts of the world.

The North Korean regime has been considered responsible for helping Lebanon’s Hezbollah organization to build an enormous underground bunker system that dramatically increased the terrorist group’s fighting capacity in the 2006 Second Lebanon War.

The U.S. State Department added North Korea to its official list of states that sponsor terror in 1988, making it possible for American victims to sue the North Korean government and collect against their assets in a U.S. court. North Korea was removed from the list late last year, but the current lawsuit was filed on behalf of the Puerto Rican families before the deadline for filing lawsuits.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Seoul: Filipinas Forced Into Sex Trade With Foreigners and US Soldiers

Women enter the country on ‘Arts and Performance’ visas but are soon turned into waitresses who have to sell their bodies if they cannot sell between 200 and 500 drinks a month. Human rights activists want the government to intervene.

Seoul (AsiaNews) — The number of Filipinas entering South Korea on E-6 “Arts and Performance” visas who are eventually forced into prostitution is rising at an alarming rate, NGOs and activists report. For human rights groups, their fate is a “clear case of human trafficking” because the women end up offered as sex slaves to foreign businessmen and US military personnel stationed in the country.

One of the latest cases involves a 28-year-old Filipina named Lorelei (not her real name) who was trapped at “B,” a prostitution establishment for foreigners, located in the Okpo neighbourhood of Geoje City, South Gyeongsang Province.

She was freed after she was able to send SMS messages to Jenny, a friend and a former prostitute, with information about her whereabouts, which enabled police to move in.

Both women had come to South Korea 6 March on an E-6 ‘Arts and Performance’ visa. They were supposed to perform on stage but were quickly made to serve drinks to customers and then prostitute themselves.

The owners of the place set a quota of 200 to 500 drinks each woman had to sell per month; failing that, they had to pay a ‘bar fine’ in the flesh, i.e. prostitution.

Local sources told AsiaNews that US soldiers refer to Filipinas as “juicy girls” and “drinking girls.”

For the past few years, the problem has been getting worse. In 2008, more than 2,000 Filipino women immigrated to South Korea as part of this scam, ending up in the prostitution business.

Kim Hee-jin, director of Amnesty International’s South Korean section, said that the authorities must take strong countermeasures to eradicate the sex trade.

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

Immigration


Australia: New Liberal Leader Tony Abbott Says He Would Have ‘Removed’ Oceanic Viking Asylum Seekers

UPDATE 12.10pm: FEDERAL Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has suggested he would have solved the stand-off aboard the Oceanic Viking by forcibly removing the asylum seekers.

The 78 Tamils disembarked in Indonesia after more than a month aboard the vessel following a deal offered by Australian authorities which guaranteed their refugee claims would be fast-tracked.

But Mr Abbott said the group should have been removed.

“If 70 people invaded the prime minister’s office it wouldn’t matter how good the cause was, they would be removed,” he told Fairfax Radio.

“Now, I think that the people who were on the Oceanic Viking should have been removed.”

Mr Abbott, in his first full day as opposition leader, made the comment while taking calls on talkback radio this morning.

And like Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said in the lead up to the 2007 election, Mr Abbott has advocated a policy of turning the asylum seeker boats back so they do not reach Australian waters.

The newly-elected opposition leader also flagged a return to temporary protection visas, a policy also supported by Malcolm Turnbull before he was dumped.

“We’ve got to above all else deny to unauthorised arrivals the great prize of permanent residency in Australia,” he said.

“And that means a new class of visas, akin to the temporary protection visas, it means offshore processing.

“It means where you can, turning boats around and it means working closely with host countries to try to ensure that we don’t get people setting off in these leaky boats.”

There have been 49 boats carrying asylum seekers intercepted in Australian waters this year.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Cyprus House Ratifies Agreement With Lebanon

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, NOVEMBER 30 — The Cyprus’ House of Representatives has ratified an agreement between Cyprus and Lebanon for the re-entry of persons who enter or reside illegally in the territory of any of the two countries. The House, as CNA reported, also approved a protocol for the implementation of the agreement. The agreement was signed in Nicosia on July 19, 2002 and the protocol on May 15 in 2008. The purpose of the agreement is to facilitate the re-entry of persons who enter or reside illegally in the territory of either contracting party. The protocol defines the procedures for the re-entry of these persons, the means of identifying them, the competent authorities from each country which will deal with such matters as well as the documentation relating to the agreement. The legislation on this issue aims to tackle the problem of illegal immigration by facilitating the deportation process.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



European Asylum Request Office on Malta

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, DECEMBER 1 — Malta will host the seat of the European office charged with helping EU countries examine asylum requests from illegal immigrants who land on their coast, the interior ministers of the EU decided yesterday. The decision was announced by the French Internal Minister, Brice Hortefeux, who supported Malta’s candidacy in that it is one of the countries under the pressure of immigrant flows. More than 67,000, according to data from the EU high commission for refugees, people crossed the Mediterranean in 2008 to request asylum in Europe. More than half of them landed in Malta and Italy.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Anti-Santa Claus Group Wins Support of Thousands

Thousands of Austrians have joined an online campaign against Santa Claus.

More than 70 fan groups have been set up by anti-Santa Facebook users backing the “Pro-Christkind” initiative which wants a ban on the American figure of Santa Claus in favour of the “Christkind”.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



‘Cuz ‘Season’s Greetings’ Just Ain’t Good Enough

Customer ratings system gives shoppers voice to demand stores honor Christmas

Shoppers fed up with stores swapping “Season’s Greetings” and “Happy Holidays” for the more traditional “Merry Christmas” have a place to vent their frustrations this December and a resource for identifying those shops that still honor Jesus’ birth as the reason for the season.

The Retailer Ratings system at StandForChristmas.com provides an up-to-the-second summary of how customers have rated 29 of the nation’s largest store chains — from American Eagle Outfitters to Wal-Mart — on their acknowledgment of Christmas.

“Millions upon millions in our nation deeply value the great truths of Christmas and the holiday’s inspiring place in American life and culture,” the website states. “We’re asking you to decide which retailers are ‘Christmas-friendly.’ They want your patronage and your gift-shopping dollars, but do they openly recognize Christmas?”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Bionic Hands ‘Just a Few Years Away’

Prototype for mind-controlled prosthesis unveiled in Rome

(ANSA) — Rome, December 2 — Italian scientists on Wednesday said they were two to three years from developing a lightweight bionic hand controlled by nerve impulses from the brain.

Unveiling a prototype for the new Smart Hand at a ceremony in Rome, biotechnologist Paolo Dario said it was as “light, flexible and strong” as the real thing. Dario led a team of researchers from Rome’s Biomedical University and the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa who developed the new mind-controlled prosthesis.

The five-fingered model works just like a human hand and only weighs a hundred grams more, said Dario.

A previous model developed last year weighed over two kilograms, three times as much as the average hand.

“It’s hard to make predictions, but we should be able to fit something like this onto a human arm within the next few years,” he said.

The stainless steel prosthesis looks deceptively simple, according to the biotechnologist, who has been working on the project since 1983 when the idea of grafting a robotic limb onto a human body sounded like science fiction.

He explained that the hand is one of the most delicate and complex parts of the human body and that it had been a “painstaking process” to recreate it.

“It was sort of like building a Formula One car. Every few weeks, we’d have a new part ready,” he said.

While Dario said the Smart Hand responded well to the kinds of nerve impulses which control human limbs, he admitted that “the brain-hand interface still needs a lot of work”.

The final product will eventually require a microchip implanted under the skin to act as a “translator” between robotic limb and the brain.

He also said it would take time to find suitable volunteers for laboratory trials, but that his team had already begun looking for possible candidates.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Fight U.N. Censorship in Copenhagen

It’s bad enough the United Nations is blessing the sham of man-made, catastrophic climate change in Copenhagen next week at a convention billed as a major step forward for global governance.

But now we know the U.N. will try to have its cake and eat it, too, by denying press credentials to news agencies like WND that have reported skeptically on the “global warming” charade.

[…]

It’s evident the U.N. is pulling out all the stops for a major global power grab in Copenhagen — and they don’t want any impartial witnesses around to report its shenanigans.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The 9/11 of 1859: Is Al-Qaeda an Abolitionist Movement?

The New York Times Thinks So

by Phyllis Chesler

The daily propaganda which masquerades as news and as learned opinion has just gotten my goat.

Yesterday, the New York Times published an editorial condemning Switzerland as “intolerant” for having voted to ban minarets—minarets, not mosques.

God, I cannot recall an editorial in their pages condemning Arab and Muslim countries for not allowing any Christian churches, Jewish synagogues, or Hindu and Bahai temples to be built. Nor has the Paper of Record really focused on the real refugee story in the Middle East: that of Arab Jews who were forced to flee the Islamic world and came as refugees to Israel between 1948-1956 and constituted a “silent” exodus, one which is still ongoing. My friend Pierre Rehov directed and distributed the most haunting and powerful film with this exact title.

Further, in today’s New York Times, a typically biased piece titled “Jewish Nationalists Clash with Palestinians” also appeared. Note: The headline does not say “Israeli citizens,” nor does it describe the Palestinians as “nationalists” as well. But the main omission is this: The Times’ Isabel Kershner fails to note that the confrontation turned ugly when Americans and Europeans (Swedes) physically assaulted Jewish “nationalists” with clubs and stones. What are they doing here? Where are they when Sderot is being shelled? And, by the way, the fact that the Israeli High Court, which has rendered many pro-Palestinian decisions, ruled that these particular Palestinian nationalist settlers were there illegally is not given the proper weight in this article.

The fact that Jordan is already a “Palestinian” state never seems to register in this newspaper. True, the Jordanians did not want the mainly Palestinian terrorists and massacred and expelled them in 1970; Israel alone is expected to live with them.

But the most troubling article today is one that the distinguished Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and author, Tony Hurwitz, wrote. Horwitz compares John Brown the “abolitionist” and “terrorist” to—you guessed it—Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and the 9/11 hijackers. The title of his piece is “The 9/11 of 1859.”

What are they drinking or smoking over there?…

[Return to headlines]



The Other Idol-Breaker: Owen Barfield and the Plenitude of the Word

History, for Barfield, grounded in literate expressions of human endeavor, is necessarily — the conclusion will by now be familiar — a history of consciousness, of intentions and purposes and clarity of articulation; and the historian necessarily seeks a merging of minds, that he might interpret the past for the present. Unancestral Voice contains a great deal more. I have entirely omitted to explain the provocative title and I shall only allude once — here — to the book’s recurrent motto: “Interior is Anterior.” The drift of Barfield’s thinking should be sufficiently evident by this point. He is a severe but hopeful critic of the dehumanizing trends in the modern Western civilization, which began to crystallize in the Eighteenth Century but which had taproots in the materialistic, operational attitude to life expressed cogently in Bacon’s New Atlantis, the blueprint of which Western humanity has been seeking rather successfully to realize ever since. When “Takuan Seiyo,” “Fjordman,” or any other nonconformist thinker writes about the imperiousness of super-state, multiculturalist, and collectivist politics and defends tradition, he is making an argument that at least runs in parallel with a strand in Barfield’s analysis of modernity. When “Fjordman” describes the hatred of Swedish bureaucrats for age-old Swedish tradition or for the very Swedishness of the Swedes, or when “Takuan Seiyo” writes of “Meccania” and “Pod People,” he brings into focus the nightmare of polities whose steering elites see human beings as things, or a mass of things, to be manipulated in the Baconian project. — Hence the determination of those elites to destroy tradition and individuality, the better that they might effect their dead, mechanistic designs. As Barfield writes, the vital force enters into tradition, endowing on tradition itself, through generations of experience, an organic quality, such that tampering with tradition can only damage or kill it and damage or kill those whom tradition had nourished…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

A Justifiable Fear of Political Islam

A German-Iranian ex-Muslim gives her opinions about the Swiss minaret ban, and its meaning in the larger context of creeping sharia. Thanks to reader JLH for translating the interview from the Leipziger Volkszeitung, November 30, 2009:

Against Sharia

An interview about the construction ban on minarets in Switzerland with Mina Ahadi, Chair of the Central Council of Ex-Muslims:

Question: What do you say to the ban on minaret construction in Switzerland?

Mina AhadiMina Ahadi: I welcome the decision. It really is about minarets. The rejection of minarets is actually a rejection of Islamism, Sharia and the requirement for wearing a hijab. The minaret is merely a symbol of a justifiable fear of political Islam. So it is good that Swiss citizens have intervened in this situation and said a clear “No.” I would also like to see a broader discussion in Germany about female genital mutilation and the rights of children.

Q: Critics of the vote are afraid it will amplify xenophobia. How great a danger is there?

– – – – – – – –

A: That would be a simplistic and false interpretation. In Switzerland, it is not about fencing Muslims off. Rather, it is a protest against the attack on human rights in the name of Islam. Many Muslims, too, no longer feel that they are represented by Islamic political organizations. Many are resisting the suppression that has been decreed for them. Perhaps this vote will give them the courage to free themselves from it.

Q: Many people now fear he reaction of the Islamic world. What is in store for Switzerland?

A: Naturally, there will be aggressive reactions to Switzerland in the Muslim societies and the Arab world in general. The first threats have already have already been made. It suits the culture of the perpetually offended to take on the role of the victim and decry the suppression of Islam in the Western world. That just shows that this is about politics, not religion. We really hope that secularism and the human rights of the West will continue to be defended.

Islam and the Rise of Violent Anti-Semitism

This is the third in a series of articles by John J. O’Neill exploring the role that Islam played in the destruction of classical European civilization.

Previous articles:




Islam and the Rise of Violent Anti-Semitism
by John J. O’Neill

In my newly-published book, Holy Warriors: Islam and the Demise of Classical Civilization, I argue at length that a great majority of the things commonly regarded as “Medieval” were in fact introduced to Europe from Islam, and that it was Islam, and not the Huns, Vandals and Goths, which terminated Classical Civilization, the rational and humane civilization of Greece and Rome. This civilization survived in Europe and in North Africa and the Near East until the seventh century, at which point it was terminated by the Muslim conquests.

By the late seventh century, and certainly by the eighth, Islamic ideas began to penetrate Europe, where they had a profound influence. European Christians, for example, began to think, for the first time, in terms of “Holy War,” an idea that would have been unthinkable in earlier centuries. There is strong circumstantial evidence that they began also to influence European thinking about the Jews.

Anti-Semitism of course preceded the rise of both Christianity and Islam; and Christianity itself had a long history of antagonism towards Jews well before the appearance of Islam. The antagonism was mutual, and Jewish leaders were in the early centuries as vociferous in their condemnation of Christianity as Christian leaders were of Judaism. Serious violence between the two groups was however uncommon; and the first real pogrom launched by Christians against the Jews in Europe did not happen until the beginning of the First Crusade, in 1096. But this was not the first pogrom against Jews in Europe; an event which occurred in Cordoba in Spain in 1011. This was followed by another outbreak of mass-murder in Granada in 1066. Neither massacre was carried out by Christians, however, but by Muslims.

If we look for the origin of violent anti-Semitism in Europe, we must look to Spain.

Europe’s largest Jewish community was located in Spain. Following the Islamic conquest of that land in 711, the Jews came under the domination of a faith that was from its inception virulently and violently anti-Jewish. For Muslims the lead was given by none other than their founder, the Prophet Muhammad. It would be superfluous to enumerate the anti-Jewish pronouncements in the Koran and the Haditha, where the Hebrews are portrayed as the craftiest, most persistent and most implacable enemies of Allah. In the Koran (2: 63-66) Allah transforms some Jews who profaned the Sabbath into apes: “Be as apes despicable!” In Koran 5: 59-60, He directs Muhammad to remind the “People of the Book” about “those who incurred the curse of Allah and His wrath, those whom some He transformed into apes and swine, those who worshipped evil.” Again, in 7: 166, we hear of the Sabbath-breaking Jews that “when in their insolence they transgressed (all) prohibitions,” Allah said to them, “Be ye apes, despised and rejected.”

From the same sources we know that Muhammad’s first violent action against the Jews involved the Qaynuqa tribe, who dwelt at Medina, under the protection of the city. Muhammad “seized the occasion of an accidental tumult,” and ordered the Qaynuqa (or Kainoka) to embrace his religion or fight. In the words of Gibbon, “The unequal conflict was terminated in fifteen days; and it was with extreme reluctance that Mahomet yielded to the importunity of his allies and consented to spare the lives of the captives.” (Decline and Fall, Chapter 50) In later attacks on the Jews, the Hebrew captives were not so fortunate.

The most notorious of all Muhammad’s attacks against the Jews was directed at the Banu Quraiza tribe. This community, which dwelt near Medina, was attacked without warning by the Prophet and his men, and, after its defeat, all the males over the age of puberty were beheaded. Some Islamic authorities claim that Muhammad personally participated in the executions. The doomed men and boys, whose numbers are estimated at anything between 500 and 900, were ordered to dig the trench which was to be their communal grave. All of the women and children were enslaved, with Muhammad personally taking for himself one of the most beautiful of the prisoners. He also confiscated the property of the murdered Jews. These deeds are mentioned in the Koran as acts carried out by Allah himself and fully sanctioned by divine approval. Thus in Koran 33:26-27, we read:

And he brought those of the People of the Book [Jewish people of Banu Qurayza] who supported them from their fortresses and cast terror into their hearts, some of them you slew (beheaded) and some you took prisoners (captive). And he made you heirs of their lands, their houses, and their goods, and of a land which ye had not frequented (before). And Allah has power over all things.

The killing of the Jewish prisoners is sanctioned in Koran 8:67:
– – – – – – – –

It is not fitting for an Apostle that he should have prisoners of war until He thoroughly subdued the land…

The Massacre of Banu Quraiza was followed soon after by the attack on the Khaybar tribe. On this occasion, the Prophet ordered the torture of a Jewish chieftain to extract information about where he had hidden his treasures. When the treasure was uncovered, the chieftain was beheaded. This chieftain was the husband of the most beautiful Jewish woman of Khaybar, the 17-year-old Safiyah. Safiyah’s family members had been annihilated by Muhammad at the Banu Qurayza massacre. Now having beheaded her husband, the Prophet took Safiyah as his slave. The story is told thus by Sahih al-Bukhari, whose compilation of the acts and deeds attributed to Muhammad was written in the ninth century, and forms one of the two pillars of Islamic jurisprudence. (Volume 5, Book 59, Number 512):

The Prophet offered the Fajr Prayer near Khaybar when it was still dark and then said, “Allahu-Akbar! Khaybar is destroyed, for whenever we approach a (hostile) nation (to fight), then evil will be the morning for those who have been warned.” Then the inhabitants of Khaybar came out running on the roads. The Prophet had their warriors killed, their offspring and woman taken as captives. Safiya was amongst the captives, She first came in the share of Dahya Alkali but later on she belonged to the Prophet. The Prophet made her manumission as her ‘Mahr’. Muhammad was sixty (60) when he married Safiyyahh, a young girl of seventeen. She became his eighth wife.

The distribution of the booty is described thus in al-Bukhari Hadiths No.143, page-700:

Sulaiman Ibne Harb…Aannas Ibne Malek (ra) narrated, “in the war of Khayber after the inhabitants of Banu Nadir were surrendered, Allah’s apostle killed all the able/adult men, and he (prophet) took all women and children as captives (Ghani mateer maal). Among the captives Safiyya Bint Huyy Akhtab was taken by Allah’s Apostle as booty whom He married after freeing her and her freedom was her Mahr.”

It is said that at first Dihyah al-Kalbi, one of Muhammad’s followers, asked for Safiyah. But when Muhammad saw her exquisite beauty, he chose her for himself and gave her two cousins to Dihyah.

In the massacre of the Jewish Settlement of Bani Mustaliq, Muhammad captured their women and took twenty-year-old Jewish girl, Juwairiya as his personal slave. [Al-Bukhari 3.46.13.717, p431-432]. Sahih Muslim (2.2349, p.520) says that Mohammed attacked the Banu Mustaliq tribe without any warning while they were heedlessly grazing their cattle. Juwairiya was a daughter of the chief. Sahih Muslim 3.4292, p.942 and Abu Dawud 2.227, p728 and al-Tabari 39, p.182-183 also say Juwairiya was captured in a raid on the Banu Mustaliq tribe. She had been married to Musafi’ bin Safwan, who was killed in battle.

We need go no further into the horrific details of these events, as they have already been examined by numerous writers and their veracity denied by no one. What we need to emphasize is the attitude these atrocities betray, as well as the fact that they became the model for the behavior of all future followers of the Prophet.

What caused Muhammad’s seemingly implacable hatred of the Jews? According to Gibbon, it was their refusal to recognize him as their long-awaited Messiah that “converted his friendship into an implacable hatred, with which he pursued that unfortunate people to the last moment of his life; and, in the double character of apostle and conqueror, his persecution was extended into both worlds.” (Decline and Fall, Ch. 50)

It is a widely-held fiction that, aside from the Prophet’s persecution of the Jews of Arabia, Muslims in general and Islam as a rule was historically tolerant to this People of the Book, who were generally granted dhimmi (“protected”) status in the Islamic Umma, or community. But dhimmi status, also accorded to Christians, did not, as Bat Ye’or has demonstrated at great length, imply equal rights with Muslims. On the contrary, dhimmis were subject, even at the best of times, to a whole series of discriminatory and humiliating laws and to relentless exploitation. At the worst of times, they could be slaughtered in the streets without any hope of legal redress. One of the most noxious measures directed against them was the requirement to wear an item or color of clothing by which they could be easily identified: identified for easy exploitation and abuse. The latter law was copied, significantly enough, by the Nazis. Bat Ye’or has shown that this law was enforced in Islam right from the beginning. The violence was not continuous, but the exploitation was, and the pattern of abuse initiated by Muhammad in Arabia in the seventh century was to be repeated throughout history. The first massacres of Jews in Europe, carried out by Muslim mobs in Spain, were preceded by other massacres carried out in North Africa, and clearly formed a continuum with Muhammad’s massacres of that people in Arabia.

Nonetheless, there was, at times, a semblance of tolerance for both Jews and Christians. It could not have been otherwise. When the Arabs conquered the vast territories of Mesopotamia, Syria, and North Africa during the seventh century, they found themselves a small minority ruling over enormous populations comprising mainly Christians and, to a lesser degree, Jews. As such, they needed to proceed with caution. Like all conquerors, the Arabs were quick to exploit any internal conflicts; and it was in their interests, above all, to divide the Christians from the Jews. This was particularly the case in Spain, where the Jewish population was very large. A united Jewish and Christian front could have proved extremely dangerous, and it was entirely in the interest of the conquerors to sow mistrust and suspicion between these communities. In the words of Bat Ye’or, “The [Arab] invaders knew how to take advantage of the dissensions between local groups in order to impose their own authority, favoring first one and then another, with the intention of weakening and ruining them all through a policy of ‘divide and rule.’“ (The Dhimmi, p. 87)

Now, Jewish communities, both in Spain and elsewhere, tended to be both educated and prosperous. Jewish doctors, scientists and merchants could be usefully employed by any ruling group. And employed they were by the Arabs. Some, such as Ibn Naghrela, rose to positions of great prominence. The international connections of the Jews and their mastery of languages proved invaluable to the new rulers. The Jews frequently found themselves in the role of intermediaries between Muslims and Christians. And we cannot pass over the role of Jewish merchants in supplying Muslim Spain with all its essentials — including slaves from northern and north-eastern Europe. (See eg. Hugh Trevor-Roper, The Rise of Christian Europe, p. 143)

Yet such favors as the Jews enjoyed was transitory and uncertain. There was never any real security, as the massacres of 1011 and 1066 illustrate only too well. On the other hand, it was entirely in the interests of the Muslims that the Christians believed the Jews were favored. And part of that myth was the notion that “the Jews” had actually assisted the Muslims in their conquest of the country.

The likelihood that this story was true is vanishingly small, especially when we consider the massacres of Jews carried out in Arabia by Muhammad himself just a few decades earlier. No people had better international links than the Jews, a nation of merchants par excellence, and those of Spain would have been very much aware of Muhammad’s behavior long before the first Muslim armies landed on Spanish soil. Nonetheless, the story got out that the Jews had helped the Muslims. There can be little doubt that this story was fostered by the Muslims themselves, as part of the policy of divide and conquer; of sowing mistrust between the two vanquished communities.

All during the tenth and eleventh centuries, the war for possession of the Iberian Peninsula raged between Christians and Muslims. This conflict was to grow into a real clash of civilizations, as Christians and Muslims called in the assistance of co-religionists from far and wide. The Shrine of Santiago de Compostela became a rallying symbol for the Christians of the north and for those of France and Germany, who crossed the Pyrenees to join the struggle against Islam. Their Christian allies in Spain already had the conviction that the Jews were secret allies of the Muslims — a belief, as we said, encouraged by the Muslims. They were convinced that the Jews had assisted the Muslims in their conquest of the country; and they came into contact with Muslim anti-Semitic attitudes — attitudes which the Christians began to imbibe. This latter point needs to be emphasized, because it has never I feel been given the weight it deserves. As the dominant power of the time, Islam was hugely influential. Christian kings, both in Spain and southern Italy, began to adopt Islamic ideas and norms on a whole range of things. Some began to keep harems, attended by eunuchs; others became enthusiastic slave-traders. In view of the widely-accepted influence of Islam, it seems unlikely that that faith’s view of the Jews would not have found resonance among Christians.

Now, it is an acknowledged fact that it was in Spain that the warriors who later joined the First Crusade learnt to persecute the Jews. In Runciman’s words, “Already in the Spanish wars there had been some inclination on the part of Christian armies to maltreat the Jews.” (The History of the Crusades, p. 135) Runciman notes that at the time of the expedition to Barbastro, in the mid-eleventh century, Pope Alexander II had written to the bishops of Spain to remind them that there was all the difference in the world between Muslims and Jews. The former were irreconcilable enemies of the Christians, but the latter were ready to work for them. However, in Spain “the Jews had enjoyed such favour from the hands of the Moslems that the Christian conquerors could not bring themselves to trust them.” (The History of the Crusades, p. 135) This lack of trust is confirmed by more than one document of the period, several of which are listed by Runciman.

Just over a decade after the Christian knights of France and Germany had helped their co-religionists in Spain to retake the city of Toledo from the Muslims, some of them prepared to set out on the First (official) Crusade. Before they did so, a few of them took part in the mass murder of several thousand Jews in Germany and Bohemia — an atrocity unprecedented in European history.

In view of the fact that these pogroms were committed by warriors some of whom had learned their trade in Spain, and in view of the fact that such atrocities were hitherto unknown in Europe, we may state that there is strong circumstantial evidence to suggest that the Christians had been influenced by the Muslims. This is all the more probable in view of Islam’s history of virulent and violent anti-Semitism.

To conclude, I am not trying to argue that anti-Semitism did not exist among Christians before the rise of Islam. Obviously it did. Yet the influence of Islam, and the terrible struggle between the two intolerant ideologies of Christianity and Islam which began in the seventh century, had a profoundly detrimental effect upon the Jews; and it was then, and only then, that the virulent and murderous anti-Semitism so characteristic of the Middle Ages entered European life.



Holy Warriors: Islam and the Demise of Classical Civilization, is published by Felibri Publications. For information, see the Felibri website.

Intellectual Honesty

(Cross-posted from the Brussels Journal)

Dr. Andrew Bostom, the author of the well-researched books The Legacy of Jihad and The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism, has reviewed Fjordman’s book Defeating Eurabia, which is now available in a cheaper printed version:

Defeating Eurabia“Fjordman’s collection of short works, ‘Defeating Eurabia’ marks his emergence as a uniquely informed European essayist. Remarkably curious and erudite, the author’s lucid essays are ultimately a testament to that rarest and most desperately needed attribute in our era—intellectual honesty. An unapologetic defender of the Greco-Roman, Judeo-Christian values of Western civilization, and their apotheosis in Western Europe, Fjordman expresses alarm at Europe’s supine Islamization, and condemns the demonization of ordinary non-Muslim indigenous Europeans who have the ‘temerity’ to voice their objection to this ongoing cultural jihad. ‘Defeating Eurabia’ is a brilliantly argued, passionate critique of Western Europe’s contemporary utopian ‘multiculturalist’ governing elites—avatars of the latest fanatical European politico-religious creed—a bizarre, toxic brew of statism and unreformed, Shari’a-compliant Islam.”

[Post ends here]

Towers of Intimidation

Minaret ban 1


The Swiss minaret ban is shaping up to be the most significant anti-jihad event in recent memory. Before it’s over, the reaction to the referendum by the “Muslim street” may well make the Motoon crisis look pale in comparison.

However, the Islamic response up to now has been muted and somewhat tentative. Switzerland, after all, is not as easy to kick around as Denmark. It’s not just a matter of whether to boycott cuckoo clocks and skiing vacations: numerous high-rolling oil sheikhs and terrorist emirs keep their ill-gotten booty in numbered Swiss bank accounts. Screwing around with Switzerland isn’t necessarily in their best interests, at least not at the moment.

So Muslim leaders are holding back a bit, presumably waiting for the ECHR or the UN to take care of the Swiss problem so they won’t have to.

Minaret ban 5The world’s political, academic, and media leaders have been all but unanimous in heaping opprobrium on the Swiss for their intolerance and xenophobia. But, while collecting the excerpts below, I noticed that the real reasons for Western anxiety almost never surface. The real issue isn’t intolerance or Islamophobia or racism or the need for multicultural harmony and the celebration of diversity.

The real concerns, at least for government bureaucrats and business owners, are:

How many cars and buildings will be burned every night because of this?

How violent and murderous will the Muslims actually get?

Officially-published opinions, however, reflect the international consensus distilled by the current wisdom. The center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung neatly summed up the opinion of most of the West’s liberal elite:

“The referendum is a disaster for Switzerland. There is no such construction ban anywhere else in Europe. When those six words ‘the construction of minarets is prohibited’ are written into the Swiss constitution, they will breach that constitution in several ways, as they violate its guarantee of freedom of religion and the ban on discrimination.

“The ban also constitutes a flagrant breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. It won’t take long before someone affected by this ban takes the case to the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights, which will result in an embarrassing condemnation and possibly Switzerland’s expulsion from the Council of Europe.

“There will be a storm of outrage, especially in the Muslim world. The worst mistake now would be for Switzerland to react by stiffening its stance. Because in its heart, this country is cosmopolitan and liberal.”

And the equivocating “conservative” voices could hardly manage anything better:
– – – – – – – –

The conservative Die Welt writes:

“The Swiss decision gives the wrong answer to the right question. The question concerning all European societies is how to find the right way to deal with a growing Muslim minority, and where the limits of tolerance should be regarding the practice of traditions that are in some cases backward.

“The referendum has provided an excessively simplistic answer. It condemns the minaret which it interprets as a symbol of Islamic power — as if the traditional architectural feature so closely related to the Christian church steeple were more important than what is preached inside the mosques.

“It throws Switzerland back behind the level of enlightenment and tolerance that Europe has toiled to attain in the past — and which turned multi-ethnic Switzerland into such a successful model.

“The referendum shows how deep the fear of Islam runs in Europe and that the issue isn’t being taken seriously enough by the political elite — and not just in Switzerland. But it doesn’t provide a solution to Europe’s pressing integration problems.”

The conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes:

[…]

Many Muslims in Switzerland have integrated themselves well. The problems that do exist can’t be solved with a ban on minarets. But the Swiss People’s Party has succeeded in broadening the issue to Islamization. Existing problems with immigrants from Kosovo, for example, were simply combined with the religion issue.” [emphasis added]

Switzerland is not multi-ethnic in the same way that, say, Los Angeles is multi-ethnic. Ethnic Italians, Germans, and French have lived together without major friction for hundreds of years, sharing a civilization, a general European culture, and a religion.

Mass-importing Muslims into the country is not analogous, and those who use this argument are disingenuous.

“The problems that do exist can’t be solved with a ban on minarets.”

No, they can’t. Do the critics have any suggestions at all about how they can be solved?

And what about the EU reaction? According to ANSAmed:

“I shall explain to the EU that this was not a vote against the Muslim religion, but against minarets as buildings”. Switzerland’s Justice Minister, Evelyne Widmer Schlumpf, was speaking on her arrival at a meeting of EU interior and justice ministers.

[…]

The current presidency of the EU, Sweden, has expressed surprise and regret at the result of the Swiss referendum. On his arrival at the European Council, the country’s immigration minister, Tobias Billstrom, said he was “somewhat surprised” and found it “strange” that this kind of matter should be decided by referendum.

[…]

Sweden’s minister for integration, Nyamko Sabuki, went further, expressing “regret” that Switzerland should have decided such an issue in a referendum. “The Swiss system is a good one because it calls on its citizens to decide, but sometimes it can be used inappropriately, as has happened here”. “Europe does not have a minaret problem. There are no issues between Europeans and Moslems. Moslems are Europeans”, the Swedish minister underlined.

The Swiss Justice Minister also hopes that the ECHR will be able to undo the will of the Swiss people:

Widmer-Schlumpf noted that it was foreseeable that an appeal against the ban could be lodged with the European Court of Human Rights.

More from Al-Arabiya about European reactions:

“It’s an expression of quite a bit of prejudice and maybe even fear, but it is clear that it is a negative signal in every way, there’s no doubt about it,” said Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, whose country holds the European Union presidency.

Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister, called the vote “an expression of intolerance and I detest intolerance.”

The Vatican joined Muslim leaders in expressing dismay after a referendum on Sunday voted for a constitutional ban on the construction of towers attached to mosques from where the faithful are traditionally called to prayer.

According to Swissinfo:

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner appealed for the Swiss to go back on the decision, which he described as a “show of intolerance”. He said he was “a bit scandalised” by the ban, which amounted to “oppressing a religion”.

Sweden, holding the presidency of the European Union, also came out strongly against the result. Integration Minister Nyamko Sabuni said voting on the issue had been “an abuse of the Swiss voting system”, while the Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt said it was a “display of prejudice and perhaps even of fear… at all levels a negative sign”.

Tobias Billström, the Swedish migration minister, added that it was rare to make such a decision by referendum, with issues such as building height or location usually the domain of town planners. The Austrian interior minister, Maria Fekter, agreed.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said he was “greatly concerned” at the signal the vote sent to the Islamic world.

For Germany the outcome demonstrated that there was fear of Islamicisation, which needed to be “taken seriously”, said Wolfgang Bosbach, head of the German parliamentary internal affairs commission. But Christoph Steegmans, spokesman for the German Chancellery, said the government was “certain that freedom of religion was as important in Switzerland as it is to us”.

We’ll begin the official Islamic responses with Al-Arabiya:

Egypt’s Mufti Ali Gomaa, the Egyptian government’s official interpreter of Islamic law, denounced the minaret ban as an “insult” to Muslims across the world.

And from Der Spiegel:

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Switzerland’s vote to ban the construction of minarets was a “sign of an increasing racist and fascist stance in Europe,” Turkish television Channel 7 reported on Tuesday. Islamophobia was a “crime against humanity,” just like anti-Semitism, Erdogan said.

[…]

The Turkish foreign ministry said the more than 100,000 Turkish immigrants living in Switzerland were worried about the decision which “runs counter to human values and basic freedoms.”

The OIC had plenty to say:

The Secretary General of the OIC, Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu voiced his disappointment and concern with the result of the public referendum which took place in Switzerland yesterday, 29th November 2009, on the initiative to ban building of minarets in the mosques in Switzerland.

[…]

Minaret ban 2He recalled that the UN Committee on Human Rights had clearly pronounced its concern on the ban as a discriminatory practice that violated fundamental human rights including the freedom of religion.

Secretary General Ihsanoglu expressed his deep regret that at a time when the Muslim world and Muslim societies around the world have been engaged in a struggle to fight extremism, the western societies are being hostage to extremists who exploit Islam as a scapegoat and a springboard to develop their own political agenda which in turn contributes to polarization and fragmentation in the societies.

[…]

The Secretary General urged the Swiss authorities to remain vigilant in addressing any move, which may fuel extremism, misunderstanding, misperception and intolerance among communities and that he remained confident that Swiss political leaders would not spare any effort to preserve the image of their country as guardian of the international human rights instruments.

As the Muslim public opinion is following the issue with concern, the Secretary General appealed to the Muslim societies to abide by peaceful and democratic means in expressing their views on the issue.

And the UN voiced its collective opinion:

UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Asma Jahangir, criticised the “clear discrimination towards the members of the Swiss Muslim community”, in a statement on Monday.

“I have serious concerns about the negative consequences of the outcome of this vote on the freedom of religion or belief of members of the Swiss Muslim community,” she said, and called for Switzerland to take the necessary measures to protect the freedom of religion.

Meanwhile a spokesman for the UN High Commission for Human Rights also confirmed on Monday that legal experts were assessing whether the ban conformed to international law. The Commission will give its position on the outcome once the legal assessment is complete.

And also the Council of Europe:

The Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly said the Swiss referendum outcome risked “promoting feelings of exclusion and deepening divisions” in society.

“The decision, although an expression of popular opinion, is a source of serious concern,” said Lluís Maria de Puig, president of the assembly, in a statement.

The non-official reaction from Muslims was swift and condemnatory, but not as strident as one might have expected:

Political and religious leaders of Muslim countries were quick to condemn the vote. Maskuri Abdillah, head of Indonesia’s biggest Muslim group, Nahdlatul Ulama, said the vote reflected “a hatred of Swiss people against Muslim communities.”

Egypt’s top cleric, Ali Gomaa, called the referendum an “insult” to Muslims, while the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, the largest international Muslim group with 57 member states, called the vote a “recent example of growing anti-Islamic incitements in Europe by extremist, anti-immigrant, xenophobic, racist, scare-mongering ultraright politicians who reign over common sense, wisdom and universal values.”

“It is a bad answer to a bad question,” Babacar Ba, the Geneva ambassador of the Islamic conference told Swiss journalists Monday. “I fear that this kind of thing is simply a gift to extremism and intolerance.”

And according to ANSAmed:

On the popular site for Islamic news Islamonline, the jurisconsult and rector of an Islamic university in the United States, Taha Alwani, polemically asked “why the Swiss are afraid of minarets but show not the least concern when they buy oil from Islamic countries, when their companies do business in Arab-Muslim capitals, or when they decide to hold Muslim money in their banks.” A thinly-veiled suggestion for a campaign to boycott Switzerland, but one which for the moment no one seems to be following.

[…]

“Today minarets, tomorrow mosques,” said Said Ardallah on an Al Jazeera forum. “With their money in Swiss banks Jews have the country in the palm of their hands,” added Ardallah.

From the The Local, the reactions of European Muslims:

Head of the Turkish Community in Germany (TGD) Kenan Kolat told Berlin daily Berliner Zeitung that the decision was “very regrettable,” adding that basic rights such as religious freedom should not be allowed to come to popular vote.

“A minaret belongs to a mosque,” Kolat said.

[…]

Meanwhile Islamic scholar Katajun Amipur told daily Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger that the referendum threatened to spark Islamophobia throughout Europe.

“If this initiative triggers a dynamic in other European countries — and the danger is there — then the Muslims will have no place in Europe in the end,” she said.

The architect in charge of a controversial new Cologne mosque Paul Böhm called the decision “undemocratic” and “unintelligent.”

According to Al-Arabiya:

But Youssef Ibram sharply criticized the Swiss government for not intervening more forcefully in defense of religious freedom before the referendum got off the ground.

“The most painful for us is not the minaret ban, but the symbol sent by this vote. Muslims do not feel accepted as a religious community,” he added.

Der Spiegel:

Egypt’s Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa, the country’s top cleric, called the ban an “insult” to Muslims across the world but called on Muslims not to be provoked by the move. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said he was shocked by the decision which showed “intolerance.”

Muslims are, not surprisingly, insulted. And we know what they like to do when they’re insulted!

According to Asia News:

Elsewhere in the Muslim world, reactions are even stronger. For the grand mufti of Egypt, the result is an “insult” to Muslims around the world. “This proposal […] is not considered just an attack on freedom of beliefs, but also an attempt to insult the feelings of the Muslim community in and outside Switzerland,” Gomaa said.

Responses came in from Pakistan:

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani religious groups on Monday condemned a referendum in Switzerland that saw voters approve a ban on the construction of mosque minarets, calling it ‘extreme Islamophobia.’

And the Muslim Brotherhood weighed in:

Prohibiting the construction of minarets in Switzerland goes against all international customs, human rights, and freedom of religion. The statement was made to ANSA by Mehdi Akef, the supreme guide of the Muslim Brothers, who commented on the result of yesterdays Swiss referendum. He emphasised that “All Europeans do not want Islams rebirth and growth. But Islam exists everywhere in Europe and in the world”.

The referendum was, naturally, racist:

Speaking in an interview on forces radio, Uriah Shavit, a researcher at Tel Aviv University and author of a book on Islam in Europe, stated: “This is a racist decision, perhaps the worst of its kind since the end of the Second World War… it is as if they had decided to cut all the ringlets out of the hair of religious Jews”.

Will there be a boycott?

One of its commentators [in the mass-circulation Blick newspaper of Zurich] notes that Swiss exporters will now have to beware, explaining that they exported goods worth SFr14.5 billion ($14.49 billion) last year to Muslim countries, seven per cent of total exports.

“After the ‘yes’ vote to the minaret initiative, there is now a fear of boycotts.”

And:

Le Matin of Lausanne said the weekend vote had shown that for many people, Islam could be summed up by “extremists with beards, women wearing a burka and imams calling on the faithful to wage a holy war”.

Your point?

Somehow the truth gets through, even when the MSM thinks it’s putting us racist xenophobes in our place.

The rest of world press lined up on the side of tolerance and multiculturalism:

“The irrational fear of Islam has struck once again in Europe,” said the French Libération newspaper in an editorial headed “Absurd”.

“The ban on minarets has cast a sudden pall on the image of a country which is used to the peaceful coexistence of religions,” it commented.

Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung says the Swiss People’s Party — which backed the ban — managed to make a mountain out of a molehill. The paper points out that less than five per cent of the Swiss population are Muslim, and they are mostly well integrated. “Where difficulties with Muslims do exist, they can’t be solved by banning minarets.”

The Times newspaper of London deplores the vote and sees it as a blow against the principles on which European societies are built.

[…]

Minaret ban 4Britain’s Guardian newspaper writes of “an Alpine distrust of outsiders which lapsed into racism”.

Austria’s Kurier explains the vote in part by Switzerland’s ongoing dispute with Libya saying that some voters will have taken out their frustration with Moammar Gaddafi by voting to ban a symbol of the Muslim faith.

Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung describes the vote as one of “anger and frustration”, coming after the bank secrecy affair and the crisis with Libya…

There were a few small nuggets of common sense buried here and there among all the high-minded bombast. Even the Swiss Justice Minister had to admit that the supporters of the ban had a point:

While criticizing the ban, Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf acknowledged that the result “reflects fears among the population of Islamic fundamentalist tendencies” that “have to be taken seriously.”

And a secular Swiss Muslim said:

“Switzerland welcomed us and we must respect their values,” said ‘Muhieddin’ in Zurich, adding that “I wonder whether Islam the-religion-of-tolerance would show itself such when there is a need to grant authorisation for the construction of new churches in Muslim countries.”

In Germany, Wolfgang Bosbach, a conservative Christian Democrat, voiced his opinion:

“But there are spectacular plans for large structures, such as in Cologne’s Ehrenfeld district or in Duisburg-Marxloh, for which there is a lot of resistance simply because of the size,” he told the paper.

Bosbach added that is “possible that some of these large buildings were planned to signal how strong Islam has become in Germany.”

And Bild says that Germans would likely vote to do the same thing if permitted:

But mass circulation Bild, which can claim to have its finger on the nation’s pulse more than other newspapers, said Germans would probably vote the same way if they were allowed a referendum on the issue:

“The minaret isn’t just the symbol of a religion but of a totally different culture. Large parts of the Islamic world don’t share our basic European values: the legacy of the Enlightenment, the equality of man and woman, the separation of church and state, a justice system independent of the Bible or the Koran and the refusal to impose one’s own beliefs on others with ‘fire and the sword.’ Another factor is likely to have influenced the Swiss vote: Nowhere is life made harder for Christians than in Islamic countries. Those who are intolerant themselves cannot expect unlimited tolerance from others.”

To cheer yourselves up, read about Geert Wilders’ reaction, which was no surprise:

Dutch far-right politician Geert Wilders followed the result by calling for the Netherlands to organise its own referendum on the issue, saying: “Whatever is possible in Switzerland could equally be done here.”

Ditto for Filip Dewinter:

“It’s a signal that they have to adapt to our way of life and not the other way around,” Filip Dewinter, a member of the Vlaams Belang party in Belgium, told Le Monde. Mr. Dewinter said he plans to pave the way for a minaret ban in Belgium soon; Geert Wilders, a prominent right-wing politician in the Netherlands, has called for a Swiss-style referendum there too.

The Lega Nord was inspired by the actions of the Swiss:

Northern League says Italy should follow in Swiss footsteps

(ANSA) — Rome, November 30 — A constitutional referendum to ban the building of Islamic minarets in Italy is soon to appear before parliament, Simplification Minister Roberto Calderoli announced on Monday.

Taking the lead from Switzerland, which drew widespread international criticism by passing its own anti-minaret referendum this weekend, Calderoli said it was time Italy affirm its Catholic roots.

And from Corriere della Sera:

“Once again, the Swiss have shown us what civilisation is all about”. Overjoyed by the Swiss right’s referendum victory, the Northern League have come up with a new proposal. “We need to take a stand against the Masonic, pro-Islamic ideology to which even our political allies are sadly prone”, said Roberto Castelli, a senior party figure. “In the forthcoming constitutional reform bill, I believe that the Northern League may, and indeed must, ask for the cross to be added to the Italian flag”, he added.

The Danish People’s Party was similarly encouraged:

The Danish People’s Party Leader Pia Kjærsgaard has congratulated Switzerland on the result of its weekend referendum in which a majority of 57.5 percent voted to ban minarets in the country.

“Outstanding that you can have referendums in which people can say what they think. On this issue, the Danish People’s Party will table a bill in Parliament so that we can have a referendum in Denmark too,” says Pia Kjærsgaard.

[…]

“We oppose plans for grand mosques in Denmark and believe that a large number of voters agree with us,” says Pia Kjærsgaard.

In all of these media reports and interviews, very few writers or commenters got down to the nitty-gritty and admitted what the real issue is. The issue is not intolerance, or racism, or xenophobia, or Islamophobia.

The real issue is FEAR.

Fear of what the Muslims will do to us if we don’t give them whatever they demand.

Fear of carbecues and street riots and assault and arson and rape and looting.

According to AFP:

Fears Grow Over Dangers of Swiss Minaret Vote

GENEVA — The Swiss foreign minister warned on Tuesday that a decision by voters in Switzerland to ban new mosque minarets could endanger security, amid stark warnings about a broader threat of extremism.

Opponents of the ban in Switzerland vowed to press ahead with legal challenges, while Turkey and the UN human rights chief delivered sharp rebukes over a broader and growing trend of European intolerance that they believe the vote revealed.

A “broader threat of extremism” means that the political elite are afraid that Muslims will commit acts of terrorism if they don’t get their minarets. That they will prove to be violent and intolerant and unwilling to act in accord with the norms of a civilized society.

In other words, the authorities are admitting that the supporters of the minaret ban are right to resist Islamization: Islam does not belong in Switzerland, because it cannot assimilate to the culture of its adopted home.

And the prime minister of Turkey is only too happy to underline this fact by providing a little reminder of the “tensions” that may arise if Muslims are thwarted in their aspirations:

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stressed that it “has irked not only the Islamic world, but also those who fear a clash of civilisations.”

He called on Europeans to act against the ban “so as not to plunge the world, particularly Europe, into tensions.”

This is an obvious protection racket: “Nice little cuckoo clock factory you got yourself there, Heinz. Be a pity if anything happened to it.”

Now let’s see if the minaret ban can withstand the baleful gaze of the ECHR.



Thanks to C. Cantoni, Esther, Insubria, Steen, and TB for the tips.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 12/1/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 12/1/2009The Swiss minaret ban is still reverberating, with reactions coming in from around the world. In Italy, the Lega Nord has been inspired by the Swiss referendum, and hopes to follow the example of its northern neighbor.

In other news, USA Today reports on the rising incidence of honor killings in the United States, and actually quotes Robert Spencer.

Thanks to C. Cantoni, Gaia, Insubria, JD, Sean O’Brian, Steen, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Dubai: Press Backlash on International Media
Fed Moves to Drain Some Money Out of Economy
India Grappling With Inflation Above 15%, Record Gold Process and the Crisis in Dubai
 
USA
Ex-Con Counts on “Faith Community” To Pass Health Care
Fiscal Responsibility — Or Just Plain Socialism?
Gibbs: ‘No Dispute’ On Global Warming
‘Honor Killings’ In USA Raise Concerns
How Anwar Awlaki [Hasan’s Imam] Got Away
Mychal Massie: It’s Not a Hate Crime if …
Scientist Calls Nation’s Biggest Solar Plant a Toy
Suspect Released in Arkansas After Claiming He Had Changed
Suspected Cop Killer’s Clemency Haunts Huckabee
White House Still Listening to Van Jones ‘Green’ Advice
 
Europe and the EU
Europe Reacts to the Swiss Minaret Ban
Fears Grow Over Dangers of Swiss Minaret Vote
‘Germany Would Also Have Voted to Ban Minarets’
Italy: ‘Cross on Flag’ Flap
Italy: Right-Wing Minister Wants ‘Cross’ On Flag
Italy Receives Two Guantanamo Inmates
Lisbon Treaty Comes Into Force — The Inglorious Revolution
Minaret Referendum Mulled in Parliament
Muslim Leaders Condemn Swiss Ban
Swiss Minaret Ban Sends Ripples Worldwide
Swiss Minaret Ban Reflects Fear of Islam, Not Real Problems
Switzerland: Minarets; Muslim Brothers, Human Rights Denied
The Minaret Ban Hits the Swiss Headlines
The Swiss Minaret Result Explains Why They’ll Never Allow Democracy in Britain
UK: Dutch Mother Posed as Penniless Somalian Immigrant to Claim £70,000 Benefits
UK: University of East Anglia Launches Investigation Into Leaked Emails
World’s Press Dissect Swiss Minaret Ban
 
Balkans
EU: Schengen Opens to Serbs, Montenegrins and Macedonians
Kosovo: UN Court Begins to Examine Independence Declaration
 
North Africa
Egypt: Stock Exchange, Dubai Sends Local Market Down
Egypt Kills Migrant Trying to Slip Across Israel Border
Libya Sentences Swiss Men to Jail Amid Gaddafi Son Row
Terrorism: Algeria, Algerian Guantanamo Prisoner Sentenced
Tunisia: Kairouan, 40 People Stabbed on Night of Eid El Idha
 
Israel and the Palestinians
EU ‘Ready to Recognise East Jerusalem as Palestinian Capital’
Goverment-Settlers Clash Over Settlements
Import of Arab-Language Books to be Eased
 
Middle East
Dubai: Central Bank Offers Liquidity, Markets in Spotlight
EU-Jordan: Science and Technology Agreement Signed
Iran Warns it Will Take ‘Serious’ Action Against Seized British Sailors if it Proves They Had ‘Evil Intentions’
Iran’s New Anti-Israel Ally: French Comedian Dieudonne
Swiss Ban on Minarets Condemned in the Muslim World, But Many Voices Call for Moderation
Turkey’s Erdogan Says Minaret Ban is Sign of Fascism
 
South Asia
Pakistan: More Than 60 Militants Killed in Tribal Region
 
Far East
China: Solar Toys
Philippines: Protesters Demand Justice for Massacre Victims
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
Somali Pirates Capture Huge Tanker Taking Oil to US
 
Immigration
Italy: Frattini, Safeguard Our Identity and Integrate
 
Culture Wars
Climate-Cult Con is Hard to ‘Bear’
 
General
Leaked Emails Won’t Harm UN Climate Body, Says Chairman

Financial Crisis


Dubai: Press Backlash on International Media

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, NOVEMBER 30 — Following on from several days of calm, the Emirati financial press is now letting off steam over the “distortion” organised, in its view, by international media over the financial situation in Dubai. “It is laughable” states the daily Emirates Business, “that what would have been an insignificant announcement in pre-recessionary times could have brought markets crashing down”. Not only were stock-market jitters connected to the announcement, but also the fall in the price of oil, the slump in the value of the dollar and instability in the price of gold, the paper points out. “That all this should come about just because Dubai World requested a six-month respite for sorting out its balance sheet, is hard to digest. Above all because it doesn’t make sense”. These digs were aimed at Associated Press, who headlined a piece “The Collapse of Dubai” which in fact told of additional funds being made available by the Central Bank, as well as at the Sunday Telegraph, which used the unsettling headline “Emirates Director: Dubai’s Business World Under Shock” to introduce a piece in which the airline’s CEO stated that “Dubai will find its way out of this” impasse. Ending by stressing that the amount of debt to be restructured “is not huge” and that state-backed companies should not be confused with the government itself, Emirates Business explains that “the government’s objective is clear: to review the problematic debts to consolidate profit-making enterprises” which is why DP World (as operator of the global port) was not included in the restructuring”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Fed Moves to Drain Some Money Out of Economy

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve is fine-tuning a strategy to reel in some of the unprecedented amount of money that’s been pumped into the economy during the financial crisis.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said Monday that investors and others shouldn’t conclude anything about when the central bank will reverse course and start boosting interest rates and removing other supports to fend off inflation.

The upcoming operations will involve so-called reverse repurchase agreements. That’s when the Fed sells securities from its portfolio, with an agreement to buy them back later.

Reverse repos are one tool the Fed can use to drain some money it has plowed into the economy to ease financial troubles.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



India Grappling With Inflation Above 15%, Record Gold Process and the Crisis in Dubai

The rise in prices, especially for basic necessities, creates broad discontent among the population and a trading of accusations between political parties. The state buys gold, but says it still has confidence in the dollar. Major impacts from the real estate crisis in Dubai.

Mumbai (AsiaNews) — In a developing economy like the Indian one, the rise of the industrial production index is inevitably followed by the rise of the price of food. In this month, food inflation touched a record high of 15.48%. Prices of vegetables and essential food items have risen to new levels of absurdity. Some people blames the recent cyclone Phyan but some other accuses the government of faulty policies.

Vinod Jadav, who sells vegetables at both wholesale and retail rates in Dadar Market in Mumbai, said: “I have been in this business for several years, but I have never seen prices skyrocket like this”. Krishnakant Gandhi importer of frozen food blames the ministry of manipulating the market to suit local powerful lobby. Experts also question agriculture minister Sharad Pawar’s frequent forecasts about retail prices being set to rise further due to the failure of the monsoon. This gives hoarders the psychological advantage to drive up rates immediately rather than wait for the next crop to arrive.

But also the prime minister, Manmohan Singh, interviewed by school children during the celebration of Children’s Day, requested to do something about the rise of food prices, he explained that something can be done, but as the per capita income of the nation is rising, it is but natural that also the farmers should get better prices for their produce.

Never the less the Congress Party has moved swiftly to political damage control reminding the government to take all steps to curb the menace of shooting prices. Congress general secretary, Janardan Dwivedi said the reminder was required as it was a “coalition government and not a full-fledged Congress regime”. This is a reference to agriculture minister, Sharad Pawar, who is not a member of the Congress. A day before this statement, the Opposition protested to the treasury benches over price rise of essential commodities.

On an other front also the price of gold has crossed the mark of 18.000 rupees per 10 gram (Euro=66 rupees). This is due to the fact that the Reserve Bank of India had bought 200 tonnes from IMF of gold between October 19 and October 30. Two factors: apprehension of depreciation of dollar and expectation of more central banks buying gold, are pushing up the price. The retail demand in India, which regained its position as the largest consumer of gold in the world market, has also picked up with the marriage season setting in.

But in spite of India buying gold, the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during the state visit to USA declared: “As far as I can see right now, there is no substitute to the dollar”. The Reserve Bank of India’s dollar-for-gold swap was seen in the world’s financial and political capitals as an implicit vote of no-confidence in the US economy. This is also in contrast to the Chinese suggestion that the dollar’s days as the preeminent currency may be drawing to an end. As America’s largest creditor, China holds sway over Washington. For the moment Singh is applying balm on America’s wounds.

The third factor upsetting the Indian economy is the storm building up in Dubai There are fears that Dubai government-owned Dubai World and its real estate arm Nakheel may default on debts worth $59bn. The companies were badly hit by real estate crash due to the global financial crisis.

Despite the brave front put up by the Indian government, the debt crisis that has enveloped Dubai World threatens to hit the struggling Indian overseas labour market that is largely dependent on short-term Middle East job contracts. The latest crisis comes at a time when official estimates have admitted that unemployment rates have spiraled to 30% in the Middle East in the last one year. As a consequence remittances to India are certain to be much lower then last year, 2007-08, $43.5 billion. It is well known that when Dubai sneezes, south India, especially Kerala, catches more than just a cold.

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

USA


Ex-Con Counts on “Faith Community” To Pass Health Care

The media furor over the White House state dinner crashers ignores the convicted felon who was invited to attend with the approval of Obama’s inner circle. The ex-convict, Robert B. Creamer, is a friend of White House adviser David Axelrod and the husband of Democratic Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Illinois. A major Democratic Party political strategist, he is the author of a 628-page book that describes how the Democrats can become the permanent majority party by passing a national health care bill and giving amnesty to illegal immigrants.

With the support of major elements of the “faith community,” the first part of Creamer’s plan is on track.

Creamer’s Stand Up Straight! How Progressives Can Win,” is the book “penned in the pen,” as one observer described it. “I did much of the preliminary work on this book while spending five months on a forced sabbatical at the Federal Prison Camp at Terra Haute Indiana,” Creamer says. Creamer emerged from federal prison in November 2006 after serving five months for financial crimes. His prosecutor was the famous Patrick J. Fitzgerald, who also nailed disgraced former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich.

But this didn’t stop Creamer from being invited to the White House for the first state dinner. Indeed, it makes complete sense in view of the fact that Creamer’s book is full of praise for Obama and even reprints Obama’s 2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address.

The acknowledgements section of Creamer’s book describes how he, like Obama, was influenced by Saul Alinsky, described as “the legendary community organizer.” Book endorsements are featured from David Axelrod; Greg Galluzo of the Gamaliel Foundation, which originally sponsored Barack Obama’s work as a community organizer in Chicago; and Andy Stern of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU).

[…]

Creamer himself spoke in his book of a “public plan,” which is supposed to guarantee that “right” to health care and which eventually became the “public option” in the actual legislation. In a speech captured on YouTube, Creamer’s wife, Rep. Schakowsky, candidly said that a public option is a Trojan Horse for a complete federal takeover.

Next is the immigration battle. Creamer explains that this “will have an enormous impact on the battle for power between the progressive and conservative forces in American society.” He explains that “If the Democrats continue to stand firmly for immigrant rights, the issue will define immigrants’ voting loyalties for a generation. If we are successful, a gigantic block of progressive votes will enter the electorate over the next 15 years—a block that could be decisive in the battle for the future.”

[Comments from JD: See article for video link.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Fiscal Responsibility — Or Just Plain Socialism?

With the information that has now come to light about the costs of “reform,” there is no other rational explanation for Obama’s obsession to enact Obamacare than his desire to increase government control over every aspect of our lives.

As others have noted, Obama and company have employed multiple gimmicks to conceal and misrepresent the true costs of Obamacare. Like other groups wanting to destroy America from the outside, liberals are patient. By backloading their spending, they hope to deceive Americans into thinking their plan is budget-neutral.

Thus, their bills disguise their true net costs by deferring most new spending for five years (while increasing taxes and cutting Medicare almost immediately). This trick is so transparently deceitful that if attempted by a Republican administration, we’d have already heard rumblings for impeachment.

Specifically, Democrats have said their proposal would cost $848 billion over 10 years, but the true cost would be some multiple of that. Using Congressional Budget Office figures, Investor’s Business Daily reports that only 1 percent of the spending would come in the first four years of the 10 years the Democrats are counting (2010-13). If you begin the 10-year calculation in the year appreciable spending would begin — 2014 — the cost would be $1.8 trillion. (Sen. Judd Gregg, it should be noted, estimates the costs for that 10-year period — 2014-23 — would be much greater, at $2.5 trillion.) Over the next five years (2024-28), the costs would escalate even faster, totaling $1.7 trillion.

In addition, the Cato Institute’s Michael Cannon reveals another gimmick Democrats are using to understate the actual costs for the first true 10-year period. Obama, despite his campaign promises to the contrary, would force the voluntarily uninsured to purchase health insurance. Those mandated costs should be counted as a tax just as surely as if they were first paid to the government for distribution to the insurance companies. In fact, the CBO did score similar mandates as taxes under Hillary Clinton’s reform plan in the ‘90s. But by treating these mandated costs as “off-budget,” Obama hides 60 percent of the bill’s total costs, according to Cannon. When all these gimmicks are correctly accounted for, says Cannon, “the total cost of Obamacare reaches … $6.25 trillion.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Gibbs: ‘No Dispute’ On Global Warming

Dismisses 31,000 scientists who signed petition challenging ‘consensus’

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs today brushed aside the concerns of more than 31,000 scientists who have signed a petition challenging the theory of man-made global warming.

WND White House corrrespondent Les Kinsolving brought up the petition as a follow-up to an earlier comment.

Gibbs had been asked by Fox News correspondent Major Garrett, “On climate change, why is it a good idea for the president to arrive near the beginning of the climate talk negotiations (scheduled by the United Nations in Copenhagen early in December) as opposed to the end, when the ultimate deal is going to be struck? And secondarily, does the White House have any evaluation or comment on this controversy of the hacked e-mails that suggest that some of the underlying science through some of the propositions put forward by climatologists may be in error or may have been altered in some way?”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘Honor Killings’ In USA Raise Concerns

Muslim immigrant men have been accused of six “honor killings” in the United States in the past two years, prompting concerns that the Muslim community and police need to do more to stop such crimes.

“There is broad support and acceptance of this idea in Islam, and we’re going to see it more and more in the United States,” says Robert Spencer, who has trained FBI and military authorities on Islam and founded Jihad Watch, which monitors radical Islam.

Honor killings are generally defined as murders of women by relatives who claim the victim brought shame to the family. Thousands of such killings have occurred in Muslim countries such as Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan and Palestinian territories, according to the World Health Organization.

Some clerics and even lawmakers in these countries have said families have the right to commit honor killings as a way of maintaining values, according to an analysis by Yotam Feldner in the journal Middle East Quarterly.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



How Anwar Awlaki [Hasan’s Imam] Got Away

U.S. Attorney’s Decision to Cancel Arrest Warrant “Shocked” Terrorism Investigators

A felony arrest warrant for radical Islamic cleric Anwar al Awlaki was rescinded in 2002 a day before he was intercepted as a terror suspect at New York’s JFK airport, forcing authorities to release him, according to sources familiar with the case. The warrant was cancelled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Denver, even though Awlaki was on a terror watch list, and even though the office’s supervising prosecutor for terror cases — who has now been appointed by the Obama administration as the U.S. Attorney in Denver — had been fully briefed on Awlaki’s alleged terror ties, according to investigators.

Soon after the 2002 warrant was canceled, Awlaki left the United States for good, settling in Yemen. Since his escape, Awlaki, now considered by intelligence officials to be an al-Qaeda recruiter, has been implicated as the spiritual inspiration for terror plots in Canada and the U.S., and was in e-mail contact with Major Nidal Malik Hasan, charged with 13 counts of murder in the recent mass shooting at Fort Hood, Texas.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Mychal Massie: It’s Not a Hate Crime if …

“What kind of nigger are you?”

Like being asked, “Have you stopped beating your wife?” — it’s a loaded question to which there is no right answer.

It’s even harder to answer when you’re a 130-pound black cancer survivor and the question is being yelled at you by one of two angry men — both of whom are over six feet tall and totaling close to 500 pounds.

Making it even more uncomfortable (if possible), is the fact that both men are also black.

Welcome to the world of Kenneth Gladney.

This past Aug. 6, Gladney was handing out pens and buttons outside a St. Louis—area town-hall meeting sponsored by Rep. Russ Carnahan, D-Mo. People there were concerned about Obama policies such as the cap-and-trade energy tax, runaway “stimulus” spending and a government takeover of health care. Despite the crowd’s anxiety, Gladney — by all reports — was far from what one might consider “angry.”

Leave the anger to Elston McCowan and Perry Molens. McCowan and Molens work for the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU. When town-hall meetings became uncomfortable for Obama-friendly lawmakers, the SEIU essentially became the White House’s muscle.

According to the recently released police report from that particular event, witnesses saw McCowan approach Gladney and begin berating him. That’s when McCowan asked the previously mentioned revulsive question. McCowan then punched Gladney in the face. Molens grabbed Gladney by the collar and dragged him over the table, where the both proceeded to punch and kick Gladney.

McCowan and Molens were arrested on charges of assault and interfering with an officer. Gladney went to the hospital with a sore shoulder and multiple contusions.

A black man was beaten for expressing his political beliefs. Isn’t that a hate crime?

Where are the Jacksons and the Sharptons calling the SEIU leadership on the carpet and demanding answers? Where are the Congressional Black Caucus demands for hearings and investigations? Why hasn’t Obama said these union thugs “acted stupidly” — why hasn’t the White House publicly condemned their actions?

Probably because the SEIU is a special friend of the left and of the White House. When the White House visitor logs were recently released, SEIU President Andy Stern was Obama’s most frequent guest. SEIU chapters also work hand-in-glove with ACORN.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Scientist Calls Nation’s Biggest Solar Plant a Toy

Researcher’s report claims advocates inflating numbers to hide cost

Green energy advocates are promoting the newly built, largest solar-power plant in the nation by means of hiding costs and inflating energy output claims, according to a prominent research scientist and founder of the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, who says he has crunched the numbers.

[…]

But the OISM’s Dr. Arthur B. Robinson has dug deeper into claims of just how much energy the plant will produce.

Robinson cites an FPL estimate published in Renewable Energy News that the plant will produce 42,000 megawatt hours per year of electricity. Robinson calculates that level of output only makes the DeSoto plant a 4.8-megawatt facility, or roughly one-fifth the “25-megawatt” boast.

“This fivefold difference is typical of reports on solar installations,” Robinson writes.

Robinson also criticized the project after comparing its purported energy savings to the $150 million it took to build the plant.

Based on the 42,000 megawatt hour estimate, Robinson calculates the plant will produce $2.52 million worth of electricity per year — which means it would take 60 years for the plant to pay for its construction costs, or 36 years if the numbers were recalculated with peak power cost scales.

“These estimates of years to recover cost do not include maintenance and other expenses,” Robinson writes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Suspect Released in Arkansas After Claiming He Had Changed

Documents released this morning by the Arkansas Parole Board show police slaying suspect Maurice Clemmons was supposed to remain in prison there until at least 2015, but won his release by claiming he’d changed while behind bars.

Clemmons’ appeal for clemency was granted in May 2000 by then-Gov. Mike Huckabee, who commuted Clemmons sentence and made him immediately eligible for parole.

Clemmons wrote in an appeal to Huckabee that he’d been sent to prison after an extended crime spree that started in 1989 when he was a teenager — and that he was a different person now.

[…]

Pulaski County Prosecutor Larry Jegley said that by his count, Clemmons would have been in jail until 2021, but was released from prison in August 2000.

“Mr. Huckabee made him parole-eligible 21 years before he would have been,” he said, “otherwise, he’d be cooling his heels in the Department of Corrections.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Suspected Cop Killer’s Clemency Haunts Huckabee

Alleged gunman’s prison release brings back 2008 campaign charges

Maurice Clemmons, the alleged gunman sought in the recent slaying of four Seattle-area police officers, was released from a Washington jail just six days ago, but it’s his prior release from an Arkansas prison that is returning in news accounts to haunt the then-governor of the state, Mike Huckabee.

“The political future of former Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee could be damaged by his role in commuting the sentence of a man who is now suspected of killing four police officers in Washington state,” writes Nicholas Johnston of Bloomberg News.

“Back then, Gov. Huckabee granted clemency to a disturbing number of people, including a man named Maurice Clemmons who should have never been let out,” said Larry Jegley, prosecuting attorney for Arkansas’ Pulaski County. “This is the day I’ve been dreading for a long time.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



White House Still Listening to Van Jones ‘Green’ Advice

Communist-group founder on team influencing environmental policies

Van Jones, President Obama’s controversial former “green jobs” czar, serves on the advisory board of an independent environmental organization actively working with the White House, WND has learned.

Jones resigned in September 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 is one of 20 advisers to the University of Colorado—based Presidential Climate Action Project, or PCAP, which draws up climate-policy recommendations for the White House and has been working with members of the Obama administration.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Europe Reacts to the Swiss Minaret Ban

By J. David Goodman

In the village of Amsteg, Switzerland, a poster promoting the ban on minarets became the site of competing messages on Monday.

When Swiss voters overwhelmingly approved a ban on construction of minarets in a referendum on Sunday, they surprised some pollsters and disappointed many European leaders, including those of their own government, who opposed the ban and now must find a way to implement it.

A day after nearly 58 percent of Swiss voters supported the ban, Europe found itself thrust into another round of soul-searching precipitated by yet another clash over integrating — or not integrating — a swelling Muslim population.

In France, where similar debates have focused not on architecture but on how some Muslim women dress, Bernard Kouchner, the foreign minister, was quick to condemn the results of the Swiss referendum.

“I am a bit shocked by this decision,” Mr. Kouchner said on a French radio program on Monday. “It is an expression of intolerance, and I detest intolerance. I hope the Swiss will reverse this decision quickly.”

Muslim response in Europe has so far been measured, including a small protest in Bern, Switzerland, on Sunday night. “My first reaction is one of surprise and disappointment,” Babacar Ba, the Geneva ambassador of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, told Swissinfo on Monday. “It is a bad answer to a bad question. I fear that this kind of thing is simply a gift to extremism.”

By contrast, far-right politicians in several countries were predictably gleeful over the results, and publicly wishing for similar bans.

“It’s a signal that they have to adapt to our way of life and not the other way around,” Filip Dewinter, a member of the Vlaams Belang party in Belgium, told Le Monde. Mr. Dewinter said he plans to pave the way for a minaret ban in Belgium soon; Geert Wilders, a prominent right-wing politician in the Netherlands, has called for a Swiss-style referendum there too.

Other, lesser-known far-right parties are also trying to latch on to what they perceive as a victory. Mario Borghezio, an Italian member of the European parliament, echoed the call for a referendum in Italy, declaring that “the flag of a courageous Switzerland which wants to remain Christian is flying over a near-Islamised Europe.”

But while Swiss the ban has touched off some emotional reactions, its legal status remains in doubt. As my colleagues Nick Cumming-Bruce and Steve Erlanger point out, the referendum approved adding a single sentence to the existing Swiss constitution, which provides for freedom of religion, that specifically restricts construction of minarets. Such narrowly aimed language against one religious group may run afoul of international conventions on human rights. By contrastm when French officials succeeded in implementing a ban on head scarves in public schools in 2004, they were careful to write legal language that would affect any element of dress that was overtly religious, including kippahs, turbans and large crosses.

Switzerland is party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and to the European Convention on Human Rights. On the Volokh Conspiracy blog, David Kopel writes that Article 9 of the European convention will probably be the basis for legal challenges to the Swiss ban. As the second part of that article says:

Freedom to manifest one’s religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety, for the protection of public order, health or morals, or the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.

Indeed, though the Swiss government was confident that voters would reject the ban, United Nations rights experts fretted before the referendum that approval would thrust Europe into unknown legal waters.

“What would happen if the initiative were accepted?” Philippe Gerber, a member of the Swiss justice ministry, told the U.N. Human Rights Committee before the vote. “It’s a delicate question that has never been posed before and there is no established practice. It’ll be up to the courts to decide.”

Whatever the legal result, architecture that provides a space for Islam in Europe has been and continues to be a source of consternation — from Cologne in 2007 to the continuing travails surrounding the construction of two grand mosques in Copenhagen.

And while Mr. Kouchner, the French minister, may decry the Swiss result as a manifestation of xenophobic populism, his own government is currently batting back criticism of its efforts to define “Frenchness,” which have been called a veiled attack on Muslims and immigrants.

Gone, perhaps, are the days when a majority of Europeans can look upon a mosque, as the mayor of Vienna apparently did in the 1970s, and see in it “a welcoming and friendly home to all people who live and work here.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Fears Grow Over Dangers of Swiss Minaret Vote

GENEVA — The Swiss foreign minister warned on Tuesday that a decision by voters in Switzerland to ban new mosque minarets could endanger security, amid stark warnings about a broader threat of extremism.

Opponents of the ban in Switzerland vowed to press ahead with legal challenges, while Turkey and the UN human rights chief delivered sharp rebukes over a broader and growing trend of European intolerance that they believe the vote revealed.

Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey also acknowledged that Muslims in Switzerland now faced a restriction on their freedom to exert their religion, in the first overt expression of government concern since Sunday’s referendum.

More than 57 percent of voters upset the opinion polls and defied their government by approving the right wing motion to ban minarets. Related article: UN rights chief slams minaret ban

“In any event, we are concerned by this vote,” Calmy-Rey told a meeting of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Greece.

“The reality of our societies, in Europe and in the world (is that) every blow to the co-existence of different cultures and religions also endangers our security,” she added, according to a written transcript of her remarks which was released by the ministry

Calmy-Rey warned of the risk of a chain reaction in such instances, as repeated “provocation” triggered outrage, thereby “fanning extremism.”

Turkish leaders joined widespread condemnation on Tuesday, denouncing the Swiss vote as a “mistake” and a reflection of Islamophobia as well as “racist and extreme nationalist waves surging in Europe.”

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stressed that it “has irked not only the Islamic world, but also those who fear a clash of civilisations.”

He called on Europeans to act against the ban “so as not to plunge the world, particularly Europe, into tensions.”

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay called tha ban a “deeply discriminatory, deeply divisive and a thoroughly unfortunate step for Switzerland to take.”

“I have no hesitation at all in condemning the anti-foreigner scaremongering that has characterised political campaigns in a number of countries, including Switzerland, which helps produce results like this,” she added.

Anti-immigrant party leaders elsewhere in Europe have hailed the outcome of the referendum brought by members of the hard-right Swiss People’s Party (SVP) — Switzerland’s biggest party — and other right-wing groups.

Meanwhile, the head of the Swiss Green Party, Ueli Leuenberger, pledged to support appeals against the ban to the European Court of Human Rights.

“It’s extremely important,” he told AFP.

“For Switzerland… but also at European level when you see the reactions of populist parties and the extreme right, who are celebrating and taking the Swiss example to launch campaigns against Muslims in their countries,” said Leuenberger.

The Swiss constitutional amendment does not affect mosques or religious worship.

However, opponents charged that right-wing campaigners portrayed the towers, of which there are just four in Switzerland, as symbols of “power” and whipped up fears about the burqa, women’s rights and Islamic extremism.

[Return to headlines]



‘Germany Would Also Have Voted to Ban Minarets’

Switzerland’s vote to ban minarets is a disaster for its image, write German commentators. The vote doesn’t just reflect a fear of “Islamization” but also shows that setbacks in recent years have shaken its national self-confidence. But Germans would probably vote the same way, warn some observers.

Switzerland’s decision to ban the construction of minarets in a referendum on Sunday has drawn condemnation from politicians across Europe and from Muslim leaders, but far-right politicians have welcomed it as a courageous step that should be copied by other countries.

Egypt’s Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa, the country’s top cleric, called the ban an “insult” to Muslims across the world but called on Muslims not to be provoked by the move. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said he was shocked by the decision which showed “intolerance.”

However right-wing and far-right parties such as Italy’s Northern League in Italy and France’s National Front were quick to welcome the decision. The right-wing populist Dutch politician Geert Wilders, who is famous for his anti-Islam views, called the result “great” and said he would push for a similar referendum in the Netherlands.

More than 57.5 percent of voters and 22 out of 26 cantons voted in favor of the ban on Sunday. The initiative was brought by supporters of the right-wing Swiss People’s Party and a smaller party. The campaign’s organizers had argued that minarets are a symbol of a Muslim quest to dominate others and to introduce Shariah law, and that banning them would help stop an “Islamization” of Switzerland. Muslims make up around 5 percent of the Swiss population.

In Germany, Wolfgang Bosbach, the spokesman on domestic security for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats, said the vote expressed a fear of Islamization that also exists in Germany. “One has to take this concern seriously,” Bosbach told the Berliner Zeitung newspaper.

German media commentators writing in the Monday editions of Germany’s main newspapers said the decision reflects more than a fear of Islamization. The vote, they write, is a sign of how unsettled Switzerland has become in the last two decades that have seen its self-confidence shaken by the collapse of national economic symbols such as the airline Swissair, international criticism of its secretive banking system and setbacks in its foreign policy.

But mass circulation Bild, which can claim to have its finger on the nation’s pulse more than other newspapers, said Germans would probably vote the same way if they were allowed a referendum on the issue:

“The minaret isn’t just the symbol of a religion but of a totally different culture. Large parts of the Islamic world don’t share our basic European values: the legacy of the Enlightenment, the equality of man and woman, the separation of church and state, a justice system independent of the Bible or the Koran and the refusal to impose one’s own beliefs on others with ‘fire and the sword.’ Another factor is likely to have influenced the Swiss vote: Nowhere is life made harder for Christians than in Islamic countries. Those who are intolerant themselves cannot expect unlimited tolerance from others.”

The center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung writes:

“The referendum is a disaster for Switzerland. There is no such construction ban anywhere else in Europe. When those six words ‘the construction of minarets is prohibited’ are written into the Swiss constitution, they will breach that constitution in several ways, as they violate its guarantee of freedom of religion and the ban on discrimination.

“The ban also constitutes a flagrant breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. It won’t take long before someone affected by this ban takes the case to the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights, which will result in an embarrassing condemnation and possibly Switzerland’s expulsion from the Council of Europe.

“There will be a storm of outrage, especially in the Muslim world. The worst mistake now would be for Switzerland to react by stiffening its stance. Because in its heart, this country is cosmopolitan and liberal.”

The conservative Die Welt writes:

“The Swiss decision gives the wrong answer to the right question. The question concerning all European societies is how to find the right way to deal with a growing Muslim minority, and where the limits of tolerance should be regarding the practice of traditions that are in some cases backward.

“The referendum has provided an excessively simplistic answer. It condemns the minaret which it interprets as a symbol of Islamic power — as if the traditional architectural feature so closely related to the Christian church steeple were more important than what is preached inside the mosques.

“It throws Switzerland back behind the level of enlightenment and tolerance that Europe has toiled to attain in the past — and which turned multi-ethnic Switzerland into such a successful model.

“The referendum shows how deep the fear of Islam runs in Europe and that the issue isn’t being taken seriously enough by the political elite — and not just in Switzerland. But it doesn’t provide a solution to Europe’s pressing integration problems.”

The conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes:

“Fundamentally democratic, cosmopolitan, tolerant — that’s how the Swiss always liked to see themselves. But with the vote to ban further minarets, the country has also shown other traits that smack of narrow-mindedness, fear and the desire to wall themselves in.

“Many Muslims in Switzerland have integrated themselves well. The problems that do exist can’t be solved with a ban on minarets. But the Swiss People’s Party has succeeded in broadening the issue to Islamization. Existing problems with immigrants from Kosovo, for example, were simply combined with the religion issue.”

The left-wing Die Tageszeitung writes:

“The campaign was targeted at a Swiss population that has felt increasingly unsettled since the end of the Cold War. Switzerland, which according to official myth is ‘neutral’ but which is de facto aligned with NATO, hasn’t come to terms with the loss of the communist bogeyman as well as the members of the Western alliance have. From compensation claims for the theft of the assets of Jewish refugees by Swiss banks, to the recent softening of banking secrecy for foreign tax evaders — all corrections of obvious historical lies and foreign policy mistakes since 1989 took place not through a realization of wrongdoing on the part of Switzerland itself, but through pressure from outside.”

“In addition, the collapse of Swissair and other objects of Swiss national pride was also painful, as was the humiliating treatment by Libya’s dictator Moammar Gadhafi who has been holding two Swiss nationals as hostages for more than a year. The global economic crisis has also left clear marks on Switzerland.

“The perfectly devised campaign for a ban on minarets provided a suitable bogeyman for those who were unsettled by this general uncertainty and whose self-confidence has been shattered. Encouraged by their victory on Sunday, the initiators will next call for a ban on mosques and Islamic cultural centers. It is also to be feared that there will be more frequent acts of violence against such institutions.”

— David Crossland

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



Italy: ‘Cross on Flag’ Flap

Italy must show Christian colours says League man

(ANSA) — Rome, November 30 — A prominent rightwing politician on Monday called for a cross to be added to the Italian flag, drawing angry responses from majority and opposition figures. Junior Transport Minister Roberto Castelli of the Northern League, a member of the governing centre-right coalition, said he hoped his party would back the idea as part of a constitutional reform package scheduled for next year. “I believe Europe has the right to rediscover its own identity, which is in the process of being entirely lost,” said Castelli, whose Northern League party is often accused of being against immigration. “There must be respect for other religions and ways of thinking but we must return to our own faith”.

Castelli first touched on the idea on Sunday night, while commenting on the outcome of a referendum in Switzerland, which voted to ban the construction of minarets.

Praising Swiss voters for their “civilisation lesson”, he said a strong sign was needed to fight “pro-Islamist ideology”.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, of the other coalition governing party, the People of Freedom (PdL), said the idea was “appealing”. “There are in fact nine European countries that already have the cross on their flag, so this would be an entirely normal thing to do,” he said. But other MPs in the PdL criticized the idea.

European Affairs Minister Andrea Ronchi described the proposal as “absolute garbage”. “The Tricolor is a symbol that can’t be touched,” he said. “It has a long tradition, is immensely relevant and must be white, red and green, period”.

The Farefuturo web magazine of House Speaker Gianfranco Fini, also a PdL member, branded the proposal “provocative and political propaganda”.

“This is dangerous nonsense that risks sending out a message of closure that has less to do with legality and security and more to do with the ethnic and religious situation of Muslims,” it said.

Members of the opposition also voiced anger over the proposal. The shadow immigration minister of the largest opposition group, the Democratic Party (PD), said “the nonsense the League continues to spout should be ignored”. “These forays damage Italy and the Italians, and besmirch the value of religion,” said Livia Turco.

The deputy chair of the House European affairs committee, Enrico Farinone, another PD member, accused the League of being confrontational and said the crucifix should be used “to unite people rather than divide them”. The Senate whip for the centrist Catholic opposition UDC, Gianpiero D’Alia, warned: “Those preaching intolerance and racial hatred, as the League does, cannot exploit Christian values and use them for political point-scoring”.

The House whip for the small opposition Italy of Values party, Massimo Donadi, said the Northern League had “descended into farce”, while Alessandro Pignatiello of the Italian Communist Party described the suggestion as “beyond all decency”.

Pignatiello also accused the League of hypocrisy in its bout of flag-waving.

At a rally near Como in 1997, he recalled, League leader Umberto Bossi said he only used the tricolor “to wipe (his) *ss”.

Prominent Northern League figures have frequently made headlines for their stance on Islam and immigration, most notably during the Danish cartoon row in 2006, when Roberto Calderoli wore a T-shirt emblazoned with one of the images. Most recently, the Northern League was accused of racism after it emerged that a local scheme to rid a town of illegal immigrants had been nicknamed “White Christmas”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Right-Wing Minister Wants ‘Cross’ On Flag

Milan, 30 Nov. (AKI) — A conservative Italian minister from the anti-immigrant Northern League has lauded the decision by Swiss voters to ban minarets and called for the Christian cross to be included on the Italian flag.

“I hope that the party to which I am honoured to belong puts forth my proposal,” said Roberto Castelli, deputy minister of infrastructure and transport.

“Europe has the right to safeguard its own identity, respecting other people’s roots, but it is necessary to return to our roots,” said Castelli.

He said that Islam is an “intolerant religion”.

Castelli made the remarks after Swiss voters supported a referendum proposal to ban the building of minarets.

Switzerland’s Muslim population is estimated to be at 400,000 or 5.2 percent of the total population. However, there are only four minarets in the entire country.

More than 57 percent of voters, as well as 22 out of Switzerland’s 26 cantons voted in favour of the ban, despite the government opposition to such a move, saying it would harm the country’s image.

The federal council (government) however, has to respect the decision by the cantons.

“Once again, the Swiss teach us a lesson in civilisation,” concluded Castelli.

Meanwhile, the leader of Italy’s Federation of the Greens party Angelo Bonelli, responded ironically to Castelli’s demand.

“Deputy minister Castelli wants to put the cross in the flag? So when do we begin a crusade to liberate the holy land?” said Bonelli.

The colours of Italy’s flag, commonly known as the ‘tricolore’, are green, white and red, and are commonly interpreted as the green showing the country’s plains and hills, the white representing the snow-capped Alps, and red representing the blood spilt in the wars of independence.

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



Italy Receives Two Guantanamo Inmates

Two Tunisian inmates of the US prison camp at Guantanamo Bay have been transferred to Italy, where they are expected to face trial.

Adel Ben Mabrouk and Muhammad Ben Riadh Nasri are both accused of terrorism-related offences, which they deny.

Italian officials said they were taken into custody upon their arrival in Milan and sent for interrogation.

A third Guantanamo prisoner has arrived in France, but is expected to be allowed to go free.

The French foreign ministry said Saber Lahmar, an Algerian, had been cleared of all terrorism charges.

A fourth prisoner was reported to be bound for Hungary.

Missed deadline

The transfers are part of an effort to deal with Guantanamo detainees internationally, to help the United States close the camp.

US President Barack Obama announced plans to close the camp shortly after taking office.

He set a deadline of January 2010, but has recently been forced to admit there is no chance of meeting that target.

The two Tunisians transferred to Italy are accused of travelling from Italy to Afghanistan and helping Islamist militant groups to recruit fighters.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Lisbon Treaty Comes Into Force — The Inglorious Revolution

1st December 2009 will go down in British history as a turning point; it is as constitutionally significant as that of 15th November 1688, when King William’s fleet arrived in Torbay to deliver the land from tyranny: it was the last successful invasion of England.

There had never been a revolution quite like it. The Glorious Revolution of 1688 is often termed ‘bloodless’, and it was, almost. It was a conspiracy by a faction of the ruling élite which led an invasion by invitation: they were concerned to preserve and propagate their religio-political agenda which involved an internal change of constitution.

The Inglorious Revolution of 2009 has also been bloodless: it is also a conspiracy by the ruling élite which has led to an invasion by invitation: they are also concerned to propagate their religio-political agenda which involves an undeniable internal change of constitution.

The revolution/invasion of 1688 was by the Protestant Dutch, and it heralded an era of constitutional monarchy, the Bill of Rights, religious liberty, material prosperity and political stability. The revolution/invasion of 2009 is by the European Union, the suzerain power, to which the Monarch is now subject: it enshrines a charter of ‘fundamental human rights’, and heralds an era of religious oppression, penal taxation, economic stagnation and political instability.

On this day, the ‘Constitution for Europe’ becomes law, and the ‘President of Europe’ becomes our head of state. The Queen is still the Queen, but she is now subject to the provisions of the new constitution. The Prime Minister is still the Prime Minister, but he is now obliged to promote the aims and objectives of the European Union over and above those of the United Kingdom.

And yet we are no more an ‘occupied’ nation than we became in 1688, for our Parliament has conspired with a foreign power: they have permitted, encouraged, conceded and surrendered. We are now but a province in the Empire of Europa: the Queen is but a regional governor beneath an omnipotent Emperor; Parliament is but a regional council, yet it lacks even the authority to legislate for refuse collection or road repairs. From today, everything is subject to the Supreme Government in Brussels.

And still the people come and go, talking not quite of Michelangelo, but of Coronation Street, X-Factor and I’m a Celebrity.

And still the anoraks pore over their opinion polls, wondering about the size of the next majority or the prospect of a hung parliament.

Nothing, apparently, has changed at all.

But everything has.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Minaret Referendum Mulled in Parliament

Northern League says Italy should follow in Swiss footsteps

(ANSA) — Rome, November 30 — A constitutional referendum to ban the building of Islamic minarets in Italy is soon to appear before parliament, Simplification Minister Roberto Calderoli announced on Monday.

Taking the lead from Switzerland, which drew widespread international criticism by passing its own anti-minaret referendum this weekend, Calderoli said it was time Italy affirm its Catholic roots.

The motion in Switzerland passed with a surprise 57.6% vote in the face of opposition from the government, who said it violated the country’s constitution and long tradition of tolerance.

The Catholic Church was among its loudest critics, with the Swiss Bishop’s Conference decrying the move as an “alarming mistake”.

But Calderoli hailed the move as a triumphant “yes to bell towers and no to minarets,” that served as an important example for other European countries losing touch with their Christian identities.

“Respect for other religions is important, but we’ve got to put the brakes on Muslim propaganda or else we’ll end up with an Islamic political party like they have in Spain,” he said.

The announcement followed a short-lived proposal by another Northern League MP, former justice minister Roberto Castelli who seized on the Swiss referendum to suggest Italy put a cross on its flag.

Both proposals received mixed reactions from the center right majority.

While Foreign Minister Franco Frattini pointed to the Scandinavian countries, which all have crossed flags, he joined in the near unanimous criticism from his European Union colleagues in calling the Swiss referendum “a worrying sign of intolerance”.

Deputy House Speaker Maurizio Lupi of Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party urged coalition members to let both items drop.

“The last thing we need to be getting into right now is a religious debate about crosses and minarets,” he said.

The Vatican daily L’Osservatore Romano has remained steadfast in its opposition to the initiative, which it likened to an early November ruling by the European Court of Human Rights against crucifixes in Italian classrooms.

“Both positions are based on the same, flawed principle that religion ought to be something we do in private,” explained editor Giovanni Maria Vian.

The Northern League was not the only party in Europe hoping to seize on the Swiss referendum to curtail mosque building at home.

The nationalist Danish Peoples Party have said they too will seek a similar referendum in Denmark, where minarets have yet to appear.

Italy, by contrast boasts one of the tallest minarets in Europe standing just a meter shorter than St Peter’s Basilica, at the Mosque and Islamic Cultural Center in Rome.

Italy has around 1.2 million Muslims, making Islam the second religion after Catholicism.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslim Leaders Condemn Swiss Ban

Businesses Fearing Global Backlash Urge Officials in Bern to Calm Tensions Sparked by Minaret Vote

ZURICH — Muslim leaders from around the world condemned a vote in Switzerland to ban the construction of minarets in the Alpine country, raising fresh fears of a backlash against Swiss interests around the world.

Voters in Switzerland approved a referendum Sunday to ban the building of new minarets on mosques. Nearly 58% of voters, and all but four of the country’s 26 cantons, supported the initiative, with support for the ban reaching 70% in some regions.

The outcome was a surprise in a country that has had far fewer problems with the integration of its Muslim minority than its European neighbors. As a result, the government braced for a possible backlash against Swiss businesses, even as companies themselves took a low-key response to the outcome, hoping not to stir tension.

Political and religious leaders of Muslim countries were quick to condemn the vote. Maskuri Abdillah, head of Indonesia’s biggest Muslim group, Nahdlatul Ulama, said the vote reflected “a hatred of Swiss people against Muslim communities.”

Egypt’s top cleric, Ali Gomaa, called the referendum an “insult” to Muslims, while the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, the largest international Muslim group with 57 member states, called the vote a “recent example of growing anti-Islamic incitements in Europe by extremist, anti-immigrant, xenophobic, racist, scare-mongering ultraright politicians who reign over common sense, wisdom and universal values.”

“It is a bad answer to a bad question,” Babacar Ba, the Geneva ambassador of the Islamic conference told Swiss journalists Monday. “I fear that this kind of thing is simply a gift to extremism and intolerance.”

The Swiss foreign ministry began Monday to try to ease tensions with the Muslim world. Top diplomats in Bern have contacted leaders of Islamic organizations, including the Islamic conference. Swiss diplomats in Muslim countries also have reached out to local foreign ministries to assure governments that the referendum doesn’t restrict the right of Muslims in Switzerland to practice their religion.

Despite the rhetoric, there were no reports Monday of incidents against Swiss interests. The Swiss government, which waged an aggressive campaign against the initiative, has feared a backlash similar to that suffered by Denmark several years ago after the publication of cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad, when consumers boycotted Danish goods and protesters attacked Danish embassies in some countries.

In the run-up to the Swiss referendum, the government studied the Danish leadership’s reaction to that incident to prepare for a possible yes vote. As a result, Swiss diplomats in recent months have worked to calm concerns in Muslim countries about the initiative.

On Monday, Swiss companies kept a low profile in the wake of the vote, declining to discuss any possible retaliation while urging the government to work to calm tensions.

A number of Swiss companies, such as engineering group ABB Ltd. and food maker Nestlé SA, have large interests in Muslim countries. Nestlé has about 50 factories in the Muslim world and is the world’s largest producer of halal food, or food permissible under Islamic law. Nestlé has recently begun expanding its halal business in Europe, to cater to the Continent’s growing Muslim population. “Nestlé cannot be associated with any form of discrimination,” the company said.

Switzerland’s main employer’s association, Economiesuisse, called for the government to “limit the potential damage” by keeping a dialogue open with Muslim leaders.

At a business conference in Zurich, Hans-Ulrich Meister, head of Switzerland for Credit Suisse Group, played down concerns. Clients in the Muslim countries “typically are huge investors and very professional,” he said. “They can differentiate between direct democracy banning minarets and religious freedom, but the political bodies in Switzerland have to explain this.”

Nonetheless, the government suggested Swiss business could suffer somewhat as a result of the vote. “I am assuming our trade relations with other countries will become more difficult,” said Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf at a news conference.

[Return to headlines]



Swiss Minaret Ban Sends Ripples Worldwide

Swiss voters’ decision to ban the construction of minarets has drawn worldwide criticism, with the United Nations and Council of Europe expressing outright concern.

UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Asma Jahangir, criticised the “clear discrimination towards the members of the Swiss Muslim community”, in a statement on Monday.

“I have serious concerns about the negative consequences of the outcome of this vote on the freedom of religion or belief of members of the Swiss Muslim community,” she said, and called for Switzerland to take the necessary measures to protect the freedom of religion.

Meanwhile a spokesman for the UN High Commission for Human Rights also confirmed on Monday that legal experts were assessing whether the ban conformed to international law. The Commission will give its position on the outcome once the legal assessment is complete.

The Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly said the Swiss referendum outcome risked “promoting feelings of exclusion and deepening divisions” in society.

“The decision, although an expression of popular opinion, is a source of serious concern,” said Lluís Maria de Puig, president of the assembly, in a statement.

This vote is “testimony to the fears at the heart of the Swiss population — and Europe in general — towards Islamic integration”, and the result goes against the values of tolerance, dialogue and respect for others’ beliefs, which the Council seeks to uphold, he said.

The vote on Sunday was backed by 57.5 per cent of Swiss voters and a majority of cantons. Turnout was high, at around 53 per cent.

Negative signal

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner appealed for the Swiss to go back on the decision, which he described as a “show of intolerance”. He said he was “a bit scandalised” by the ban, which amounted to “oppressing a religion”.

Sweden, holding the presidency of the European Union, also came out strongly against the result. Integration Minister Nyamko Sabuni said voting on the issue had been “an abuse of the Swiss voting system”, while the Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt said it was a “display of prejudice and perhaps even of fear … at all levels a negative sign”.

Tobias Billström, the Swedish migration minister, added that it was rare to make such a decision by referendum, with issues such as building height or location usually the domain of town planners. The Austrian interior minister, Maria Fekter, agreed.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said he was “greatly concerned” at the signal the vote sent to the Islamic world.

For Germany the outcome demonstrated that there was fear of Islamicisation, which needed to be “taken seriously”, said Wolfgang Bosbach, head of the German parliamentary internal affairs commission. But Christoph Steegmans, spokesman for the German Chancellery, said the government was “certain that freedom of religion was as important in Switzerland as it is to us”.

Dutch far-right politician Geert Wilders followed the result by calling for the Netherlands to organise its own referendum on the issue, saying: “Whatever is possible in Switzerland could equally be done here.”

What’s this?

People’s initiative

“Distorted image of Islam”

Elsewhere, the Vatican told the BBC on Monday that it endorsed a statement by the conference of Swiss Bishops criticising the vote for heightening “the problems of cohabitation between religions and cultures”.

In Lebanon, influential Shi’ite cleric Ayatollah Mohammad Hussein Fadllallah issued a statement calling the vote racist, and the fruit of a “propaganda campaign aimed at presenting a distorted and frightening image of Islam to the Swiss public”. He urged Swiss Muslims not to respond with violence to the outcome.

In Indonesia, the world’s biggest Muslim-majority country, the head of the country’s largest Muslim group Maskuri Abdillah said the vote was a “manifestation of religious hatred”, but called for followers “not to respond with excess”.

Jana, the official news agency in Libya, which is in the midst of ongoing diplomatic spat with Switzerland, issued a statement saying it exposed Switzerland’s racist side and enshrined in law a “racist religious action”.

Swiss Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, attending a gathering of European Union justice ministers on Monday, was forced on the back foot and had to explain to her counterparts that Sunday’s referendum vote was not “a referendum against Islam … but a vote directed against fundamentalist developments”.

Widmer-Schlumpf noted that it was foreseeable that an appeal against the ban could be lodged with the European Court of Human Rights.

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



Swiss Minaret Ban Reflects Fear of Islam, Not Real Problems

A minaret in Wangen bei Olten: The Swiss have voted in favor of a ban on minaret construction.

The Swiss have voted in favor of a complete ban on the construction of minarets. But the decision is not a reaction to problems with Muslims in the country. Instead, it reveals a deep-seated fear of Islam.

There are only four minarets in Switzerland. One of them was completed just a few months ago in the village of Wangen bei Olten, population 5,000. It may just be a tiny tower in the middle of an industrial area, but its construction sparked a national controversy. It eventually led to a referendum campaign by a right-wing religious grouping that wanted to enshrine the following sentence in the Swiss constitution: “The construction of minarets is forbidden.”

On Sunday, the Swiss voted in favor of the ban. The results were highly surprising, contradicting all the polls and the fact that the government and almost all the major parties had campaigned for a “no” vote.

Some 57.5 percent of voters supported the ban. The initiative was also supported by the required majority of cantons, with 22 of Switzerland’s 26 cantons voting in favor of the ban. The two city cantons of Geneva and Basel-City rejected the proposal, as did two French-speaking cantons, Neuchâtel and Vaud.

It is a shockingly clear success for a proposal which originated from politicians on the far right of the political spectrum.

Symbolic Vote

For a long time, the initiative only seemed to be supported by a right-wing splinter group. Even Christoph Blocher, the longtime leader of the right-wing populist Swiss People’s Party (SVP), publicly distanced himself from the initiative, although his party almost unanimously expressed its support for the ban in the end.

But the organizers of the campaign managed to turn the dispute over minarets into a symbolic referendum on the influence of Islam. They did not speak much about minarets. Instead, they talked about Sharia law, burqas and the oppression of women in the Islamic world. In the end, even the prominent feminist Julia Onken supported the initiative.

The poster which the organizers used for their campaign showed a number of black minarets resembling rockets standing closely together on a Swiss flag. In front of the flag, a woman stared angrily out from beneath a black burqa. It was an image of a Switzerland that had been taken over by Islam. Minarets are “symbols of power” of a foreign religion, argued politician Ulrich Schlüer, who belongs to the SVP’s right wing. The ban, he said, represents a clear statement against their spread.

The debate was largely divorced from the reality of Switzerland. Although around 22 percent of the population is of foreign origin, the country has so far had relatively few problems with its roughly 400,000 Muslims. Most of them are liberally minded Bosnians, Kosovo Albanians and Turks and their approximately 160 mosques are practically invisible. Burqas are seldom seen on Swiss streets and there have never been serious calls for the introduction of Sharia law.

The decision, therefore, does not reflect real problems in Switzerland, but rather a general feeling of unease toward Islam. The issue revolves around a deep-seated fear that society’s values could be in danger.

However it is conceivable that the ongoing conflict with the Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi could also have played a small role. Gadhafi is currently holding two Swiss citizens hostage in retaliation for the arrest of one of his sons in Geneva. But the crucial element was probably a fundamental need to clarify once and for all who has the final say in Switzerland.

Part 2: A Violation of Human Rights

The vote will undoubtedly change the image of Switzerland abroad. The country likes to present itself as a neutral guardian of human rights. It is the country where the Red Cross was established and the Geneva Convention was passed. But now the supposed model democracy has violated the human right of freedom of religion and has discriminated against a group solely on the basis of their religion.

The ban will have serious consequences. It will not eliminate immigration-related problems in Switzerland, but it will produce major problems for Switzerland in its international relations. The Swiss banks and the Swiss economy, which have close ties with economies around the world, including in the Arab world, will suffer as a result. There may also be damage to the tourism industry.

The ban will damage Switzerland’s credibility as a mediator in the eyes of Muslim countries, whether it be as a diplomatic representative of the US in Iran or in the conflict between Armenia and Turkey. And finally it will cause massive damage to the relationship between the Swiss and the Muslims living in the country, promoting exactly that isolation from the rest of society which the initiative was supposedly intended to address.

Negative Publicity

The problems for Switzerland don’t end there. The last year has been a difficult one for the country as economic superpowers blasted Bern for protecting tax dodgers, the result being a significant retreat from the country’s almost mythical banking secrecy rules. In addition, Switzerland’s largest bank, UBS, almost fell victim to the financial crisis and was further damaged by allegations of illegal activities. Even the arrest of star director Roman Polanski in Zurich generated the kind of publicity many in Switzerland would rather avoid. The fact that Swiss citizens are now discriminating against a religion in a manner that violates human rights will further damage the country’s reputation.

Still, it is likely that minarets will continue to be built in Switzerland. The European Court of Human Rights is sure to take on the case, with most legal experts seeing a violation of freedom of religion and a clear-cut case of discrimination. Nevertheless, the damage has been done.

Europe-Wide Concern

Concern about growing numbers of Muslims and the visibility of Islam isn’t, of course, just limited to Switzerland. Both Cologne and Copenhagen have seen minaret debates of their own, the burqa is an issue in France and anti-Muslim politicians have had great success in Holland. So far, centrist politicians across the continent have failed to find an adequate response to the growing concern.

As such, it would be inaccurate to explain away the Swiss referendum results by merely pointing to xenophobia in the country. It is also an expression of the failures of the liberal political elite to adequately address the issue and to find solutions to the real and perceived problems with Muslim immigrants.

It is an issue that clearly concerns a large portion of the Swiss population; it would be a major misstep to allow right-wing populists to control the debate. Otherwise, extreme measures, like bans on minarets, can be expected to increase — in Switzerland and elsewhere in Europe.

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



Switzerland: Minarets; Muslim Brothers, Human Rights Denied

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 30 — Prohibiting the construction of minarets in Switzerland goes against all international customs, human rights, and freedom of religion. The statement was made to ANSA by Mehdi Akef, the supreme guide of the Muslim Brothers, who commented on the result of yesterdays Swiss referendum. He emphasised that All Europeans do not want Islams rebirth and growth. But Islam exists everywhere in Europe and in the world”. Mehdi Akef ought to be at the end of his mandate, but in recent days it was announced that the elections scheduled for the beginning of 2010 may well be postponed to the end of the year. in an article published yesterday by the paper Asharq al Awssat, the groups spokesperson Mohammed Habib stated that in any event his successor will be Egyptian. Circles within the Muslim Brothers (a radical movement established in 1928 in Egypt) were speculating on the potential candidature of exponents from other countries. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Minaret Ban Hits the Swiss Headlines

Sunday’s clear decision by Swiss voters to ban further construction of minarets in the country has sent shockwaves around Switzerland and elsewhere.

In Switzerland, there seems to be a general concern in the media that the vote (57.5 per cent in favour of the ban) could lead to reprisals from Muslims.

The Fribourg newspaper La Liberté says Switzerland might have to pay for a “democratic luxury”.

“At a time when there are so many other challenges, including the economic crisis, the conflict with Libya and also the disappearance of banking secrecy, let’s hope the price to pay will not be exorbitant.”

The Corriere del Ticino also cites Libya, saying that fear of Islamic fundamentalism had added fuel to the fire.

“Over the last few months the Swiss have also felt the arrogance of a Muslim tyrant like Gaddafi who keeps two of our citizens as hostages and has called for Switzerland to be eliminated from the world map.”

The Tribune de Genève echoes many other newspaper opinions by arguing that the vote was a “yes” related to fear of Islam. Geneva was one of only four of the 26 Swiss cantons to vote against the initiative of the right. The three others were Vaud, Basel City and Neuchätel.

The Basler Zeitung, among others, makes the point that the vote was not about the construction of minarets in Switzerland.

“Gut feelings”

“This weekend gut feelings decided [the result]: these include resentment over the lack of willingness to integrate by some migrants, the widespread fear of the spread of foreign cultures and the fear that the Swiss Christian culture could be under threat.”

The mass-circulation Blick newspaper of Zurich comments that the vote was a “big slap in the face” for the government and most political parties that had opposed the ban.

It asks whether there will now be a big debate in the country about Islam. Blick sums it up this way: “Clear vote, unclear consequences”.

One of its commentators notes that Swiss exporters will now have to beware, explaining that they exported goods worth SFr14.5 billion ($14.49 billion) last year to Muslim countries, seven per cent of total exports.

“After the ‘yes’ vote to the minaret initiative, there is now a fear of boycotts.”

Le Temps of Geneva does not mince its words. It comments that the future will decide if the up-till-now peaceful relations between Swiss and Muslims will deteriorate after “this brutal sign of hostility”.

“The Muslims of Switzerland do not deserve the injustice of this sanction brought on by fear, fantasies and ignorance.

“ Our diplomats will have their work cut out. “

Neue Zürcher Zeitung “Not against mosques”

“But let’s keep in mind that the Swiss voted against minarets and not against mosques.”

L’Express of Neuchâtel was much harsher in its criticism.

Its headline read: “A vote against Islam”. It accused the Swiss of showing irrationality and intolerance.

“Yesterday’s vote ended with the most xenophobic result in several decades… a xenophobia based on fear… It’s a fear that may appear unfounded when you realise that the vast majority of Muslims are perfectly integrated into our country.”

Le Matin of Lausanne said the weekend vote had shown that for many people, Islam could be summed up by “extremists with beards, women wearing a burka and imams calling on the faithful to wage a holy war”.

The Journal du Jura has a headline on its editorial that reads: “An own goal of fear” and criticises the confusion that reigns about the Muslim population of Switzerland and the “religious fundamentalism which is affecting the world”.

Zurich’s Neue Zürcher Zeitung explained that public discussion in Switzerland had gone as far as calling the fears over minarets a “clash of cultures”. Debate was a question of the “advance of Islam” and was mainly against “Islamists prepared to use violence”.

It added: “Our diplomats will have their work cut out.”

Swiss Roman Catholic theologian Hans Küng told the (Bern) Bund newspaper of his concerns, arguing the decision would have a high cost for Switzerland.

The 81-year-old said the good integration of Muslims in Switzerland was now in danger.

“As a Swiss abroad I was always proud of my country. The latest catastrophic developments for its image — for example banking secrecy — now culminate in this incomprehensible acceptance of an initiative, which not only goes against religious freedom, but also against tolerance that is so prized in Switzerland.”

Robert Brookes, swissinfo.ch

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



The Swiss Minaret Result Explains Why They’ll Never Allow Democracy in Britain

By Ed West

So the Swiss decided that four minarets is quite enough for one European country, and have voted for a ban, leading to threatening headlines around the world, such as “Vote shows hatred of Muslims” (according to the Indonesians), “Swiss brace for minaret backlash” and “Swiss ban on minarets fuels fear of reprisals”.

No doubt angry mobs from Cairo to Karachi will be furiously putting together little square red flags with white crosses for their “spontaneous” displays of anger and grievance, and no doubt the Islamic world’s leaders will call for an immediate boycott of all Swiss goods, except of course the banks, which are vital and necessary in their campaign against the Zionists.

The Swiss will naturally receive total support from their fellow Europeans, just as the publishers of small Scandinavian newspapers did almost four years ago when they dared to provoke the Islamic world. More than one newspaper has warned that Switzerland risked becoming a “pariah” in Europe, and I don’t doubt it — at least among the elites, who have expressed shock at the vote.

But this result is not that shocking to politicians who bothered to listen to the people. Luckily in Britain, where there is very little actual democracy, they don’t have to. Were Britain an actual democracy in the Swiss sense, we would not be in the EU, for the simple reason that after 1992 we would have had a referendum on membership and we would have voted no. In fact on every single issue under the sun the public are more conservative than the elite.

For example, the reason he United States has capital punishment and Europe doesn’t is not because Europeans are soft, hand-wringing lefties who all have sociology degrees, but because Europe is less democratic. In every opinion poll, the majority of British people have expressed support for capital punishment; even a majority of the Dutch, who we consider the most liberal and decadent people on earth, favour it.

Were Britain an actual democracy we would also still have corporal punishment in schools, Prince Charles would be in charge of the country’s architecture (while Lord Rogers would still be designing loft conversions), and the country would be as diverse as a golf club in the Hebrides. For proof of this I look no further than Roy Hattersley, who recently wrote in the Guardian:

“For most of my 33 years in Westminster, I was able to resist Sparkbrook’s demands about the great issues of national policy — otherwise, my first decade would have been spent opposing all Commonwealth immigration and my last calling for withdrawal from the European Union.”

My colleague Daniel Hannan argues that the Swiss ban was wrong but that his plans for direct democracy are still the way forward. That may be true enough, but I suspect the vote will remind the liberal elite why they think the masses are revolting.

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



UK: Dutch Mother Posed as Penniless Somalian Immigrant to Claim £70,000 Benefits

A mother who claimed asylum under a bogus identity in order to conduct a £70,000 benefits fraud has been told she would have been sent to prison if it weren’t for her five children.

Leyla Yusuf posed as a penniless Somali immigrant who needed state help to raise her and her family, but in reality she was a Dutch national with a comfortable lifestyle including property in Dubai.

The 31-year-old put in an asylum claim under the false name Leyla Hassan and was given a national insurance number enabling her to make claims for child and housing benefit, council tax help, income support, tax credits and community care grants.

Despite the fact that her alter ego had her real year of birth, phone numbers, and some children with the same names, the audacious fraud went undetected for seven years.

Yusuf was only rumbled when suspicious investigators called her in for an appointment — and fixed a second interview up for ‘Leyla Hassan’ on the same day.

She turned up for both and was arrested and charged with committing £70,000 worth of benefit fraud.

Yesterday, however, she was back at her terraced house in Manchester with her taxi driver husband after a judge spared her a prison sentence for the sake of her children.

Yusuf, who is of Somali origin, arrived in Britain on a Dutch passport in 2002, settling here with her husband and two of her children.

A court was told she consulted a British-based Somali lawyer, paying him £1,500, and was told the only way for her to claim benefits here was to create a fictitious identity.

So she invented Leyla Hassan, using as an address an empty property a few streets from her home in Moss Side, and put in a claim for asylum.

While it was processed, the couple went on to have two more children, earning around £10,000-a-year in benefits despite the fact that her husband was working.

She was finally trapped earlier this year when fraud investigators arranged appointments for Yusuf and her alter ego.

Yusuf — who now has a fifth child aged just six weeks — admitted falsely claiming £70,000.

A further four counts relating to £30,000 she obtained by lying that she lived apart from her husband were left to lie on file.

Sentencing her at Manchester Crown Court, Judge Anthony Hammond said she had perpetrated a ‘well-executed’ and ‘cynical milking of the system’.

‘You have defrauded this country of over £70,000 by a deliberate and cynical manipulation of the system,’ he told Yusuf.

‘You richly deserve to go to prison and your husband is lucky he’s not in the dock with you.’

But he added: ‘You have five children, the youngest only six weeks of age and the next youngest two years of age.

‘Were I to send you to prison, it’s going to be very difficult for someone to look after the two-year-old, and the youngest would go with you into prison.’

Instead she was given a 12-month sentence, suspended for two years with supervision, plus 300 hours unpaid work after admitting six counts of false accounting and one of failing to declare.

Yusuf has been ordered to repay the money, and investigators from the Department of Work and Pensions may try to recoup it by going after her property in Dubai.

An investigation is also expected to be carried out into her claims that a lawyer advised her to carry out the fraud.

Judge Hammond commented: ‘There are one or two dubious practitioners in that area making an awful lot of money.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: University of East Anglia Launches Investigation Into Leaked Emails

University of East Anglia to launch review into theft and online publication of hundreds of emails sent by scientists in climate research unit

Selected and unverified extracts from the emails have been used by climate change deniers to claim that the scientists colluded to manipulate climate data, causing a storm on deniers’ blogs. The charge is rejected as “despicable” by those involved and as groundless by leading scientific bodies.

With less than two weeks before the crucial UN climate change summit in Copenhagen, climate scientists and campaigners are assessing the damage the incident has caused to the public understanding of global warming. Opinion was split last night over how to deal with the fallout.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



World’s Press Dissect Swiss Minaret Ban

The Swiss vote to ban minarets reflects the fears of many Europeans but has tarnished the country’s reputation, many international commentators believe.

“The irrational fear of Islam has struck once again in Europe,” said the French Libération newspaper in an editorial headed “Absurd”.

“The ban on minarets has cast a sudden pall on the image of a country which is used to the peaceful coexistence of religions,” it commented.

Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung says the Swiss People’s Party — which backed the ban — managed to make a mountain out of a molehill. The paper points out that less than five per cent of the Swiss population are Muslim, and they are mostly well integrated. “Where difficulties with Muslims do exist, they can’t be solved by banning minarets.”

The Times newspaper of London deplores the vote and sees it as a blow against the principles on which European societies are built.

“In the name of defending the principles of a constitutional society against religious intolerance, Swiss voters have adopted intolerance. That is more than a paradox: it is a calumny,” it says.

Reasons

Commentators have various theories as to why the Swiss in particular should have voted this way.

Britain’s Guardian newspaper writes of “an Alpine distrust of outsiders which lapsed into racism”.

Austria’s Kurier explains the vote in part by Switzerland’s ongoing dispute with Libya saying that some voters will have taken out their frustration with Moammar Gaddafi by voting to ban a symbol of the Muslim faith.

Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung describes the vote as one of “anger and frustration”, coming after the bank secrecy affair and the crisis with Libya…

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

Balkans


EU: Schengen Opens to Serbs, Montenegrins and Macedonians

(by Chiara Spegni) (ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, NOVEMBER 30 — As of December 19 Serbs, Montenegrins and Macedonians will feel closer to Europe, in a tangible manner, in their everyday lives. They will be able to travel in the Schengen area (all EU Member States except for Great Britain and Ireland, plus Switzerland, Norway and Iceland) without a visa: a simple biometric passport will suffice. The final approval, which was eagerly expected by Belgrade, Podgorica and Skopje, was decided today by the meeting of Interiors in Brussels. EU Commisioner for enlargement Olli Rehn stated that “this is a great day when the announcement was made in a press conference with Serbian president Boris Tadic and EC vice president Jacques Barrot. Barrot explained that “We are proud of offering the chance, especially to the youth of these countries, of being able to travel this Christmas without having to request a visa”. “This is the beginning of a new era”, said Tadic, who believes that today “represents a key moment ahead of the full integration of the entire region into the EU. Not only is it a great day for Serb citizens, but for all those of former Yugoslavia, including the people of Kosovo, who will be soon able to benefit from the new visa conditions”. In being the first to meet the objective in 2009, Serbia, Macedonia and Montenegro will act as forerunners for other countries in the western Balkans, especially Bosnia and Albania, who should meet the necessary requisites by the end of 2010. Of course, allowing Serb citizens to travel freely in Europe does not imply admitting Belgrade to the group of 27, but Tadic believes that the elimination of visas represents a key moment in this direction, aside from a tangible result for the government: todays decision was not a gift, but the result of hard work carried out in a short time, considering that the road map started in 2008”. “There is no better way of promoting European values in our region than that of allowing free access to Europe to our youth” is what ANSAmed was told by Slavica Milacic, Montenegros ambassador to the EU, who also sees the elimination of visas as an incentive for entrepreneurs to strengthen trade with Europe. But above all Milacic sees todays events as a tangible sign of the European outlook and a credible EU policy of enlargement, which keeps our governments under check and committed compared to a general agenda of reform. Barrot stated that In this sense, the elimination of visas represents an encouraging signal, but we need to keep pressing to meet the conditions for admittance in terms of the judicial, the respect of European values, and human rights. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Kosovo: UN Court Begins to Examine Independence Declaration

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS — The International Justice Court, which regulates controversies between nations for the UN, began this morning to examine at the Hague the legality of Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia. Before the UN court, until December 11, Serbia, Kosovo and 29 nations will appear. The court’s ruling will arrive in coming months. Kosovo proclaimed independence on February 17 2008. Until today, 63 countries have recognised its independence as a former Serbian province with a population that is for the most part Albanian. In the EU, 22 of 27 nations have recognised the scission. Serbia has always been opposed to Kosovo’s move, considering it against international law and for this reason opened a case before the international Justice Court.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Stock Exchange, Dubai Sends Local Market Down

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 30 — Local stocks in Cairo suffered early today a severe blow, with an almost 7% decline, on the first trading session of the week after a long four-day Idul Adha (Bairan) feast holiday due to a debt crisis in Dubai. Worried about the potential aftermath from about USD 80 billion debt default to world banks, and scant information about the implications, prompted a widespread sale of stocks particularly by Foreign and other Arab investors, MENA reports. The confusion took the shares of leading companies down, including the two market moving stocks Orascom Telecom (OT) and Orascom Construction Industries (OCI). OCI, Egypt’s biggest maker of nitrogen fertilizers and top listed builder, mosedived by 10.03 peer cent to trade at LE 220.50. OT, the largest Arab mobile operator by subscribers, also plummeted by 6.63 per cent to sell at LE 25.92. Dubai stock market was also a leading victim to slump by seven per cent early Monday amidst thin trading. Shortly before Monday’s close down, the market kept its declining curve on Arab and foreign investors unabated sales. EGX 30 index registered a 6.84 per cent decline or by an average of 436.16 points at 5940.16 points. Meantime, a statement by Orascom Telecom Holding said that its net profits in the last nine months (January to September) dropped 66.81 per cent or by LE 7.747 billion to LE 3.847 billion. The statement relayed to the Egyptian stock market authority said this compares to LE 11.594 billion in net profits in the same period last year. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt Kills Migrant Trying to Slip Across Israel Border

An African migrant has been shot and killed by Egyptian police as he tried to illegally cross into Israel, an Egyptian security official has said.

Border police said the man, described as in his twenties and of unknown sub-Saharan origin, ignored orders to stop.

At least 17 migrants have been killed at the Egypt-Israel border in 2009.

Human rights activists have previously criticized Egypt for the practice, but Egyptian police claim they are trying to control people trafficking.

In September there was widespread condemnation from rights groups when a party of four sub-Saharan migrants were shot at the porous, desert border, which is 250 km (155 miles) long.

Eritrea is the most common country of origin for people trying to cross from Egypt to Israel, followed by Ethiopia and Sudan.

Analysts say the number of migrants from the Horn of Africa attempting the journey has increased in recent months because other routes, such as through Libya to Europe, have become more difficult.

‘No threat’

The Sinai border is on one of the main routes for African migrants and refugees seeking work or asylum in Israel.

Egypt has come under pressure from Israeli authorities to clamp down on the traffic.

More than 13,000 people have managed to make the journey since 2006.

Human Rights Watch has criticised Israel for violating the rights of some refugees who arrive in the country and has denounced the forcible return of dozens of them to Egypt.

Egypt maintains that its tactics on the border are part of its strategy to counter terrorism and smuggling, but a Human Rights Watch report in 2008 said there was no suggestion migrants who had been shot posed any threat to border guards.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Libya Sentences Swiss Men to Jail Amid Gaddafi Son Row

Libya has sentenced two Swiss businessmen to 16 months in jail amid a row over the arrest last year of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s son in Geneva.

Max Goeldi and Rachid Hamdani, detained since July 2008, were convicted of immigration offences.

Libya has said their trial and the Swiss “aggression” against Col Gaddafi’s son Hannibal are not linked.

Hannibal Gaddafi and his wife were briefly held in Geneva in 2008 over allegations of abusing two servants.

The charges were later dropped, but the case angered Tripoli.

Their arrest sparked retaliatory measures from Libya, including cancelling oil supplies, withdrawing billions of dollars from Swiss banks, refusing visas to Swiss citizens and recalling some of its diplomats.

Libyan officials said the Swiss businessmen were also fined 2,000 dinars ($1,700; £1,000) each, but had the right to appeal.

It is believed they will be tried for tax evasion and failure to comply with business laws later in the month.

The case has sparked outrage in Switzerland, and the government has been criticised for its handling of the affair.

Swiss President Hans-Rudolf Merz visited Tripoli in August and issued a public apology for the arrest of Hannibal Gaddafi.

But he failed to secure the return of Hamdani, a construction company employee, and Goeldi, Libyan operations manager of engineering firm ABB.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Terrorism: Algeria, Algerian Guantanamo Prisoner Sentenced

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, NOVEMBER 30 — An Algerian held in Guantanamo, from where he refuses to be extradited to his home country, has been sentenced in his absence by the Algiers Court to 20 years in prison for “belonging to a terrorist group abroad”. Reports were from the APS press agency, which noted that Ahmed Belbacha had been arrested in Pakistan and transferred to Guantanamo in 2002. Despite the fact that US authorities had decided to release him in 2007, the prisoner refused to be extradited to Algeria and “preferred to stay in Guantanamo”, continued the source within providing any further details. According to some observers, the 37-year-old Belbacha refused to go back to his home country out of the fear that he would be tortured. After leaving Algeria in the 1990s, he is thought to have gone to Afghanistan before being arrested in Pakistan in December 2001. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Kairouan, 40 People Stabbed on Night of Eid El Idha

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, NOVEMBER 30 — Around forty people suffering from knife injuries were treated at Kairouan’s hospital last Friday night (festival of Eid El Idha). The news appears in the French-language Tunis weekly Hebdo, which states that the injuries did not result from fights but were the outcome of unprovoked attacks. The worst case, involving a cut off nose and lip, was transferred to Sousse Hospital. The trigger of this episode of gratuitous violence may, as in previous cases, have been the consumption of alcohol. But the weekly paper makes no mention of this. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


EU ‘Ready to Recognise East Jerusalem as Palestinian Capital’

Jerusalem, 1 Dec. (AKI) — A document obtained by an Israeli newspaper claims that European Union foreign ministers will next week call for the division of Jerusalem to be capitals of both Israel and the future Palestinian state.

According to a report published on Tuesday in the daily Haaretz, a draft document authored by Sweden — which currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency — implies a recognition of the Palestinian state, even if declared unilaterally.

Israel, however, is reportedly waging a diplomatic battle to prevent the EU from issuing such a statement, due to take place on 7 December during a two-day meeting in Brussels on the so-called peace process between Israel and the Palestinians.

“The goal is an independent, democratic, contiguous and viable state of Palestine, comprising the West Bank and Gaza and with East Jerusalem as its capital,” the document says, adding that the EU Council “has never recognised the annexation of East Jerusalem.

“If there is to be a genuine peace, a way must be found to resolve the status of Jerusalem as capital of two states. The Council calls for the reopening of Palestinian institutions in Jerusalem in accordance with the road map. It also calls on the Israeli government to cease all discriminatory treatment of Palestinians in East Jerusalem.”

In regard to borders, the document says that the EU will not accept any territory annexations or border changes following the 1967 Six-Day war, unless the Palestinian Authority agreed.

In October, United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon stated that Jerusalem must be the capital of two states — Israel and Palestine — with arrangements for the holy sites acceptable to all, if peace in the Middle East is to be achieved.

East Jerusalem is also where most of the holy sites for Muslims, Jews and Christians are located including the Western or Wailing Wall and Temple Mount, as well as the Al-Aqsa mosque.

On 17 November, Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt said that conditions in the Palestinian territories “were not there yet” to accept a unilateral declaration of an independent state put forth by top Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat and without having found a solution to the conflict with Israel.

Bildt’s comments came a day after US state department spokesman Ian Kelly echoed similar concerns.

The US — Israel’s biggest ally — however, has veto power in the UN Security Council, and could in theory exercise it to prevent the unilateral declaration.

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



Goverment-Settlers Clash Over Settlements

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, NOVEMBER 30 — The government of Israeli PM Benyamin Netanyahu and the representatives of settlers who live in Jewish settlements in the West Bank appear today to be on the verge of clashing, which could also end up in open demonstrations of rebellion against the authority of the state. Furious over the PMs decision to freeze all new housing constructions in the settlements for the next 10 months in order to bring the Palestinians back to the negotiating table for peace, the representatives of settlers had an emergency meeting today. At the end of the meeting, they condemned the Governments illegitimate, immoral, anti-Zionist and inhuman decision. They also decided not to collaborate with the inspectors sent by the authorities to the area with the aim of monitoring whether the government order is being respected and they even threatened to close the gates to the settlements. An appeal against the government was also presented to the High Court of Justice so that it invalidates the governments decision to stop the constructions. In a gesture of open challenge to the government, the head of the regional council of the settlements in the north of the West Bank, Gershon Messica, ostentatiously ripped up the order for the freeze of all constructions that he had just been handed by a government official in front of a television camera. Yishai Hollander, spokesman of the settlements council, said that there will be a number of ceremonies of the next few days for the laying of foundation stones of new quarters in many settlements. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Import of Arab-Language Books to be Eased

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, NOVEMBER 30 — For those Israelis whose native toungue is Arabic (one in five) new literary horizons are now being opened with the final touches being put to a law which would liberalise importation of Arab-language books, even if they have been printed in “countries hostile” to the Israeli state. In the past, even harmless titles, like “Pinocchio” or the Harry Potter saga, or translations into Arabic of the works of William Shakespeare and Moliere, were held up on their entry into Israel because they had been “printed in hostile states”, including Lebanon and Syria. These restrictions did not exist for books printed in countries that held diplomatic relations with Israel, such as Egypt and Jordan, whose output of printed matter is, however, smaller. The new legislation will look not so much at the country of origin as at the content of the book. Israel’s secret services will nonetheless be able to halt the import of Arab books or magazines which express hatred towards Israel, which negate the Holocaust, or which promote the organisation of terrorist attacks. “This is an important law,” said Labour MP and former education minister, Yuli Tamir, “which will bring about an enrichment of the cultural heritage of all of Israel’s inhabitants, each of whom has the full right to read books in their native tongue”. According to press reports, the new law will boost support for the government. It is still unclear when it will come before Parliament.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Dubai: Central Bank Offers Liquidity, Markets in Spotlight

(ANSAmed) — ROME, NOVEMBER 30 — After holding its breath for the past two days, the international financial world is today seeing the reopening of markets after the financial difficulties announced by Dubai World which jolted stock exchanges on Thursday, though the following day authorities and banks acted to reduce the domino effect. Today the Dubai stock exchange reopens, and the intentions and asset conditions of the institutes and enterprises working in the Gulf exposed to the public holding will be known. Yesterday the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) took action to shore up banks operating on its territory, ordering liquidity to cushion the potential impact on the stocks of the credit institutes most-exposed to Dubai World’s request for debt restructuring on the reopening of regional stock exchanges. The announcement last Wednesday of a request for a debt moratorium came just before the Islamic holiday Eid Al-Adha, during which the stock exchanges of oil-rich Gulf countries were closed. On Saturday, Dubai’s neighbouring Gulf country and one of the largest oil exporters in the world — as well as capital of the United Arab Emirates — Abu Dhabi came to its rescue, though only with limited measures. It announced that it would help out the nearby, indebted emirate of Dubai, but only on a case by case basis and not underwriting all the debt of the state-held Dubai World. Meanwhile, technical experts at Deloitte, Rotshschild and Alix Partners are attempting to restructure Dubai World’s debt, and there will be a number of options to look into. The holding could pay off by December 14 the 3.52-billion dollar ‘sukuk’ (Islamic bond) issued by Nakheel, the real estate operator famous for having built the palm-shaped islands, and set other deadlines for the rest of the debt. Another solution may be to pay back 80% of the debt both to bond holders and to banks. Otherwise Dubai World could go forward with its plan to ask for the previously announced debt moratorium with a freeze on payments until 30 May 2010. In the worst case scenario, reports The National, Dubai World could bring in asset liquidation in response to possible legal actions on the part of its creditors.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU-Jordan: Science and Technology Agreement Signed

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, NOV 30 — The European Union signed today a science and technology (S&T) cooperation agreement with Jordan. This agreement will help structure and enhance S&T cooperation in areas of common interest such as energy and sustainable development where joint research efforts could bring common solutions and mutual benefits. The accord opens a new chapter of scientific cooperation between the EU and Jordan, an important partner in the european neighbourhood policy. “The signature of an S&T cooperation agreement signed Janez Potocnik, European commissioner for Science and Research — is the recognition of our mutual interest in bringing together our scientific capacities to address the great challenges we face today. Under the agreement, a joint EU-Jordan Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation will be created and it will help identify common research priorities and put in place the necessary tools for cooperation (e.g reciprocal participation in research programmes, exchange of researchers). Jordan became the fifth Mediterranean Partner Country to sign an S&T Cooperation Agreement with the EU (the other four being Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco and Israel). (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran Warns it Will Take ‘Serious’ Action Against Seized British Sailors if it Proves They Had ‘Evil Intentions’

Iran is prepared to take ‘serious’ measures against five British sailors it is holding hostage if it can prove they had ‘evil intentions’, an aide to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said today.

The president’s head of staff spoke as British diplomats scrambled to free the five sailors and prevent a propaganda coup.

The civilian crew were snatched six days ago after ‘inadvertently’ straying into Iranian waters in the Persian Gulf as they sailed their yacht from Bahrain to Dubai for the start of an international race.

[…]

Last night 21-year-old Mr Porter’s mother Beverley said her husband Charles had spoken to their son on his mobile phone.

She said the sailors had strayed into Iranian waters by only 500 yards, but were now being held somewhere off Iran.

[…]

Her 48-year-old husband added: ‘From what we understand, there was an oil field on their charts — which is a restricted area — so they chose to go one side of it.

‘In doing so they strayed too close to a small island called Sirri. I assume that is when they were picked up. They’re miffed that they are being cooped up and a race was going on.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Iran’s New Anti-Israel Ally: French Comedian Dieudonne

(IsraelNN.com) French comic-politician Dieudonne, who has been convicted more than once for anti-Semitic speech, has teamed up with Iran, which is funding his production of a new anti-Israel comedy. Dieudonne recently visited Iran and met with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Deputy Culture Minister for Cinematic Affairs.

“We received a substantial budget allowing us to make movies on par with Hollywood, which serves as the long arm of Zionist culture,” he told the Tehran Times.

Dieudonne told his hosts, “It is forbidden to talk about the Holocaust in France [sic], but I have arranged the comedy in such a way that it ridicules the issue of the Holocaust. Comedy is an influential tool and now that we cannot speak directly about it, this is the best approach to use. Today, there are only a few countries like Iran that are open to joint productions on these types of issues.”

He said that in his meeting with Ahmadinejad, “We also discussed that the world is dominated by imperialism and that one cannot make use of art to depict this. We also discussed the censorship conducted by the Zionist lobby in Europe and their influence on the media.”

He charged that the “Zionist lobby” has caused the cancellation of 200 performances he had scheduled. “To get around this, I bought a big bus in which I can travel to different districts and then perform my plays when I get there.”

Dieudonne, who previously ran for the European Parliament as head of an anti-Zionist party, was fined earlier this year after he invited a convicted Holocaust denier to receive an award from someone dressed as a Nazi concentration camp victim.

French judges also fined him two years ago for comparing Jews to “slave-traders.”

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]



Swiss Ban on Minarets Condemned in the Muslim World, But Many Voices Call for Moderation

Vote result is seen as an expression of Islamophobia. The grand mufti of Egypt calls it an “insult” to Muslims around the world. More voices warn against violent reactions, noting that the Swiss government as well as Christian and Jewish groups are opposed to the ban.

Beirut (AsiaNews) — The Muslim world slammed the vote in Switzerland in favour a ban on minarets on Swiss soil (pictured: protest demonstration). For Muslims, the result is case of Islamophobia. However, some voiced urge moderation, especially since the Swiss government, the country’s Catholic Bishops’ Conference and groups like Amnesty International have come out against the ban.

“The most painful for us is not the minaret ban, but the symbol sent by this vote. Muslims do not feel accepted as a religious community,” said Farhad Afshar, who heads the Coordination of Islamic Organisations in Switzerland.

Elsewhere in the Muslim world, reactions are even stronger. For the grand mufti of Egypt, the result is an “insult” to Muslims around the world. “This proposal [. . .] is not considered just an attack on freedom of beliefs, but also an attempt to insult the feelings of the Muslim community in and outside Switzerland,” Gomaa said.

Still, many have called for calm. Maskuri Abdillah, the head of Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia’s largest Muslim group, spoke about “hatred” and “intolerance”. The vote for him is a sign of the “hatred of Swiss people against Muslim communities. They don’t want to see a Muslim presence in their country and this intense dislike has made them intolerant.” Still, he urged Muslims in his country “to show them tolerance and freedom of religion”.

Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, secretary general of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, said he was confident that “the people of Switzerland will reach the best consensus and will take the best decision,” and overturn the ban.

At the level of media, we find a variety of responses. Al Jazeera spoke of a “shocking result”. Quoting an analyst, the satellite TV said, “It was because people are worried about the growth of Islam in Europe.”

For the Tehran Times, it is a case of rising “Islamophobia in Europe and violation of religious freedom and convention commitments.

An Iranian TV channel said that everyone condemned the Swiss Islamophobic vote, noting that the Swiss government slammed the ban.

Similarly, Lebanon’s Nahar newspaper as well as Hizbollah’s al Manar TV channel noted that Christians also expressed dismay over the outcome, stressing that it was “inadmissible that the religious minority” is now “to subject to unequal treatment.” The Kuwait Times agrees.

Nahar also reported that religious groups, including Christians, Jews and Muslims, have come out in a rare show of unity against the right-wing proposal. (PD)

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



Turkey’s Erdogan Says Minaret Ban is Sign of Fascism

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has joined a chorus of international criticism of Switzerland’s ban on minarets, saying it refelects an increasingly racist and fascist stance in Europe. The Swiss foreign minister said the vote may pose a threat to the country’s security.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Switzerland’s vote to ban the construction of minarets was a “sign of an increasing racist and fascist stance in Europe,” Turkish television Channel 7 reported on Tuesday. Islamophobia was a “crime against humanity,” just like anti-Semitism, Erdogan said.

Turkish President Abdullah Gül also criticized the Swiss referendum in which 57.5 percent of voters had backed an initiative brought by the conservative Swiss People’s Party and a smaller right-wing party which argued that minarets symbolize a quest for Islamic power. Gül said the vote was a “disgrace” for the people of Switzerland and showed how far Islamophobia had advanced in the Western world.

The Turkish foreign ministry said the more than 100,000 Turkish immigrants living in Switzerland were worried about the decision which “runs counter to human values and basic freedoms.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Pakistan: More Than 60 Militants Killed in Tribal Region

Islamabad, 30 Nov. (AKI/DAWN) — Pakistan’s security forces have killed at least 60 militants and arrested 87 others, including Uzbeks and Afghans, during operations in the Khyber tribal region near the border of Afghanistan.

Commandant Brigadier Fayyaz told a media conference on Monday that security forces had cleared the area of militants.

Security forces also recovered a huge cache of arms and ammunition.

They also destroyed 27 vehicles, ten hideouts and five tunnels, he said.

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

Far East


China: Solar Toys

Meanwhile, China is currently building the world’s largest solar array, and the green media is grandly crowing that China has seen the light and is joining the green-energy revolution.

China is building hundreds of new coal-fired power plants and dozens of nuclear-power plants — and has 132 nuclear plants in various stages of planning and construction. “Green” energy makes up about 1 percent of China’s new energy installation. This 1 percent is obviously being built for political advertising purposes. China also plans to sell lots of solar panels to the United States. Energy produced by China’s coal and nuclear industries will be stored in solar panels, shipped to the United States and gradually released over the next 50 years. U.S. capital paid for the panels will build nuclear and coal-fired plants in China.

The entire U.S. energy trade deficit could be reversed and electricity prices lowered fivefold by the construction of 50 nuclear-power stations with 10 reactors each for a private capital cost of between $1 trillion and $2 trillion. In a free market, this would be accomplished by a combination of new nuclear and hydrocarbon power plants. Under current U.S. government impediments, this will never be done.

With industry restricted to “green” methods, such as solar panels, and with hydrocarbon energy stifled by cap-and-trade, reversing the energy trade deficit would cost $20 trillion. This is beyond the resources of our currently decapitalized, deindustrialized nation.

For 30 years, U.S. energy production has gradually been restricted by U.S. government actions. Now, with the new Marxists and socialists in charge in Washington, this energy restriction has been markedly increased. Without energy at competitive prices, our country has a very dim future.

If these political processes are allowed to continue, before long there will not be sufficient capital in the United States to correct the problem. If, after that, we manage to change course and build those 50 nuclear power stations, the capital will come from abroad — and the American people will be enslaved to foreign owners.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Philippines: Protesters Demand Justice for Massacre Victims

Manila, 30 Nov. (AKI) — Hundreds of journalists and human rights activists protested near the presidential palace in the Philippines’ capital, Manila, on Monday, seeking justice for colleagues who were among the 57 victims of a massacre in the south last week.

“We call for justice,” Benny Antiporda, head of the National Press Club, said in a statement.

“The whole world has shown its disgust over what happened. The media workers killed in the massacre were not armed.”

The National Union of Journalists said 59 journalists had been killed in the Philippines since 2001, without taking account of the 30 who were among last week’s victims murdered in the southern province of Maguindanao.

Prosecutors have charged Andal Ampatuan Jr, a local mayor and member of a powerful political clan, with seven counts of murder and justice officials said they expected to file more charges in relation to the massacre.

Meanwhile, local media reported that police and military operatives on Monday raided the suspected storage area of high-powered firearms that could have been used to kill the victims of the massacre.

According to GMA News’ security forces seized high-powered guns, ammunition, a grenade, and military paraphernalia from a safe house belonging to a certain Inspector Saudi Mokamad in Cotabato City.

As investigations were continuing into the killings, president Gloria Arroyo, a key political ally of the Ampatuans, last week gave the interior secretary permission to suspend all local officials in the province of Maguindanao who may have a role in the crime.

Ampatuan Jr has denied any involvement in the killings, calling such accusations “baseless”.

On Friday, the justice department moved to stop eight other members of the Ampatuan family from leaving the country as they were also placed under investigation.

The government was also planning to suspend and remove them from positions of power in the province to pave way for a fair inquiry.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Somali Pirates Capture Huge Tanker Taking Oil to US

Somali pirates have captured a tanker carrying oil to the US, officials say.

The Greek-owned Maran Centaurus was about 1,300km (800 miles) off Somalia when it was hijacked on Sunday, said the EU Naval task force (Navfor).

The ship was full of oil and is believed to be one of the largest yet seized by Somali pirates. There are 28 crew members on board.

Pirate attacks have been common off the Somali coast and international navies have been deployed to counter them.

A spokesman for the Greek coastguard told Reuters news agency that about nine armed pirates attacked the ship close to the Seychelles.

As it was fully laden, it was moving quite slowly — between 11 and 15 knots (20-27km/h) — when attacked, a Navfor spokesman told the BBC.

Reuters reports the Greek defence ministry as saying that a Greek navy frigate which had been involved with the Navfor operation was now shadowing the vessel.

Navfor said the ship, which has a dead weight of some 300,000 tonnes, had been sailing to New Orleans in the US from Jeddah in Saudi Arabia but was now heading towards Somalia.

Its crew is made up of 16 Filipinos, nine Greeks, two Ukrainians and one Romanian.

Maran Tankers Management, which operates the vessel, told Reuters the crew were “well”.

Somalia analyst at the International Crisis Group think-tank Rashid Abdi says the fact that pirates are now operating so far out to sea shows that the intervention of the world’s navies has made little difference to the problem of piracy.

“This incident clearly shows the pirates are becoming more bolder,” he says.

“So I don’t think the solution is in building the naval deployment there, or increasing the naval deployment. The problem is actually in dealing with the governance crisis which feeds the problem of piracy.

           — Hat tip: Sean O’Brian [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Italy: Frattini, Safeguard Our Identity and Integrate

(ANSAmed) — ROME, NOVEMBER 30 — “The stronger we will be in defending and safeguarding the roots of our identity, the more we will be able to integrate the identity of others”. Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini made this statement while commenting the issue of immigrants’ rights. Speaking to the State-Regions Conference held today in Villa Madama, the foreign minister specified his thoughts on citizenship for foreigners living in Italy. Frattini emphasised that citizenship for non-Italians must be the end of a path made of respect for rules, and of learning the language. A path rich and complex, but which must not be taken for granted as an acquired right”. According to the foreign minister, the main points of the file on immigration are the respect of the laws, legality, reception and integration”, all of which “without losing our identity”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Climate-Cult Con is Hard to ‘Bear’

When did global warming turn into a forced religion?

My daughter came home from school recently with a spring in her step and a song on her lips. With no foreshadowing — or time to call an exorcist — out came this chilling refrain:

“ . . . You can hear the warning — GLOBAL WARMING . . . “

By the time her father and I removed our jaws from the floor, we had learned that:

A) All the kids had been coerced into singing this catchy ditty, which we called “The Warming Song,” at a concert for parents.

B) Further song lyrics scolded selfish adults (that would be us) for polluting our planet and causing a warming scourge that would, in no short order, kill all the polar bears and threaten the birds and bees.

C) There was no deprogramming session on the menu. And no arguing allowed.

The international “Climategate” scandal is now moving into its third week. And reaction from folks on the scientific and political left — or is that redundant? — who treat global warming as a cult in which naysayers must be crushed has been depressing:

Total denial.

The scandal began when someone hacked into the server at the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, England, and uncovered a cache of messages between leading warming gurus. These e-mails revealed guys deeply frustrated by planetary temperatures that, stubbornly, had refused to rise in some time. Were they afraid of losing their scientific juice? Or their funding?

So, as the e-mails prove, the scientists did something about it. They cooked the books to exaggerate global warming.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Leaked Emails Won’t Harm UN Climate Body, Says Chairman

Rajendra Pachauri says there is ‘virtually no possibility’ of a few scientists biasing IPCC’s advice, after UAE hacking breach

There is “virtually no possibility” of a few scientists biasing the advice given to governments by the UN’s top global warming body, its chair said today.

Rajendra Pachauri defended the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in the wake of apparent suggestions in emails between climate scientists at the University of East Anglia that they had prevented work they did not agree with from being included in the panel’s fourth assessment report, which was published in 2007.

The emails were made public this month after a hacker illegally obtained them from servers at the university.

Pachauri said the large number of contributors and rigorous peer review mechanism adopted by the IPCC meant that any bias would be rapidly uncovered.

“The processes in the IPCC are so robust, so inclusive, that even if an author or two has a particular bias it is completely unlikely that bias will find its way into the IPCC report,” he said.

“Every single comment that an expert reviewer provides has to be answered either by acceptance of the comment, or if it is not accepted, the reasons have to be clearly specified. So I think it is a very transparent, a very comprehensive process which insures that even if someone wants to leave out a piece of peer reviewed literature there is virtually no possibility of that happening.”

[…]

Some commentators, including the former chancellor Nigel Lawson and the environmental campaigner and Guardian writer George Monbiot, have called on Jones to resign but Pachauri said he did not agree. He said an independent inquiry into the emails would achieve little, but there should be a criminal investigation into how the emails came to light.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Maybe His Wings Melted?

It’s hard to blog when you’re on drugs. Amend that: the blogging is easy. Making sense is difficult. With this proviso in mind, let me say I sat down to assemble some prefatory notes on two subjects I’ve been thinking about: Tiger Woods’ unfortunate run-in with his wife was the first topic, and the second was…was…umm…the second one had disappeared into the fog of misfiring neurons.

I looked on Memeorandum; surely someone would be posting on the lost idea and seeing the category would bring the contents of my subject floating up to the top like a message inside an eight ball. Nope. Nada.

Nothing on offer gave off the pheromone warning; there was no sudden ah-ha! “I-was-going-to-post-on-that” feel to any of the stories.

I noticed they were still carrying the Charles Johnson manifesto from the other day. Wasn’t that fish wrap by now? Then I saw one of the lede captions went directly to Jules Crittenden’s post. I like Crittenden’s style. He’s succinct, a witty writer.

Cycling Left


Titling his take on the matter “Charles Johnson Explains The Crazy Hating” was cleverly ambiguous. You’re left wondering who was expending the energy on crazed vitriol. Was it Chazzer slinging mud from his high dudgeon or had one of his numerous victims/enemies decided to go after him? And that is Mr. Crittenden’s intention – to leave you wondering – as Chazzer’s readers are often left when he goes predictably postal over whatever latest outrage has him spittering into the dark.

My favorite snip:
– – – – – – – –

I would have preferred a detailed description of the moment when all that inclusive thoughtful concern hit him like a silver bullet, when the switch flipped on the bright shining light on the road to Damascus, when … enveloped by its warm, mentally balanced, nurturing embrace … he started frothing about the hateful craziness. Also, how the crazy hating on his new side of the aisle fits into his new anti-hate/crazy world view.

Now is that adept or what? Better footwork than Fred Astaire. And notice the nudge about the road to Damascus. Just a sprinkle of Biblical metaphor to get CJ’s juices flowing.

Speaking of metaphors, earlier today the Baron pointed something out about Chaz. I had noted back in 2007, when he first went off the track, that he’d begun using smell metaphors when he was sounding particularly regressed. If you have the time or interest I suppose you could dig through the late 2007 threads when he began expressing disgust by referring to his olfactory nerves. Things smelled bad or good. And now it seemed he was back to his bloodhound tricks.

This example today was an attack on some ad which ran in the paper. CJ complains about the noxious smell emanating from this ad. Originally I’d planned to just use his nose, but if you read the whole passage, you can observe both his deep sense of persecution and how invaded he feels. This is the full quote the Baron sent me:

The racism at the Washington Times (former employer of white supremacist blogger Robert Stacy McCain) is bubbling to the surface for all to smell, like noxious sewer gas. Today they ran the following advertisement, a lunatic Birther ad featuring images of monkeys. This isn’t even “dog whistle” racism. It’s right in your face, poking you in the eye.

This is fascinating. His sense of smell is assaulted, even his eyes are in danger of being “poked”. I tell you, Charles is a walking, talking (and biking) Freudian slip (if you want to read the whole thing, Google is your friend. I don’t link to his site anymore).

Sometimes when I see this Icarus figure lying in the withered grass, staring sightlessly at the stars, I wonder if his fall could have been avoided. At other times I simply don’t give a fig beyond wondering how much farther he has to go before he’s finally finished falling.

I guess that point will be when Memeorandum says, “Charles Who?” “Little Green What?”

Humanitarian Racism

The Oxford historian Avi Shlaim gave a lecture on Israeli history yesterday at the University of Helsinki. Prof. Shlaim is a “New Historian”, and purports to shine a light on a different version of history — i.e., one that just happens to make the state of Israel look bad.

The Israeli ambassador to Finland and Estonia, Avi Granot, was present at the lecture, and took exception to Dr. Shlaim’s view of history.

KGS from Tundra Tabloids was also there last night, and brought along a video recorder. He confronted Prof. Shlaim about the lecturer’s humanitarian racism, defined as: “a bigoted, patronizing attitude exhibited by well-meaning humanitarians, that assumes certain non-western recipients of aid cannot be expected to live up to western ethical or moral standards.”

Here’s a video clip of the exchange between the professor and the blogger:



KGS has several other videos of the lecture, including the portions during which the speaker was confronted by the Israeli ambassador.



Hat tip: Vlad Tepes.

[Post ends here]

Surviving the Coming Crash

The Fjordman Report


The noted blogger Fjordman is filing this report via Gates of Vienna.
For a complete Fjordman blogography, see The Fjordman Files. There is also a multi-index listing here.



RiotAs I have stated my essay The Coming Crash, I think we need to realize that the current ideological order is broken and beyond repair. There will probably some sort of pan-Western economic and social collapse in the not-too-distant future; I fear this is too late to avoid by now. The people who support the ruling paradigm are too powerful, and the paradigm itself contains so many flaws, that it cannot be fixed. It needs to crash. Instead of wasting time and energy on attempting to fix what cannot be fixed we need to prepare as best as we can for the coming crash and hopefully regroup to create a stronger and healthier culture afterward.

White GuiltWe are currently in the middle of the White Guilt Gold Rush. If you are a white Westerner you may not have fully realized this, but I can assure you that the rest of the world knows this. The trick is to keep the white man on the defensive and vaguely guilty at all times so that he can be squeezed for money. The climate quotas for carbon dioxide constitute a thinly disguised form of global Socialism through the UN-sponsored redistribution of wealth.

The recent scientific scandal about fake data regarding man-made global warming is just the tip of the iceberg. There are currently so many different layers of lies from “gender equality” via IQ differences to climate that it is virtually impossible to deal with all of them. Our entire society has essentially become one big lie. Our media, our schools and our political leaders repeat these lies every single day; those daring to question them are immediately ostracized.

EU Skull Dragon


Since the EU has forced through the EU Constitution/Lisbon Treaty and in essence abolished not just popular influence on EU policies but dissolved dozens of nation states, the self-appointed European elites have in effect banned any legal opposition to their rule. It is no longer possible to formally oppose their policies within the regular political channels. Given that the same elites appear hell-bent on running the entire continent into the ground, this leaves the options of rebellion or a structural collapse. I don’t think we will see open rebellion just yet, although this could change if the economy deteriorates further. This means that the most likely way out now is a structural collapse, and I fear that’s exactly what we are going to get.
– – – – – – – –
Didn’t the Obama Administration with international aid “save” the world from a looming financial crisis? Of course they didn’t. The main problem for the USA is that the national debt keeps rising while the national IQ keeps falling. This hasn’t changed one bit in the past year. On the contrary, it is worse now than it was before, and it looks like it will be worse still next year and the year after that. As long as this situation remains unchanged, my bet is that the price of gold will continue to rise as people seek safe harbor from the collapsing US dollar.

Although other industrialized countries have heavy debt loads, too, the case of the United States is especially serious because of its sheer size. Had the USA been a private person he would probably have been declared bankrupt a long time ago. But the United States is not a private person; it is still the world’s largest economy and has the world’s largest armed forces. As writer Takuan Seiyo states in the latest installment of his brilliant From Meccania to Atlantis series: “The strongest, most admired country in the world until just a few years ago is now a cautionary tale of the wages of sin and stupidity told to Chinese schoolchildren.”

I don’t know what the future holds for the USA. It could split apart along ethic and ideological lines in a Second American Civil War, or it could become just another Latin American country along with Canada, in which case all of America will be Latin America.

I could add that I don’t hate Latin America. If we do end up with a series of nasty Multicultural civil wars in Western Europe it is possible that some areas of South America could be better places to live than Birmingham or Marseilles. However, Latin America never has been and probably never will be a major force in world politics. If the United States declines this will shift global power back to Eurasia, where it has been throughout most of human history. China will in all likelihood be a leading player and perhaps the dominant one.

I am increasingly convinced that some of the developments we are witnessing are deliberate and that there is a long-term goal among certain powerful groups of breaking down Western nations to facilitate the creation of a global oligarchy. The lies we are being served are virtually identical in every single Western country. I’ve had discussions about this with my Chinese friend Ohmyrus who thinks this is caused by a structural flaw in our democratic system. I don’t necessarily disagree with that, but there are other forces at work here as well.

According to Herman Van Rompuy, the newly-installed President of the European Union, the climate conference in Copenhagen is a step towards the “global management” of our planet. As author Bat Ye’or has demonstrated and as I have confirmed in my own book Defeating Eurabia, the EU is actively collaborating with Islamic countries to rewrite the textbooks in European countries to make them more “Islam-friendly.”

Euro MedIt is well-documented that there are detailed long-term plans to expand the EU to include Muslim North Africa and the Middle East. This has been publicly confirmed by several high-ranking officials, including the British Foreign Minister in 2007. One newspaper leaked EU plans to import 50 million (!) more Africans to Europe in the coming decades, although urban communities across Western Europe are already in the process of breaking down due to mass immigration. A high-ranking official from Tony Blair’s Labour Government in Britain openly confirmed that they promoted mass immigration to import voters and alter the ethnic composition of the country. Similar policies are undoubtedly being promoted in countries from Germany to Australia.

In June 2009, only a few years after a group of Arabs killed thousands of Americans in a Jihadist attack, former US President Bill Clinton told an Arab American audience that soon the USA will no longer have a majority of people with a European heritage. He believed that “this is a very positive thing.” It wasn’t that first time that Mr. Clinton expressed such views.

Jens Orback, Democracy Minister in the then Social Democratic Swedish government, during a radio debate stated that “We must be open and tolerant towards Islam and Muslims because when we become a minority, they will be so towards us.” He took it for granted that the natives will become a minority in their own country and that they have no right to oppose this.

I could add that Sweden has no colonial history. Neither have Finland or Norway, which gained their independence as late as the twentieth century, yet both countries are still force-fed mass immigration of alien peoples. The “colonial guilt” argument used against the natives in Britain, France and other Western European countries is bogus. The real issue is that we white Westerners should not have any countries to call our own. Our countries should be giant Multicultural theme parks for everybody else, financed by brainwashed white taxpayers.

Arguably the leading academic Multiculturalist in my country, Professor Thomas Hylland Eriksen of the University in Oslo, who has received millions in government funding for his projects, in an interview stated frankly that “The most important blank spot exists now in deconstructing the majority so thoroughly that it can never be called the majority again.” This is the ultimate goal of Western Multiculturalists. Make no mistake about it. Needless to say, this agenda is only pushed in white majority Western countries. All other countries are allowed to retain their demographic profile; only the West is required to commit suicide.

Law and order is rapidly breaking down in major cities across Western Europe, and indeed the Western world, as immigrant gangs rule the streets. The law is only upheld against the “racist” white majority population to ensure that they keep on paying ridiculously high taxes to authorities that do nothing but lie to them, insult them and aid their national destruction.

As the eminent English writer El Inglés says, “The nature and severity of the problems we face are now sufficiently clear for European patriots to start asking themselves what actions they and others like them will eventually be called upon to take when the failure of the state reaches a critical point, and what sort of battlefield they will be arrayed upon at that moment.”

Karl MarxOne thing we absolutely need to do is to break the stranglehold that Marxist and Leftist groups have successfully established over the media and the education system in Western countries. These people need to be squashed. Maybe some readers think this sounds too harsh, but I firmly believe that we cannot deal effectively with our external enemies as long as our internal enemies control the information flow. We must reject those who promote a Globalist world, including multinational corporations that desire unlimited access to cheap labor.

Imagine if you have a person jumping off a plane without a parachute because he is convinced that he has “moved beyond gravity.” If works for a little while, until it suddenly doesn’t. That sounds too crazy to be true until you realize that this is what the entire Western world is doing right now when we pretend that we have “moved beyond ethnic divisions.” It is hardwired into the human brain to look after your people and “tribe” first. The only ones who are not currently doing this are whites. If, or rather when, white Westerners start behaving like everybody else our countries will quickly become Balkanized nightmares of competing tribes.

We must switch from a “save the world” to a “save ourselves” mode. In the early twentieth century, people of European origins made up one third of the global population, maybe as much as 40%. In the not-too-distant future this figure will be down to less than 10% and falling. This sharp reduction has not been caused by a plague but by a massive population increase in Third World countries, ironically facilitated by the global technological civilization created by European advances. We have given alien peoples the technological ability to multiply, move to our countries and colonize us. This cannot be allowed to continue.

We must start looking after our own interests just like everybody else. Self-preservation is a natural instinct for all living things down to plants and bacteria. The first thing we must do is to bury the entire notion of “racism,” which is anti-scientific nonsense exclusively designed to intimidate whites. It is perfectly conceivable, indeed highly likely, that there is a major genetic component to culture. This would imply that the preservation of the European cultural heritage can only be accomplished through the preservation of our genetic heritage.

It is becoming more or less mandatory for teachers in many Western countries to disparage European peoples, their culture and their heritage. We don’t need to have special reeducation camps because the media and the education system ensure that our society is virtually one large reeducation camp. Unfortunately, that’s not much of an exaggeration. In Hollywood films such as the disaster movie 2012, which I had the misfortune of seeing, all whites are portrayed either as evil and selfish or as losers whereas the non-white characters are portrayed as selfless and heroic. In reality, whites are today among the most selfless and least ethnocentric groups on the planet, and we are being punished heavily for this trait.

The truth is that whites create superior societies. Not only are others not capable of creating what we do, most of them are not even capable of maintaining it. The one major exception would be Northeast Asians, the only other large group of people on this planet apart from Europeans capable of sustaining a technologically sophisticated society. If anybody replaces us as the world’s leading civilization it will be them, for the simple reason that they are the only ones who possess a genetic intelligence to match ours, and they are not suicidal.

ImmigrantsBecause we create attractive societies other peoples want to move to our countries, but in displacing us they will gradually destroy what made our countries desirable places to live in the first place. They both hate and secretly envy us, and our children suffer needlessly from the violence and verbal abuse caused by this. If whites put up a colony on the planet Mars, I am sure others would hitchhike there on our space ships and demand that we let them in. Once there they would not exhibit any trace of gratitude. On the contrary, they would constantly whine and complain about how evil and racist and oppressive the white man is.

Muslims would demand respect because we owe all our scientific and technological advances to medieval Muslim scholars and because the Martian colony is the 63rd holiest place in Islam. In case you thought the latter sentence was intended as a joke, think again. In 1997 three Arab Muslim gentlemen from the Yemen sued NASA for trespassing on Mars, which they claimed that they owned because they inherited the planet from their ancestors 3,000 years ago.

Novelist Virginia Woolf famously wrote that women need “a room of their own.” In the twenty-first century it is whites who need a room of our own, and if we cannot have that in Europe, which is our cradle, then I don’t see where else we can have it. The alternative is that we maintain a continuing cycle where whites create dynamic societies that are overrun by people incapable of sustaining them. This cycle will finally end when the existence of white communities itself ends. The only viable long-term solution to this dilemma is physical separation. If you force very different peoples to share the same geographic space, conflict is inevitable. This insight was once considered common sense. Now it’s “hate speech.”

Will such a policy not be denounced as “hate” and “Fascism”? Possibly, but I don’t see why we should care about that. We, too, have a right to shape our destiny. Besides, we could always use the arguments of our critics against them. If whites truly are uniquely evil and oppressive, as some people seem to think, is it then not an act of mercy to keep non-whites away from us? That way they don’t have to become exposed to our racism, our hatred and our Islamophobia, but can retain their diverse, authentic and colorful tribal violence undisturbed.

One change that could conceivably take place is that people of European origins develop a stronger identity as “whites” on top of their national identities. I tried to explain to a hostile and now luckily discredited American blogger a while ago that the term “white nationalist” is meaningless in a European context. Maybe it carries some meaning in North America or Australia where most whites are of a mixed heritage, but over here it does not. Englishmen and Germans look fairly similar, but that hasn’t prevented them from slaughtering each other by the millions. Ditto for the French and the Spanish, the Poles and the Russians etc.

I don’t know if there ever will be a “white” identity. Perhaps we are just too different. What I do know is that if such an identity ever comes into being it will to a large extent have been created and forced upon us by our enemies. I have watched a number of disturbing videos, filmed by the attackers, of gangs of blacks or Arabs attacking what appears to be completely random whites. This happens from Sweden via Germany, Britain and France to the United States. This escalating wave of anti-white violence is one of the least-reported major news stories today as Western mainstream media almost uniformly try to cover these things up.

What strikes my about these attacks is that they are based on skin color; nobody asks the victims whether they are Russian Orthodox, Polish Catholics, English atheists, German Lutherans or Dutch Calvinists. These distinctions matter a great deal to us — we have fought many bloody wars because of them — yet they do not seem to matter to those who hate us. If people feel that they are attacked as whites they may start defending themselves as such, too.

The coming pan-Western crash will at the very least lead to an ideological-political paradigm shift and the rise of a new mythology to replace the post-WWII “suicide paradigm” of misunderstood anti-Nazism. At worst, the discontinuity will be so long and severe that what emerges on the other side will be a completely new civilization, the third generation of European civilization, just like what emerged during the Middle Ages was a different civilization from that of Greco-Roman Antiquity. The transition between the first and second generations of European civilization took centuries. History generally moves faster now than it did back then, but I suspect such a transition will nevertheless take several generations.

How a new civilization would look like I do not know. Medieval Europeans used different elements of the Greco-Roman legacy creatively and added new innovations on top of this. Generation Two of European civilization contained within itself aspects of Generation One, but also contained elements of sharp discontinuity. This will probably be the case next time, too.

All of this does admittedly sound a bit gloomy, yet I truthfully remain convinced that we have the necessary cultural and genetic resources to regroup and regenerate at some point, although it is conceivable that whites will in the future come from fewer bloodlines than we do today.

Just a Reminder

R.I.P. Europe


Today, December 1st, 2009, is the day that twenty-seven independent sovereign European nations ceased to exist.

The Constitution of European Union, a.k.a. the Lisbon Treaty, officially goes into effect today, and its member states are now completely subordinate to the unelected authoritarian regime in Brussels.

All the available evidence indicates that the overwhelming majority of the population of the EU opposes the Lisbon Treaty, and if they had ever been allowed to vote on the issue, they would have rejected it. But the “ever-closer union” is profoundly undemocratic, and doesn’t care a fig for the will of the people it pretends to represent.

The next few months will almost certainly bring a set of new laws and regulations designed to tighten the screws on any pockets of resistance, especially where “hate speech” and Multiculturalism are involved.

With their recently-acquired aversion for minarets, the Swiss are bucking the trend. For the rest of the continent, however, it is now too late.

Auf wiedersehen, au revoir, and good-bye to all that. So long, Europe; it was nice knowing you.

[Post ends here]

Sambucus Will Do in a Pinch

Ummm…I offered to do the Health Club update for the Baron. As in: if our health doesn’t improve soon, he’s got a club handy.He’s doing most everything while we sleep and sleep. And sleep.

Our family doctor left a voice mail this evening saying she’d looked at my x-rays and I don’t have pneumonia. She has old x-rays for a comparison and what looked like pneumonia at the Emergency Room appears to be scar tissue to her.

However I think I’ll stick with the antibiotic the ER doc gave me, thankyouverymuch. For one thing, my fever is receding. It’s such a relief not to feel hot and uncomfortable all the time.

For another, it may be this drug which is allowing me to sleep a lot. Same for the fB – we both keep having naps, numerous naps. You know – like they do in the Army? Soldiers sit down for any length of time, they sleep right there since they don’t know when they’ll get another chance. Of course, our war is just against the horrible organisms clogging our lungs. Nothing like what they’re suffering in Afghanistan, but for those of us in the trenches it feels similar. A kind of “what-am-I-doing-here?” disconnect.

Massed masks


Like soldiers would, you start to lose track of the days. Hard to believe that the fB has been slogging away for a month now, a lunar month anyway. I can figure this part out because he was to have started work Monday morning four weeks ago. He’s gone from his initial deep distress about letting them down and “what-if-they-give-my job-away” to being too sick to care. He’s not yet back to fretting; an obvious indication he’s not well enough to go anywhere soon.

Does anyone know if there is a difference in the actions of identical generic drugs?

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The reason I ask is that we got the narcotic cough medicine at a different pharmacy than usual and it’s made me quite itchy. It’s never done that before. I looked on the label but didn’t see a manufacturer so I thought perhaps this place, a big chain versus our usual small pharmacy (which isn’t open on Sunday night), might use a different brand of generic.

Oh, and the pharmacist had to give us pills to break in half because that’s the only kind he has left. He says there’s a shortage of most cough meds now, liquid and pills. He was apologizing to the Baron, but the B said we’re grateful there was anything in stock at all. I suppose as the season wears on spot shortages will occur here and there.

I’ve reached the point in this illness where I can smell something bad in the refrigerator but I’m not well enough yet to bother finding out what/where it is. Since it’s not going anywhere until I’m better – the B can’t smell anything – I’ll just wait till I have the energy to contemplate the science projects currently growing in the cold dark cave. Sickness can produce the strangest indifference and ennui.

I have developed a yen for an old childhood favorite, which the B thinks is gross: crunchy peanut butter-banana-and jelly sandwiches When I’m well, bread isn’t part of my diet but at the moment to heck with it. My 4 a.m. sandwich construction was going okay until it came to the jam. Darn jar wouldn’t open for anything so I used Sambucus elderberry cough syrup instead. Regular cough syrup is awful, but this Sambucus stuff is pretty good. Wish I had some ice cream for it.

Gosh, our readers are a patient bunch. Where else could we go and drone on about our illnesses?