News Feed 20120714

Financial Crisis
» Greece: Majority Supports Government, Fears Collapse, Survey
» Greece Asks for 2 Year Extension to Meet Bailout Conditions
» Italy: 24,000 State Jobs Due to be Eliminated
» Spain: Drug Trade Thrives in Recession-Battered Cadiz
» Spread Doesn’t Reflect ‘Fundamentals’ Of Italian Economy
» The Biggest Financial Fraud in History Receives Scant Media Attention
» There Will Never be Enough Jobs in America Again
 
USA
» “Muslim Terrorists Misunderstood” Study Says
» Bachmann’s Muslim Witch Hunt
» Can Women Change the Face of North American Mosques?
» Don’t Know Much About History, Religion, Time-Space Continuum
» I Do Not Like This, Uncle Sam, I Do Not Like the Go Green Scam
» My Doctor is Now the IRS
» Paterno Won Sweeter Deal Even as Scandal Played Out
» The End of Privacy: Government to Deploy Laser-Based ‘Molecular Strip-Search’ Devices Across Airports and Roadside Checkpoints
» The Lamps of Liberty Are Going Out
» Treasure Coast Muslims Prepare for Holy Month of Ramadan
» Uzbek Man Gets More Than 15 Years for Obama Threat
» Why the West Loves Lying to Itself About Islam
 
Canada
» Quebec Muslim Activist Becomes First Woman Charged Under 9/11 Terror Laws Over Hezbollah Gun-Running Plot
 
Europe and the EU
» Europe is in More Danger Than at Any Time Since the 1930s. One Nationalist Demagogue Could Cause an Earthquake
» France: Cergy Muslims Finally Have Their Mosque
» Italy: Church Considers Beatifying Former Chief Exorcist
» Italy: Showgirl: Journalist Accepted Houses, Money From Berlusconi
» Italy: Berlusconi Minister Sent to Trial for Mafia Association
» Italy: Tourist Found at Rome Station Was Not Raped
» Italy Will Continue to Strive for Religious Freedom in EU
» Switzerland: Woman Told to Accept Abuse or Leave Country
» UK: Bristol Roads Closed for Pride and EDL
» UK: EDL March in Bristol: Protesters Urged to Avoid Fountains Area
» UK: EDL March in Bristol: Muslim Community Statement
» UK: London 2012 Olympics: Games Could Need More Troops, Lord Coe Suggests
» UK: Olympics: ‘I Don’t Know if Guards Speak English’, Says G4s Chief
» UK: Police Clamp Down on Counter Demos in Bristol
» UK: Walsall Mosque Scheme Moving Nearer
» UK: We Are No Longer Being Governed, Just Patronised by Self-Regarding Pygmies Who Play at Politics
 
North Africa
» Libya: Boon of ‘Arab Spring’ Is Ongoing Democratic Progress
» Tunisia: Salafite Party Hibz Ettahir Not Legal Yet
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Hamas Says Egypt’s Mursi Will End Gaza Blockade
» Palestine — Foreign Political Interference Dressed Up as Humanitarian Aid
» Shas Paper Against Haredi Draft: We’ll Leave Israel
 
Middle East
» Arab Spring: This Youth Movement Has Women Covered
» Memoir of a Middle-East Maven
» Saudi Arabia: 18-Year-Old Shia Protester Shot Martyred by Saudi Forces in Awamiyah + Pic
» Syria: Is Assad Threatening Israel?
» Turkey: No Hookah Pipe Smoking for People Under 18
» Yemen: Deadly ‘Suicide’ Blast Hits Police Academy in Capital
 
Caucasus
» Russian Forces Say Kill 8 Militants in Caucasus
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Two Attacks Target Head of Women’s Rights and Intelligence Chief
» Afghanistan: Top Afghan MP Killed in Suicide Attack at Daughter’s Wedding
» Afghanistan: Taliban Admission of Unwinnable War Could Open the Door to Peace
» Canada’s Afghan Legacy: Failure at Dahla Dam
» India: For Karnataka Catholics, The Government is Violating Minority Rights
» India: Thousands Pray at ‘Mosque’ Site
» Pakistan: Eight Men Dressed Like Police Abduct Christian Pastor
» Shiite Genocide Continues in Pakistan; Two People Martyred by Firing of Wahhabi Terrorists
 
Australia — Pacific
» Anti-Mosque Agitator Paul Weston: Islam is Worse Than Nazism
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigeria: Christians: Place Boko Haram on Black List
» Nigeria: Tension in Onitsha as Muslims Protest Plan to Demolish Mosque
» Nigeria: Suicide Bomber Targets Maiduguri Mosque
 
Latin America
» Obama Excuses Chavez While American Rots in Cuba
 
Immigration
» UK: Bring in Migrants to Cut Billions From Deficit, Says Osborne’s Watchdog
 
Culture Wars
» Croatia: Assisted Reproduction Law Liberalized
» Serbia: 50% Do Not Want Gay Friend, Survey
 
General
» What is Sharia?
» Why is Islam So Dangerous?

Financial Crisis


Greece: Majority Supports Government, Fears Collapse, Survey

Samaras has 45% approval

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 13 — The government of Antonis Samaras has made a good impression so far, the first survey carried out since national elections on June 17 revealed. The poll was carried out by the Public Issue institute on behalf of the Kathimerini daily.

According to the survey, 45% of those interviewed said they were satisfied with the government so far against 43% who said they had a negative opinion.

Up to 51% said they were confident the Samaras government had the ability to manage Greece’s crisis, though 51% said they were pessimistic about the country’s outlook. Another 47% said they didn’t believe the government would make it.

As far as the opposition is concerned, 56% of those interviewed said they were not satisfied with Syriza, its main party, while 31% said they had quite a good opinion. An important trend that emerged from the survey was the decline of support for left-wing parties — Syriza, Democratic Left and Greece’s Communist Party — while conservative parties — Nea Dimokratia, Anexartiti Ellines and Chryi Agvi — remained stable.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece Asks for 2 Year Extension to Meet Bailout Conditions

(AGI) Athens — The new Greek government led by Samaras has asked for a 2 year extension to met bailout conditions. In a speech made to parliament, Prime Minister Antonios Samaras said, “We are requesting two years to meet the objectives.” In exchange the premier is ready to commit to a more ambitious privatization plan than previously envisaged and to merge or close dozens of public bodies before the end of the year as well as changing the status of the country’s properties.

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



Italy: 24,000 State Jobs Due to be Eliminated

Rome,. 9 July (AKI) — Around 24,000 Italian state employees are due to lose their job because of 26 billion euros in spending cuts.

Around 11 thousand of the workers are employed in government ministries and public bodies that are not related to economic functions, while the other 13,000 work for local administrations, according to the technical report of the Italian government’s so-called spending review. The report said around 8 thousand jobs will come from early retirements.

Prime minister Mario Monti and his government of unelected technocrats last week approved the cuts that will be spread out over the next three years in a move to delay implementing a rise in value-added taxes.

The government came to power in November after Silvio Berlusconi resigned as a debt crisis threatened to cause Italy to default on interest payments for its 1.9 trillion euro debt.

Monti’s austerity measures have been blamed on causing Italy’s recession to deepen and causing a rise in unemployment.

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



Spain: Drug Trade Thrives in Recession-Battered Cadiz

Record 36% unemployment drives youth, kids to crime

(ANSAMed) — MADRID — Stuck between the recession and record 36% youth unemployment, the people of Cadiz province in northern Andalusia are increasingly turning to hashish trafficking to make the rent and feed their kids, according to data released by the narcotics division of the public prosecutor’s office and reported in Spanish media today.

Cadiz province faces Morocco across the Atlantic Ocean, and also includes Ceuta, the Spanish enclave on Moroccan soil just across the Strait of Gibraltar. Last year, 693 of a national total of 2,134 properties seized from drug traffickers were located in Cadiz, which is the only Spanish province with a special anti-narcotics magistrates division and three public prosecutors fighting the drug lords. While just 11% of hash seizures were made in Cadiz in 2004, that figure rose to 23% in 2007, to 40% in 2009, and to 46% in 2010, according to data released by the drug squad. In the coastal town of Barbate, pop. 23,000, there were 300 drug trafficking convictions, in a province whose inhabitants represent 3% of the national population, but where 15% of drug trafficking cases are brought.

And of the 282 tons of hash seized throughout Spain in 2011, 115 tons were intercepted in Cadiz, according to the Spanish Coast Guard. A figure which the national narcotics division puts at 160 tons, but which in any case only represents 20% of the drugs that reach mainland Spain from Morocco, in a trade worth an estimated 300 billion euros a year.

More and more drug mules with previously clean rap sheets are being arrested at the border, with 47 arrests in one April weekend alone, according to anti-drug prosecutors. The increased labor supply has pushed prices down: while drug mules commanded 4,000 euros for a 20-minute run across the Strait two years ago, this year they make under 2,000 euros, according to the drug squad. Salaries are even lower for the lookouts, usually youths with cell phones on motorbikes, many of whom are now underage. Drug dealers make 200,000 euros on every ton of hashish, net of source price and intermediaries’ salaries, according to police sources. In Cadiz, 1 kilo of hash is worth 1,500 euros, but it gets sold at 4 times that price by smaller dealers all over Europe.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spread Doesn’t Reflect ‘Fundamentals’ Of Italian Economy

High borrowing costs not justified, says Bank of Italy governor

(ANSA) — Rome, July 11 — The high borrowing costs Italy is currently paying to service its huge public debt are not justified, given the many strengths of the country’s economy, Bank of Italy Governor Ignazio Visco said on Wednesday.

The spread between 10-year Italian bonds and the German benchmark is very high at the moment despite Premier Mario Monti’s government adopting a series of structural economy reforms and measures to restore the nation’s public finances to health and move it from the centre of the eurozone crisis. “The spread is a lot higher than what is justified by the fundamentals of our economy,” Visco said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Biggest Financial Fraud in History Receives Scant Media Attention

The chances are good that if you ask someone on the street what LIBOR is, they would guess it to be an obscure country in Africa. The reality, of course, is that LIBOR is something that affects everyone, to the extent that it “sets” the interest rate you’ll be paying for your mortgage, car loan, credit cards, and the rate of return you’ll receive on your pension, 401K, savings and all financial instruments. In total, it establishes the pricing of financial products across the world to the tune of up to $800 trillion. Trillion.

We are now finding out that the entire system has been rigged, enriching the “elect” and financially looting the rest. If you are reading this, you have been robbed, although the corporate media remains silent about who robbed you, how it was done, and which government and non-government officials were complicit and benefited. Why? Perhaps the most compelling reason is that when the “average” person learns the depths at which corruption exists between the various banks, governments and government officials, there will be a revolution like the world has never seen. Additionally, they too, along with many elected and appointed officials, have aided and abetted the fraud. Yes, it’s that bad, and it’s about to break wide open.

LIBOR is an acronym for the London Interbank Offered Rate, which is the average interest rate set by a group of international banks and charged by and between banks. Sixteen-(16) banks set the LIBOR rate: Bank of America, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, Barclays Bank, Citibank, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, HBOS, HSBC, JP Morgan Chase, Lloyds TSB Bank, Rabobank, Royal Bank of Canada, Norinchukin Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, and West LB. LIBOR sets short and long term interest rates for 10 currencies and for 15 different time spans, ranging from one day to one year. The rate is calculated daily by a company named Thomson Reuters, which is the parent company of Reuters News, and is overseen by the British Banking Association (BBA).

Although based in London, the LIBOR rate impacts all financial products across the globe.

[…]

Simply stated, a group of about 20 international banks, including many associated with setting the LIBOR rate and a number of U.S. banks have been fraudulently and systematically rigging global interest rates for the past decade, if not longer.

The fraud was “discovered” when Barclay’s Bank was found to have been involved in submitting false numbers to LIBOR to enhance their trading position. The “scandal” as it is called in the media, instead of the wholesale fraud and robbery that it is, now involves numerous other banks who reportedly acted in collusion to fix global interest rates.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



There Will Never be Enough Jobs in America Again

Well, we just had another bad jobs report. The U.S. economy created just 80,000 new jobs during the month of June. Normally, about 125,000 new jobs need to be created every month just to keep up with population growth. So it is a bit odd that the official unemployment rate did not rise above 8.2%. What is even more alarming is that the Social Security Administration is telling us that 85,000 U.S. workers “left the workforce” and enrolled in the Social Security Disability Insurance program during the month of June. That means that the number of Americans enrolling in Social Security Disability actually exceeded the number of new jobs that was created. That is definitely not a sign of recovery. Unfortunately, this is about as good as things are going to get. Right now corporate profits are at an all-time high and usually after a recession has ended the percentage of working age Americans that have jobs bounces back very strongly. But that has not happened this time, and when the next economic crisis hits things are going to get a lot worse.

The headline to this article states that there will never be enough jobs in America again.

How could that possibly be true?

Well, the sad truth is that it is very hard to make a profit on an employee in the United States today.

Every year, the control freaks that run things just keep dumping more taxes, more laws, more regulations and more demands on employers. Hiring even a low level employee today is very complicated and very expensive.

[…]

The United States has been losing millions of jobs to lower wage countries, and the fierce competition for the jobs that remain is driving down wages in this country.

As a result, many of our greatest cities that were once the envy of the entire world have become cesspools of filth, decay and wretchedness.

We are going to continue to bleed jobs because both major political parties are fully convinced that merging our labor pool with the labor pool of the rest of the world is a grand idea.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


“Muslim Terrorists Misunderstood” Study Says

by Matt Lacy

A new taxpayer-funded study that was released this week claims that rather than wanting to force their religion on people, Muslim terrorists are simply understood [sic] and only kill people because they are victims of those who oppose Islam. The 147 page study, titled “How Islamist Extremists quote the Qu’ran” states it analyzed the most frequently cited or quoted verses listed in the Center for Strategic Communication’s database of over 2,000 extremist texts from 1998 to 2011.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Bachmann’s Muslim Witch Hunt

by Alex Seitz-Wald

The tide of Islamophobia that threatened to drown the political scene in the summer of 2010 during the debate over what critics called the “ground zero mosque” has since receded and Muslim conspiracy theories have largely vanished from the political debate. But with another election looming, the tide may be rising again, and Rep. Michele Bachmann is predictably already ahead of the crowd.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Can Women Change the Face of North American Mosques?

The North American mosque is evolving and redefining its purpose and practices. A recently-released report by a group of mainly Muslim organisations, The American Mosque 2011, provides the first factual glimpse into changes in North American mosques. Initially serving primarily as a place to perform religious rituals, mosques are developing into community building institutions.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Don’t Know Much About History, Religion, Time-Space Continuum

[Comment: Scroll down half way in the article.]

The head of the religion department at Luther College in Iowa recently argued that Jesus Christ, the central figure of Christianity, was in fact, a Muslim.

“‘Was Jesus a Muslim?” asks Prof. Robert F. Shedinger in the beginning of a book he published this year entitled Was Jesus a Muslim?

…at least he’s not a history professor, since he’s not familiar with the concept of history, or of one thing happening after the other. It’s good that he’s also not a physics professor, since he doesn’t seem to be up on the laws of the universe.

Jesus could no more have been a Muslim than he could have been a Mets fan or a reader of Professor Shedinger’s book, because you cannot be or do a thing which does not yet exist.

Other possible Shedinger book titles. “Was Buddha a Mormon?” and “Was Thomas Edison a Star Trek fan?”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



I Do Not Like This, Uncle Sam, I Do Not Like the Go Green Scam

Stephen Moore of the Wall Street Journal said in his column, “sweltering in the dark is a glimpse into America’s future if the “greens” have their way. Electrical power is the central nervous system of our modern economy. Yet every initiative by green groups is focused on reducing our access to electrical power.” (When the Moore Family Lost Power, WSJ, July 4, 2012)

Clean and renewable energy, like wind and solar, only provide 3 % of our electricity, far short of powering the largest economy on earth. After billions of dollars of subsidies in solar and wind energy, companies are still going bankrupt, long after Solyndra LLC’s demise. The excuse is that they cannot compete against the Chinese. Recently, Abound Solar Inc. of Loveland, Colorado, suspended operations and sought bankruptcy in Wilmington, Delaware, after receiving $400 million in Department of Energy loan guarantees.

[…]

Dick Morris wrote in “Screwed” that China has hacked our electric power grid in 2009 and created secret openings so that an attacker could get back in with ease. “Hackers left behind software that could be used to cause disruptions or even shut down the system.” Richard Clarke wrote in the Wall Street Journal that “there is no money to steal on the electrical grid, nor is there any intelligence value that would justify cyber espionage. The only point to penetrating the grid’s controls is to counter American military superiority by threatening to damage the underpinnings of the U.S. economy.” Entering the grid is much more efficient than exploding a bomb that would trigger an EMP. (Dick Morris, China Has Hacked Our Electric Power Grid, May 10, 2012)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



My Doctor is Now the IRS

The Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, “A Brief Overview of the Law, Implementation, and Legal Challenges,” gives a new definition to Nancy Pelosi’s statement that we had “to pass Obamacare to find out what’s in it.” Not only did Congressmen not read the 2,700-page law before they voted and passed it by twisting arms and briberies, but they now have to be informed of the disaster they have created. (C. Stephen Redhead, Hinda Chaikind, Bernadette Fernandez, Jennifer Staman, July 3, 2012)

[…]

I predict that most private insurers will be pushed out of business. Americans will be forced into a government health insurance exchange, a privilege for which they will have to pay a tax determined by the omnipotent government. A 15-member bureaucratic death panel will deny as much medical care as possible based on age and utility of a “unit” (person) in order to save money.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Paterno Won Sweeter Deal Even as Scandal Played Out

In January 2011, the same month that Joe Paterno learned of an investigation into his longtime assistant coach Jerry Sandusky and testified before a grand jury, he began negotiating with his superiors to amend his contract. The timing was something of a surprise, because the contract was not set to expire until the end of 2012, according to university documents and people with knowledge of the discussions.

By August, Mr. Paterno, who was the football coach at Penn State, and the university’s president, both of whom were by then embroiled in the investigation into Mr. Sandusky’s sexual assaults on boys, had reached an agreement. Mr. Paterno was to be paid $3 million at the end of the 2011 season if he agreed it would be his last. Interest-free loans totaling $350,000 would be forgiven, and he would have use of the university’s private plane.

The university’s full board of trustees was kept in the dark about the arrangement until November, when Mr. Sandusky was arrested and the contract arrangements, along with so much else at Penn State, were upended. Mr. Paterno was fired, two top university officials were indicted and the trustees came under assault from the coach’s angry supporters.

Board members who raised questions about whether the university ought to go forward with the payments were shut down, and in the end, the board, bombarded with hate mail and threatened with a defamation lawsuit by Mr. Paterno’s family, gave the family virtually everything it wanted, with a package worth roughly $5.5 million.

The details of Mr. Paterno and his family’s fight for money seem to deepen one of the lasting truths of the Sandusky scandal: the significant power that Mr. Paterno exerted on the state institution, its officials, its alumni and its purse strings.

[Return to headlines]



The End of Privacy: Government to Deploy Laser-Based ‘Molecular Strip-Search’ Devices Across Airports and Roadside Checkpoints

Within the next two years, a spooky, powerful and invisible new technology will be deployed by the U.S. government that can instantly scan and identify every molecule on your body or person: the cocaine residue on your dollar bills, prescription drugs in your purse, marijuana in your pocket and even trace powder residue from your practice session at the gun range.

And it can detect all this invisibly, silently, from a range of 50 meters away.

These laser detection devices are slated to be widely deployed across airports, roadside checkpoints, sports stadiums and anywhere else the government wants to surveil the public. Data collected by these devices can even be tagged to your identity so that the government compiles a database of which chemicals were detected on you at each location, for each day of your life.

This information, of course, can then be used by the government to target people they call “terrorists” — anyone who believes in liberty, the Constitution, the founding fathers or limited government. Once nationwide gun confiscation orders are handed down from Washington, these scanning devices can be used to detect trace levels of gunpowder on people merely strolling through a public place. If you’re carrying ammunition or have recently practiced with firearms, you’ll be flagged, tagged and dragged into the very secret military prisons expanded by President Obama under the National Defense Authorization Act which nullifies due process and the Bill of Rights.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Lamps of Liberty Are Going Out

Insofar as it works at all, Big Government works best in small, highly developed, northern Continental nation-states with a sufficiently homogeneous population to have sufficiently common interests. You can get by with it for a while in Mediterranean Europe, mainly because of a somewhat desultory attitude to the rule of law: In Italy and Greece, there are prohibitions against everything, but nobody obeys them and so, after a fashion, life goes on. Anglophone nations are generally disposed to abide by the law, and so, if there are a bazillion regulations, the average citizen will make a sincere effort to comply. But if you’re, say, Australia and you’re attempting to design a health-care system for 20 million people across an entire continent, it’s just about doable.

But no advanced society has ever attempted Big Government for a third of a billion people — for the simple reason that it cannot be done without creating a nation with the black-hole finances of Stockton, Calif., and the Black-Hole-of-Calcutta fetid, airless, sweatbox utility services of Rockville, Md. Thanks to Obamacare, in matters of health provision, whether you’re in favor of socialized medicine or truly private health care, Swedes and Italians are now freer than Americans: They have a state system and a private system, and both are relatively simple. What’s simple in micro-regulated America? In health care, we now have what’s nominally a private system encrusted with so many statist barnacles that it no longer functions as either a private or a state system. Thus, Obamacare embodies the strange no-man’s-land of statism American-style: The U.S. is no longer a land of republican virtue and self-reliant citizens but it’s not headed for the sunlit uplands of Scandinavia, either.

In their book The Size of Nations, Alberto Alesina and Enrico Spolaore argue that, if America were as centrally governed as France, it would have broken up long ago. But hey, that’s no reason not to try it! In a land where everything else is supersized, why not government? Obituaries for the late Andy Griffith generally glossed over his career finale as a pitchman for Obamacare. But he was a canny choice to sell the unsellable, for is not “health” “care” “reform” the communitarian virtues of beloved small-town Mayberry writ large? The problem is you can’t write Mayberry large. And, if you attempt it, it leads not to Mayberry but to Stockton, Calif., and to a corrupt, dysfunctional swamp.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Treasure Coast Muslims Prepare for Holy Month of Ramadan

Treasure Coast Muslims will begin the ritual dawn-to-dusk fasts of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan next week in the wake of a heat wave that shattered records across the nation. The 29 to 30 days of fasting will begin with the sighting of the new crescent moon, expected June 19 or 20. “It’s hard, and then again, it’s a blessing from God,” said Hamid Slimane, who worships at the Islamic Center of Muslim Friends of Florida, on U.S. 1 in Fort Pierce. “Can you imagine people overseas fasting in the desert, in 50-degree Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) temperatures? And they keep on going. It’s the most blessed, spiritual month.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Uzbek Man Gets More Than 15 Years for Obama Threat

An Uzbek man who came to America pursuing an Ivy League medical degree but wound up working seven days a week at a mall kiosk in Alabama was sentenced to more than 15 years in prison Friday for plotting to kill President Barack Obama. U.S. District Judge Abdul K. Kallon imposed the sentence on Ulugbek Kodirov, 22. He had faced up to 30 years in prison.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why the West Loves Lying to Itself About Islam

Say that you get a tempting offer from a Nigerian prince and decide to invest some money in helping him transfer his vast fortune from Burkina Faso or Dubai over to the bank across the street. The seemingly simple task of bringing over the 18 million dollars left to him by his father hits some snags which require you to put in more and more of your own money.

Eventually you have invested more than you ever would have ever done up front, just trying to protect the sunk cost, the money that you already sank into Prince Hussein Ngobo’s scheme. And to protect your self-esteem, you must go on believing that, no matter what Prince Ngobo does, he is credible and sincere. Any failings in the interaction are either your fault or the fault of some third party. Anyone who tells you otherwise must be a Ngobophobe.

Now imagine that Prince Ngobo’s real name is Islam.

That is where Western elites find themselves now. They invested heavily in the illusion of a compatible Islamic civilization. Those investments, whether in Islamic immigration or Islamic democracy or peace with Islam have turned toxic, but dropping those investments is as out of the question as writing off Prince Ngobo as a con artist and walking away feeling like a fool. Western elites, who fancy themselves more intelligent and more enlightened than the wise men and prophets of every religion, and who base their entire right to rule on that intelligence and enlightenment, are not in the habit of admitting that they are fools.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Quebec Muslim Activist Becomes First Woman Charged Under 9/11 Terror Laws Over Hezbollah Gun-Running Plot

A Quebec activist who fought the stereotyping of Muslims was charged with supporting terrorism on Friday after an RCMP investigation linked her to an alleged scheme to smuggle weapons to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Mouna Diab, 26, was charged with committing a crime “for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a terrorist group,” the RCMP said in a statement. She faces a possible life sentence if convicted. The Laval woman was arrested at Montreal’s Trudeau airport last year and accused of violating an international arms embargo targeting Lebanon, but police added the far more serious terrorism charge on Friday.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Europe is in More Danger Than at Any Time Since the 1930s. One Nationalist Demagogue Could Cause an Earthquake

by Thomas Pascoe

Ours is a complacent continent. Despite impending events that would have precipitated a revolution in almost any other place at almost any other time in history — either a collapse of the currency or the complete secession of budgetary control to a supra-natural body in the EU — we expect the fabric of European society to endure without major changes. I think we are wrong. There is a presumption of perpetual peace in Europe which rests in turn on a presumption of the perpetuity of our existing capital structures. Once the latter are undermined, the former is called into question. The great wars of the secular age have all been fought between ideologies which seek to restructure the relationship between capital and the people. As popular support grows for such plans, Western Europe is entering its most dangerous phase since the 1930s.

[…]

[Reader comment by davejon on 14 July 2012 at about 10:40 am.]

“Politicians in the modern era have sought to divide and rule” — yes, like “rubbing our noses in diversity” (Andrew Neather)? Nationalism reacts against unnatural processes like mass immigration and multiculturalism, and a reaction against the governing elites is way overdue. Nationalism cannot be blamed, but the elites can.

[Reader comment by danoconnor on 13 July 2012 at 8:40 pm.]

White Nationalists (and ONLY White) are the Orwellian Emmanuel Goldsteins of the modern West, that the establishment and media drag out every now and again for the usual — Two Minutes of Hate — session, as a way for the ruling elite to intimidate and guilt trip their native populations into shutting up while they go about looting their economies and electing a new people through third world voter import gerrymandering. White genocide.

The Establishment, the media, and the multicult apparatchik Liberatti are afraid that if too many of their native peoples wake up to the enormity and the future consequences of the crime that is being committed against them, that they will lose their perks, power and privilege, and lose the goverments, the universities, and the media. They would rather that we, through a relentless tsunmai of mass immigration are rendered outnumbered, powerless and finally consumed by the “Other” than admit for one moment that they had been wrong.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Cergy Muslims Finally Have Their Mosque

Inaugurated today in Paris suburbs, 1.500 capacity

(ANSAMed) — PARIS, JULY 6 — The new, modern-style, green-domed mosque in the suburban town of Cergy opened today.

At 2,000 square metres, it has capacity for 1,500 people and cost 3.75 million euros to build.

The town pitched in by guaranteeing half of a 2.2 million loan taken out by the Cergy Muslim Federation, and by leasing the land at a nominal price for 99 years. The rest came from donations from Federation members.

“It is our responsibility to progressively build a French Islam, one that will find put down roots in our country,” said Interior Minister Manuel Valls, who attended the opening of the mosque. “This was made possible by two things: Muslim unity, and political will,” Socialist Mayor Dominique Lefebvre said.

“We want it to be clear that we paid for this, through donations,” Imam Tahar Mahdi said.

There have been projects to build a mosque in Cergy since the 1980s. Lefebvre, who was elected in 1996, has played a fine balancing act with French law, which bans public funding of religious sites. The new mosque also has a cultural center, a tea room, a funeral parlor, and schoolrooms.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Church Considers Beatifying Former Chief Exorcist

Father Candido Amantini known for unique rituals

(ANSA) — Rome, July 13 — Catholic church officials began their probe Friday into the life of Rome’s former chief exorcist as they consider whether he should be beatified.

For 36 years, Father Candido Amantini was Rome’s chief exorcist. Ordained as a priest in 1937, Amantini was born in Bagnolo, Italy in 1914 and died in 1992.

For years, Amantini was the only exorcist in Rome, dealing with long queues of the faithful. His biographers say he developed his own rituals in addition to the Roman ritual of exorcism in his work at Rome’s Scala Santa, the Church of the Holy Staircase. Beatification is the third of four steps in the Catholic church’s canonization process.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Showgirl: Journalist Accepted Houses, Money From Berlusconi

‘Gestures of affection, not payment for sex’ witnesses say

(ANSA) — Milan, July 13 — An Italian TV journalist testified to accepting two houses from ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi and a former showgirl said he gave her 60,000 euros but both denied ever offering sex for payouts. “He bought me two houses, he gave me the money as a gesture of affection for our friendly relationship, not intimate,” said Silvia Trevaini, who works for Berlusconi’s television empire Mediaset.

Prosecutors questioned Trevaini about nights she spent at the ex-premier’s villa in Arcore outside Milan and why he paid her 440,000 euros, which she said went towards the two homes. Prosecutors then questioned Imma De Vivo, an ex-showgirl who along with her twin sister Eleanora also spent evenings at Berlusconi’s mansion.

“I’m not working at the moment. I’ve recently gotten some help from Berlusconi, three payments, two for 15,000 euros and one for 30,000,” she said. The De Vivo sisters were both questioned for 72,000 euros received in their father’s name from the ex-premier’s account, money they said went towards living expenses.

Both denied ever having “sexual relations for money” with the premier, and described the evenings at his villa as occasions full of “dance routines and shows, like what you see in resorts,” according to Imma. Prosecutors say Berlusconi had sex with 33 alleged prostitutes at his villa over the course of several evenings.

The former premier is accused of paying for sex with an underage Moroccan runaway called Ruby and trying to cover it up by abusing his office.

Berlusconi has stressed that both he and Ruby deny having sex and has quipped “33 women in two months is too many even for someone who likes pretty girls, like me”.

He claims to be the victim of biased prosecutors who have allegedly been conducting a witch-hunt against him since he entered politics in 1994.

The charge of having sex with an underage prostitute carries a jail term of up to three years, and abuse of office 12 years.

The Ruby trial, which opened last April, is expected to run for years, with dozens of witnesses called by the prosecution and defence including George Clooney and soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Minister Sent to Trial for Mafia Association

Palermo, 3 July (AKI) — Judges have ordered a minister in the last Berlusconi government, Saverio Romano, to stand trial for mafia association. Romano, a member of the Italian parliament denies wrongdoing and claims he requested the trial himself.

“I and my defence counsel asked for a fast-track trial before the judge ordered me to stand trial,” the former agriculture minister, told Adnkronos.

He claims the charges against him are “politically motivated”. A sentence could be delivered in the case as soon as by 17 July.

Romano was accused of being “at the beck and call” of the Sicilian mafia in evidence given by several mafia informants during the trial of jailed Sicily governor Salvatore Cuffaro. A former senator for the centrist Catholic UDC party, Cuffaro was in 2010 sentenced to 7 years in prison for abetting the mafia.

Besides testimonies by mafia informants, phone intercepts also form part of the evidence for the prosecution, although Romano’s defence claims these are “inadmissible”.

Romano was appointed agriculture minister in March 2011 in a cabinet reshuffle. His appointment was widely seen a reward for his decision to quit the opposition UDC party, in which he was elected to parliament, and to support then-premier Silvio Berlusconi’s ruling coalition in a crucial no-confidence vote in December 2010.

Berlusconi resigned as prime minister in November 2011 as the country’s financial crisis spiralled out of control, raising the real possibility that Italy could miss payments on its 1.9 trillion euros of debt. He was succeeded by an unelected technocrat, Mario Monti.

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



Italy: Tourist Found at Rome Station Was Not Raped

(AGI) Rome — The 22-year-old Australian tourist found this morning near Rome’s main station was not raped and appeared to have agreed to a sexual encounter. She was taken to hospital by ambulance. Detectives are investigating the matter and according to reports the girl had not been raped. It has been confirmed that the girl had consumed large quantities of alcohol.

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



Italy Will Continue to Strive for Religious Freedom in EU

(AGI) Rome — Giulio Terzi has said on Twitter that “Italy will continue its efforts in the EU for the freedom of religious belief.” Italy’s Foreign Minister was responding to reports of further Christian massacres in Nigeria, saying “these repeated barbarities must never pass unnoticed.” .

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



Switzerland: Woman Told to Accept Abuse or Leave Country

Switzerland’s supreme court has intervened to stop a young Kosovan woman having to decide whether to remain with her abusive husband or lose her Swiss residency permit.

The 21-year-old Kosovan woman came to join her husband in St. Gallen in the east of Switzerland some 21 months ago, newspaper Tages Anzeiger reported.

The husband, who is seven years older than his wife, forbade her from attending German-language or integration courses and would only allow her to leave the house in the company of her mother-in-law.

When the woman tried to resist what she described as slave-like conditions, she was put out on the street. Her family back in Kosovo also rejected her for her behaviour.

The St. Gallen migration board then decided not to renew her residence permit because she could not show that she was a victim of marital violence, or that she would face persecution in Kosovo. Her complaints to the Cantonal Security and Justice Department and to the Administrative Court were also rejected.

The kind of experience she had gone through was to be expected in a Muslim marriage, the authorities said.

In addition, having only met the man five times prior to the marriage, she must have known that such problems might occur.

The supreme court then stepped in and said that the previous decision-makers had not reached the appropriate conclusions. The court found that psychological abuse was also a form of violence, and said that there was no place for such behaviour in a liberal society.

A person affected by domestic violence should not “be faced with the dilemma of whether to remain in the abusive situation or to accept the loss of the right to residence,” the court concluded.

The Federal Court has now referred the case back to the St. Gallen justice authorities and told them to retry the case.

Lyssandra Sears (news@thelocal.ch)

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



UK: Bristol Roads Closed for Pride and EDL

Marches and demonstrations in Bristol have led to a number of road closures and one man has been arrested.

Supporters of the English Defence League (EDL) are due to gather at Redcliffe Wharf at 13:00 BST before marching to Queen Square for a rally. A counter demonstration at the same time by We are Bristol starts and finishes at Castle Park. One man has been arrested on suspicion of racially aggravated public order and remains in police custody. Many EDL protesters have been arriving at Bristol Temple Meads railway station where a number of cafes and businesses have closed for the day. BBC reporter Steve Brodie said thousands of police were on duty in the city and the two groups were being kept apart.

Avon and Somerset Police warned residents and businesses in the affected areas to expect a large police presence. A force spokesman said it would facilitate peaceful protests but would tackle anyone who became involved in violence or disorder. A separate and unrelated march organised by the city’s gay community set off from Berkeley Square at 11:00.

The colourful procession snaked down Park Street to College Green where the Pride festival runs until 19:00. A full list of road closures can be found on the city council website.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: EDL March in Bristol: Protesters Urged to Avoid Fountains Area

POLICE in Bristol have warned groups involved in an anti-English Defence League march tomorrow to avoid the Centre. Officers confirmed that counter protest group We Are Bristol will meet in Castle Park but urged protesters not to gather at the fountains on St Augustine’s Parade, as previously planned. The routes of the marches by the far-right EDL, which says it is protesting at the “Islamification” of Bristol, and opponents who say it attracts violent, racist supporters, will pass within 200 metres of each other. Police are aiming to contain the two protests to ensure a trouble-free day.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: EDL March in Bristol: Muslim Community Statement

THE Muslim community in Bristol today said its members will not be taking part in a counter protest against the English Defence League.

Zaheer Shabir, Chair for Building the Bridge on behalf of the Muslim Community issued the following statement:

It has been made clear by many communities in Bristol that the English Defence League is not welcome here on the 14th July. As a vibrant and diverse Muslim community in Bristol, we have met extensively in recent weeks maintaining a clear, concise and unanimous message that we will NOT be involved in any kind of counter protest. These meetings have allowed us with a further opportunity to demonstrate how the Bristol Muslim community meets any challenge with dignity and unity.

Despite there being a possibility, the Muslim community did not encourage anyone to sign the e-petition demanding a ban on EDL marching in our City of Bristol. The number of meetings we have had with the Police and Bristol City Council clarify their position on the EDL march, the UAF counter protest and the Gay Pride family event. We have decided to be a part of the positive attitude of Bristol in conducting ourselves in the usual manner.

We support Bristol City Council and the Police in ensuring that these events do not disrupt Bristol in its usual daily business and we are positively encouraged by that. In a proactive manner, the Muslim community leadership have met with the EDL to create a pathway for future dialogue. This was the first of its kind in the UK and positive assurances were given by the EDL representatives. We have also met with UAF and We are Bristol to clarify our position on the counter protest requesting them not to confuse and entice Muslim youth to join their counter protest. They have not proactively engaged with the Muslim community leadership so we are not assured on any matters whatsoever.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: London 2012 Olympics: Games Could Need More Troops, Lord Coe Suggests

More Armed Forces personnel could be called up to provide Olympic security, officials have admitted.

Lord Coe, the chairman of the London 2012 Olympic organising committee (Locog), said on Friday that he could not rule out asking for the current deployment of 17,000 to be increased. Asked if more troops will be required when the Games begin in two weeks, Lord Coe replied: “We are working on it at the moment.” Ministers were this week forced to assign an extra 3,500 soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines to security duties at Olympic sites after G4S, the private security firm being paid £284million for guard work, failed to provide enough staff.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Olympics: ‘I Don’t Know if Guards Speak English’, Says G4s Chief

The head of the firm at the centre of the Olympics security fiasco has admitted he does not know if the guards hired speak fluent English.

Nick Buckles, chief executive of G4S said he deeply regretted the company’s failure to recruit enough staff, which will see troops called in to fill in the gaps. He said attempts to recruit 10,000 workers had been “complex” and that the firm had underestimated the scale of the task. But when challenged about whether those recruited by G4S even spoke fluent English, Mr Buckles struggled to answer the question.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “That is a difficult question to answer. They all have a right to work in the UK and have been vetted to very high standards.” When the question was repeated he admitted: “I can’t say categorically.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Clamp Down on Counter Demos in Bristol

The police have today used their powers under the Public Order Act to prevent a counter demonstration to the presence of the right-wing and anti-Islamic EDL from going ahead in Bristol City Centre tomorrow (Saturday). Organisers of the rally, which had significant trade union backing, have been issued with legal notices enforcing restrictions on the counter demonstration, and have been told that they face potential prosecution if the rally goes ahead as planned.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Walsall Mosque Scheme Moving Nearer

Fresh plans to push ahead with the transformation of a controversial new mosque in Walsall have been submitted to the council.

The Ahmadiyya Muslim Association won an appeal in 2010 to convert a disused warehouse in Vicarage Place into a mosque, despite hundreds of objections and plans being thrown out by Walsall Council in December 2009. Permission is now being sought to demolish part of the building and make alterations to the inside and outside, including the addition of a dome and minaret. Hundreds of people descended on the town hall in Walsall to oppose proposals for the mosque in 2009, and four petitions were submitted against the application bearing 848 names. There were concerns about the location of the site and traffic congestion fears, as well as objections from other Muslims disagreeing with the Ahmadiyya interpretation of Islam. But an appeal was lodged soon after the refusal.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: We Are No Longer Being Governed, Just Patronised by Self-Regarding Pygmies Who Play at Politics

by Simon Heffer

David Cameron has never been wildly popular with his parliamentary party. However, they have tended to respect him, believing that he would, one day, lead them to the outright electoral victory that has eluded them since 1992. This week, that respect haemorrhaged away. Backbenchers who, for the past seven years, have rebuked me for my criticism of Mr Cameron, now concede the Prime Minister is making a series of grave mistakes. And his decision to allow Nick Clegg, his Coalition partner, to humiliate himself and the Government by proceeding with his Bill to reform the House of Lords is the gravest yet. In the wake of the failure to timetable the Bill, many Tories now ask what the point of the Coalition is, other than to keep Mr Cameron and his friends in jobs.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Libya: Boon of ‘Arab Spring’ Is Ongoing Democratic Progress

by Gwynne Dyer

The good news about last weekend’s election in Libya, as relayed by the Western media, was that the “Islamists” were defeated and the Good Guys won. The real good news was that democracy in the Arab world is still making progress, regardless of whether the voters choose to support secular parties or Islamic ones. The Libyan election was remarkably peaceful, given the number of heavily-armed militias left over from the war to overthrow the Gaddafi dictatorship that still infest the country. Turnout was about 60 per cent, and Mahmoud Jibril, who headed the National Transitional Council during last year’s struggle against Gaddafi, won a landslide victory.

[…]

And if Egyptians don’t like what their Islamic government does, they can always vote it out again at the next election.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Salafite Party Hibz Ettahir Not Legal Yet

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 13 — The legalization of Tunisia’s Hizb Ettahir Party, the political mouthpiece of the Salafite movement which is tolerated in the country, has been denied again, party leader Ridha Belhak said yesterday.

Belhai said he received a letter from Prime Minister Hamadi Djebali motivating the decision. In an interview with radio Mosaique, Belhaj did not make the motivation public but slammed the Ennahdha Parti of which Djebali is deputy leader saying ‘the prisoners of yesterday have become today’s decision makers’.

Belhaj said the fact that his party is still banned is ‘an honour’ as it is ‘dictated by the West’ and added he has not taken part in Ennahdha’s congress because he had not been invited as leader of his party.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Hamas Says Egypt’s Mursi Will End Gaza Blockade

Leader of terror group Ismail Haniyeh says he is confident Egypt’s new president will shield Palestinians from Israeli attack.

The head of the Islamist group Hamas in the Gaza Strip said on Friday he was confident Egypt’s new president would shield the Palestinian enclave from Israeli attack and fully open its borders to end a trade blockade.

Mohamed Mursi, who won power in last month’s presidential election in Egypt, is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood and ideologically close to Hamas.

The Gazan Islamists long complained that his predecessor Hosni Mubarak, ousted from power last year in a popular revolt, sided not just with Israel, but also with their political rival — Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah movement.

So far, Hamas has seen little sign of a policy shift since Mursi took office and diplomats said the Egyptian leader had so many domestic problems that he could ill-afford to dedicate much time to re-tooling Cairo’s relations with the Palestinians.

However, Ismail Haniyeh, the head of Hamas’s Gaza government, told worshipers in a mosque that change was coming.

“We are confident that Egypt, the revolution led by Mursi, will never provide cover for any new aggression or war on Gaza,” he said. “We are confident that Egypt, the revolution led by Mursi, will not take any part in blocking Gaza,” he added…

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]



Palestine — Foreign Political Interference Dressed Up as Humanitarian Aid

Attempts by foreign Governments and international aid agencies to politically influence the outcome of negotiations begun under the Oslo Accords in 1993 — now seriously threaten the total abandonment of those Accords.

The battleground for such foreign interference is Susiya village — located in Area C which comprises about 60% of the West Bank — but where only 5% of the current West Bank Arab population live.

Area C has remained under the total administrative and security control of Israel for the last 45 years.

All the Jewish towns and villages in the West Bank have been established in Area C.

Allocation of sovereignty in Area C was to be determined in negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority under the Oslo Accords and the Bush Roadmap of 2002.

Those negotiations have hit a brick wall with the continuing refusal of the Palestinian Authority to resume such negotiations unless Israel places a total ban on further building in the West Bank for the duration of those negotiations.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Shas Paper Against Haredi Draft: We’ll Leave Israel

In editorial, Rabbi Moshe Shafir warns of ‘chaos’ and ‘anarchy’ in case IDF exemption for ultra-Orthodox annulled. ‘When there is no government, there is civil war,’ he writes

The Shas daily “Yom Leyom” (“Day to Day”) has suggested some original ways to protest the government’s plan to draft yeshiva students, including leaving the country altogether and filing charges againt Israel in the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.

In a piercing op-ed published Thursday, the newspaper’s editor, Rabbi Moshe Shafir, warned of “anarchy” or “chaos” in case the haredim will no longer be exempt from army service.

“Not one haredi will enlist without the authorization of the rabbis. We’ll devote our lives to the Torah at any price,” wrote Shafir, a forefront Shas spokesperson.

In his column, Shafir warned of mass ultra-Orthodox demonstrations and said “lawsuits in the UN and the international courts, such as those filed by Israel’s Left, will be effective.

“Holocaust-type photos of dozens of children wearing yellow badges may even leave the last German submarine in the shipyard,” the rabbi said, referring to the sale of German Dolphin submarines to Israel.

Turning to Israel’s secular community, Shafir warned that the haredim may resort to a “tax revolt” and launch strikes that will “make spaghetti of your country.” He also warned of a mass haredi exodus “which will gradually turn you into a minority in the face of an Arab majority.

“We will also make it difficult to realize your melting pot ideal — the prisons are already filled with Eritreans,” he said in the editorial.

Yom Leyom also criticized Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for “lacking leadership” and leaving important decisions in the hands of “random teenagers.”

“When there is no (leader), there is no government, and when there is no government, there is civil war,” the rabbi wrote. “And in war there are casualties on both sides.”

Rabbi Eliezer Melamed, head of the Har Bracha yeshiva, suggested that the government exempt women from IDF service before recruiting haredi men.

“The interaction between men and women in the army is the main obstacle, and the leaders of the haredi public use it as the main argument (against the recruitment of haredim),” he wrote in a column published in the haredi newspaper Besheva.

“The army must prepare for the absorption of thousands of soldiers who devoutly keep the mitzvoth.”

The rabbi said that like other religious people, the ultra-Orthodox must also be offered tracks similar to the hesder yehivas that will allow them to combine army service with Torah studies.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Arab Spring: This Youth Movement Has Women Covered

by Mark Steyn

The mistake made by virtually the entire Western media during the Arab Spring was to assume that social progress is like technological progress.

Media types like to talk about “the narrative”: News is just another form of storytelling, and certain plot lines grab you more than others.

The easiest narrative of all is anything involving young people. “I believe that children are our future,” as the late Whitney Houston once asserted. And, even if Whitney hadn’t believed it, it would still, as a point of fact, be true. Any media narrative involving young people presupposes that they are the forces of progress, wresting the world from the grasping clutches of mean, vengeful old men and making it a better place.

[…]

The mistake made by virtually the entire Western media during the Arab Spring was to assume that social progress is like technological progress — that, like the wheel or the internal combustion engine, women’s rights and gay rights cannot be disinvented. They can, very easily.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Memoir of a Middle-East Maven

Robert Low admires the autobiography of “the world’s most eminent Middle East historian”

At the age of 95, Bernard Lewis has written (with the help of his partner) a fascinating account of his extraordinary life and the events and influences that have made him the world’s most eminent historian on the Middle East. His admirably terse style and the freshness of his recollections could be the work of a man 30 years his junior but we are fortunate that he has waited until now to write his autobiography, for he can place the past 30 tumultuous years, with the rise of militant Islam and the Middle East in constant turmoil, in their historical context. He is, for instance, pessimistic about the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood and similar Islamic movements.

[…]

His courage in placing historical accuracy above political opportunism, for instance in his work on slavery in Muslim countries, has made him persona non grata among the politically correct brigade that rules so many Western campuses and Middle Eastern faculties. He is notably scathing about Edward Said and demolishes not only Said’s claim to scholarship but also his motives: “I often found myself wondering where ignorance ended and deceit began.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia: 18-Year-Old Shia Protester Shot Martyred by Saudi Forces in Awamiyah + Pic

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — Saudi security forces have martyred a young protester during an anti-regime demonstration in the city of Awamiyah in the Kingdom’s Eastern Province. Abdallah Ja’afar al-Ojami, 18, was shot martyred by security forces on Friday as the protesters were demanding the immediate release of a prominent Shia cleric. Tension has been high in the Province since last week after security forces detained Sheikh Nemer al-Nemer with almost daily protest rallies in the oil-rich region.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria: Is Assad Threatening Israel?

Ron Ben-Yishai analyzes recent reports on movement of Syria’s chemical and biological weapons

Had the reports that Syria’s regime is taking chemical weapons out of storehouses reflected reality, they should have raised concerns around here. Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Army Chief Benny Gantz have already declared that Israel is closely monitoring Syria’s chemical and biological arsenals for fear that President Bashar Assad will order their transfer to Hezbollah in a desperate move before he falls — or worse, use these arms himself against Israel in a suicidal gesture.

However, for the time being it appears that Syria’s regime is not significantly changing the location and deployment of its chemical and biological weapons. At most, they are being moved to safer bases and storage areas, far away from regions controlled by the rebels or sites of battles.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Turkey: No Hookah Pipe Smoking for People Under 18

Hookahs must carry same health warnings as cigarettes

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA — Islamic nationalist Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s efforts to rid the nation of the smoking habit continue, as the National Assembly today voted to ban the use of hookah pipes by people under 18.

From now on all hookahs must carry the same health warnings as cigarette packaging, while the appearance of smoking products or implements is severely forbidden in advertising, including in non-tobacco related campaigns.

This follows on a 2009 nationwide ban on smoking in public places, offices, shops, bars, restaurants, stations, airports, stadiums, trains, taxis, airplanes, and children’s play areas.

“Turkey is in the front lines among Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) countries in the fight against tobacco,” said Muharrem Balci, president of the Islamic group Yesilay (Green Crescent) told Turkish media. One third of Turks still smoke, according to statistics.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Yemen: Deadly ‘Suicide’ Blast Hits Police Academy in Capital

Sanaa, 11 July (AKI) — At least 20 people died and dozens were injured in a large explosion believed to be a suicide bombing of a police academy in the capital Sanaa on Wednesday, Arabic satellite TV channel Al-Arabiya reported.

The suspected suicide blast took place as cadets were leaving the academy as classes finished, Al-Arabiya said.

There have been a string of bomb attacks since a US-backed military offensive drove Al-Qaeda linked militants out of Yemeni strongholds they seized during protests against former president Ali Abdullah Saleh’s rule.

The militants have vowed to carry out attacks across Yemen and in May a suicide bomber in army uniform killed over 90 people during a rehearsal for an army parade in the capital, striking at the hear of Yemen’s military establishment.

The attack was claimed by Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, described by US officials have described as the most dangerous wing of the global militant network.

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

Caucasus


Russian Forces Say Kill 8 Militants in Caucasus

(Reuters) — Russian special forces have killed eight militants, including two regional commanders of insurgent groups, in the country’s turbulent North Caucasus region, officials said on Saturday.

More than a decade after federal forces drove separatists from power in a war in Chechnya, Russia is still struggling to contain an Islamic insurgency across the mainly Muslim Caucasus region. Islamist insurgents claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at Moscow’s Domodedovo airport that killed 37 people in January 2011 and twin bombings that killed 40 people in the Moscow metro in 2010.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Two Attacks Target Head of Women’s Rights and Intelligence Chief

Two attacks, yesterday and this morning. Hanifa Safi head of the women’s affairs department of the province of Laghman killed by a bomb planted in his car. Ahmad Khan, top military chief and close to Karzai died in a suicide bombing that killed 22 people. No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Kabul (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Attacks against leading Afghan personalities continue. This morning at Aybak (Samangan), a bomb killed Ahmad Khan, head of the province of Samangan. The attack, which occurred during a wedding party, left more than 22 dead and 40 wounded. It came just one day after the tragic death of Hanifa Safi (pictured), head of the Department for women’s affairs of the eastern Afghan province of Laghman (eastern Afghanistan), among the most influential women in Afghanistan, who was killed by a bomb placed under the car in which she was traveling with her husband. At the moment nobody has claimed the two attacks. This morning, Taliban leaders issued a statement in which they deny any involvement.

Experts say the attack against Khan is related to the diatribes among Afghan ethnic groups for control of the country. Originally from Uzbekistan, he was a strong supporter of President Karzai’s Pashtun faction, which in recent years has woven several alliances with ethnic Uzbeks and Tajiks in an effort to give way to reconciliation with the Taliban.

If the death of Khan seems to have ties to political roots in the internal battle for power, no one can explain the murder of Hanifa Safi. She was engaged for years in defending the rights of Afghan women and was a symbol of change after years of Taliban rule. Jan Kubis, UN representative in Kabul, said that the entire population is shocked by this news. “The killing — he says — of a courageous person who dedicated her life to serving her country, devoting herself to improving the status of women is an insult to all of Afghanistan.”

Khan and Hanifa Safi join the sad list of leaders and politicians engaged in dialogue who have been killed between 2011 and 2012. Among these, Burhanuddin Rabbani, President of the Council for Peace in Afghanistan and head of dialogue with Taliban, killed by a suicide bomber Sept. 20, 2011.

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



Afghanistan: Top Afghan MP Killed in Suicide Attack at Daughter’s Wedding

A prominent Afghan MP and strongman was assassinated by a suicide bomber at his daughter’s wedding in a blast that killed at least 22 guests.

The lone suicide bomber killed Ahmad Khan Samangani and other high-ranking local security officials when he struck at the entrance to a hall where the wedding was being held. The provincial head of the Afghan intelligence service was among those killed and local hospitals reported at least 40 others were wounded. The blast struck at around 8am in Aybak, capital of the northern province of Samangan, a local police spokesman said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Taliban Admission of Unwinnable War Could Open the Door to Peace

Either side ought to provide the platform for serious peace talks

by Julian Borger

The recognition by the US-led coalition in Afghanistan and now by a senior Taliban commander that the war in Afghanistan is unwinnable by either side ought to provide the platform on which serious peace talks are conducted. But getting from a conducive environment to actual negotiations can take years. There is pride to be swallowed, there are constituencies to be appeased, and then there is the constant temptation to struggle on for just one more fighting season in the hope of piling up bargaining chips to bring to the table. All the while children, women and men, civilians and fighters alike, continue to die in a prolonged endgame leading inexorably to a predictable stalemate. What matters most now is whether that endgame is negotiated or fought out.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Canada’s Afghan Legacy: Failure at Dahla Dam

by Paul Watson

SHAH WALI KOT, AFGHANISTAN-Heavy snow falling high in the Hindu Kush lifts the spirits of farmers far to the south as they scrape out a living in the Taliban’s desert heartland.

The harder winter pounds the distant peaks, the happier they are. Their fate rides on the rivers of meltwater that flow south each spring, winding through a parched land, filling a network of canals that bring new life to dust-blown furrows. Kandahar’s dirt-poor farmers feel blessed this year: winter was harsh in the mountains, so spring brought lots of water to give their crops a good start. But now the water is running low as the scorching summer heat rises. And the farmers worry that most of God’s fleeting gift will hurry past them along the province’s main irrigation system, as it has for decades, leaving crops to shrivel under a punishing summer sun.

Canada had committed $50 million to cleaning up and repairing the irrigation network and the dam that supplies it, but Afghan farmers and officials complain that the project wasted money, taught villagers to expect handouts and lined corrupt people’s pockets. And after all those costly mistakes, the outdated Dahla Dam’s reservoir is so full of silt that it can’t hold enough water to get crops through the driest months. “I just want to say to Canadians that if you pave our canals with gold, what can we do with it?” chided Meerab Zakirya, 52, a Mandisar village canal manager. He has to answer to about 1,000 angry Daman district farmers when water runs out. “If we don’t have water, our main problem is not solved,” he added, both hands clenched to the arms of a white plastic patio chair. “Me, I don’t need money. I want real work. If you want to do something, do it the right way.”

Similar complaints echo across the thousands of desert farms that Canada has struggled to irrigate, into crumbling schools Canadian aid money built, and through the halls of a deeply corrupt justice system Canada helped support despite good intentions. There are two cardinal rules of development aid: projects must be closely monitored to make sure money isn’t wasted or lost to theft and corruption; and they should be sustainable, so projects survive after foreign experts move on. After a month-long investigation in Kandahar’s war zone, it’s clear that Canada failed on both counts, tarnishing a legacy that thousands of Canadian troops and civilians died or suffered debilitating wounds trying to build.

The war in Afghanistan was Canada’s biggest overseas mission since the Korean War more than half a century ago. It was also the bloodiest and most expensive. Since 2002, 158 Canadian troops have been killed in Afghanistan. Four Canadian civilians also perished: two aid workers, a diplomat and a journalist. Canada spent $1.65 billion on reconstruction and development in Afghanistan from the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001 through last year. Ottawa has committed another $300 million from 2011 to 2014 for development projects and humanitarian assistance. Since the Harper government gave up the fight in Kandahar province and pulled Canadian combat troops out last fall, uncomfortable questions remain.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: For Karnataka Catholics, The Government is Violating Minority Rights

The state’s chief minister plans to limit minority rights to schools where at least 75 per cent of students belong to minorities. Most minority schools would be excluded. For the archbishop of Bangalore, the government is twisting the law to “harass minorities” and “turn Karnataka into a Hindu state.”

Bangalore (AsiaNews) — Catholic believers and clergy plan to turn to the Supreme Court in an attempt to stop the state government from violating minority rights. Speaking to AsiaNews, Mgr Bernard Moras, archbishop of Bangalore and president of the Karnataka Region Catholic Bishops’ Council (KRCBC), slammed some statements made by the former state’s chief minister, D V Sadananda Gowda, which could cripple minority schools. For the latter, only schools where 75 per cent of the students are from minority communities would be granted “minority status”. Otherwise, they would not be entitled the privileges provided by the Right to Education Act, which imposes compulsory education between 6 and 14.

On 14 April, the Supreme Court ruled that public and private schools must establish a 25 per cent quota for poor students. However, the court exempted minority schools that are not publicly funded. Such a rule would have imposed an undue financial burden on educational facilities that are already open to disadvantaged children and teens. If the proposed Karnataka state law were to be adopted, various minority schools would be forced to close, especially in rural areas, because they could not meet the 75 per cent non-Hindu quota.

For Mgr Moras, who will lead a delegation representing 95 Catholic educational societies before the courts, both diocesan and others, state authorities are only playing with the definition of minority schools in order “to persecute, intimidate and harass” the vulnerable Christian community.

“The Supreme Court has already ruled on the various points of the Right to Education Act and its decision does not need to be interpreted,” the prelate explained. “A minority school is such by virtue of the composition of its management board, not of its student population.”

The archbishop is equally critical of the state government’s attempt to turn Karnataka in a Hindu state. “The authorities have introduced in school textbooks the word ‘saffranisation’ (Hindu nationalist colour) as well as elements of Hindu mythology and philosophy to shape the minds of young people. We challenged this, but no one has done anything, except the government, which has spent 111 million rupees (US$ 2 million) to print its books.”

“We are not alone in this struggle,” Mgr Moras noted. “Sikh and Muslim communities are also concerned. The government is after every minority. All we demand is to see our constitutional rights respected and guaranteed.”

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



India: Thousands Pray at ‘Mosque’ Site

NEW DELHI: The discovery of Mughal-era ruins near Jama Masjid drew thousands of worshippers to the site on Friday. Delhi Police said close to 9,000 people offered namaaz at the site, believed to contain remains of the 17th-century Akbarabadi Masjid that was demolished by the British after the Revolt of 1857.

Police said members of the Muslim community led by Matia Mahal MLA Shoaib Iqbal took ownership of the remains and initiated steps to repair and preserve them. “This mosque is associated with the freedom movement of 1857. People used to gather here and plan strategies against the British rule. On Friday, people offered prayers here after 155 years. Delhi Police and the administration, too, supported us. We will erect makeshift shades to protect people from the rain while offering namaaz,” Iqbal said. He added that Friday prayers will be regularly offered henceforth.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Eight Men Dressed Like Police Abduct Christian Pastor

The kidnappers get Rev Victor Samuel to follow them claiming his wife had filed a complaint against him. Both she and his family deny the claim. Catholic priest points the finger at police because they “neither denied nor confirmed” whether the kidnappers were “actual agents or criminals.” For Pakistan, it is both “shameful and a failure.”

Toba Tek Singh (AsiaNews) — A strange incident has traumatised the Christian community in Toba Tek Singh (Punjab province). Eight armed men, dressed like police officers, abducted Rev Victor Samuel, the local pastor, on 7 July. The community, which has not heard from him since then, is scared because police neither denied nor confirmed the involvement of fellow agents in his disappearance. For Fr Bonnie Mendes, the incident is “shameful” because “the family, community and nation must know if the state is involved, and, if it is, why it abducted Rev Samuel.”

The clergyman was in his office the day he was seized. At one point, four armed men dressed like police officers suddenly came into his office, with a search warrant issued by a Lahore judge.

The alleged agents told Rev Samuel that his American-born former wife, April, had laid a complaint against him concerning some jewels he was supposed to return to her.

The men questioned him about his marriage, checked his computer and took him and his brother, Sikander Samuel, to a police station on a jeep. However, on the way, the kidnappers let the brother go and drove off with the clergyman. Since then, his fate is unknown.

The family went to the Toba Sek Singh police station where they filed a missing person report. A local police officer, Ahsan Raza, contacted the reverend’s former wife who denied filing any complaint against the clergyman. Instead, she told the officer that she was happily re-married and that she held no personal grudge against Rev Samuel.

The clergyman’s brother Sikander confirmed the woman’s statement. “My brother married April in 2007,” he told AsiaNews. “After three years, she went back to America, only to return to Pakistan the following year. They got a divorce and she marry Kashif Masih, one of Victor’s friends, and now lives in the city of Sahiwal. Their separation was consensual, without any animosity. Their daughter, my nice, lives with her mother in Sahiwal.”

“Had they been real police agents, they would have brought him before a court within 24 hours,” Fr Mendes explained. “If he was abducted, police should conduct a real investigation to tell the country who the kidnappers are. Whatever the case, police have failed. Now Pakistan has another missing person.”

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



Shiite Genocide Continues in Pakistan; Two People Martyred by Firing of Wahhabi Terrorists

‘Rehmat Ali’ Martyred by Firing of a Terrorist group in Quetta

Sipah-e-Sahaba terrorist group martyred another Shia Muslim in Quetta city on Thursday. The terrorists targeted Rehmat Ali son of Juma on Kirani Road. Rehmat Ali succumbed to bullet injuries on the spot. His body was shifted to Bolan Medical Centre.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Anti-Mosque Agitator Paul Weston: Islam is Worse Than Nazism

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — Members of Gungahlin’s evangelical community are distributing extremist material from overseas in their campaign against the construction of a mosque on The Valley Avenue. A senior pastor at a Gungahlin evangelical church contacted The Canberra Times and supplied a video of far-right agitator Paul Weston, the chairman of the British Freedom Party.

[…]

[JP note: It is.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigeria: Christians: Place Boko Haram on Black List

(AGI) Washington — Nigerian Christian leader asked the US to place Boko Haram on the black list of terror groups. Ayo Oritsejafor, president of Nigerian Christian leaders, believes that placing on the black list only three leaders of the group that claimed dozens of attacks against Christian in Nigeria, “is like saying that Osama Bin Laden is a terrorist without conisdering that Al Qaeda is a terro organization.” This is like “sending a clear message not only to the Nigerian federal government, but also to the rest of the world, that the murder of Christians and Muslims which respect Islam, is an acceptable loss,” criticized Ayo Oritsejafor.

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



Nigeria: Tension in Onitsha as Muslims Protest Plan to Demolish Mosque

There was palpable tension in the commercial city of Onitsha yesterday when the Muslim community comprising Igbos, Hausas and Yorubas resisted alleged plot by the Anambra state government to demolish their Central Mosque located close to the Bridgehead market. Saturday Nation gathered that the Muslims numbering over 1000 and chanting “Allah is the greatest”, maintained that the plan by the state government to destroy their place of worship was a fallout of the cold war against them in the state.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Suicide Bomber Targets Maiduguri Mosque

A suicide bomber has killed five people at a mosque in the north-eastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri, security officials say.

The attack, reportedly by a teenage boy, narrowly missed one of Nigeria’s most revered Muslim traditional leaders, the Shehu of Borno.

The blast happened at a mosque near his palace in the centre of the city as Friday prayers finished. Maiduguri is the stronghold of the militant Islamist group Boko Haram. BBC Nigeria analyst Jimeh Saleh says the group has not targeted a mosque before, but it is known to have assassinated Muslim leaders.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Obama Excuses Chavez While American Rots in Cuba

Except for some innuendo in the mainstream press that the Republicans are “desperate” for an issue to use in the presidential campaign, Obama’s mind-boggling statement about Marxist Hugo Chavez of Venezuela not having “a serious national security impact” on the United States is getting little national media attention. But like the private conversation with outgoing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in March, the comments about Chavez, who operates Venezuela as a satellite of Communist Cuba, are nothing less than a scandal.

Obama told Medvedev that he would have more “flexibility” to make concessions to the Russians after he is re-elected. The comments were accidentally picked up by an open microphone.

The exception in media coverage of the Chavez remarks was, as usual, Fox News, where Mitt Romney made headlines by telling Neil Cavuto, “I was stunned by his comments, and shocked by them. This is Hugo Chavez, this is Venezuela. This is Chavez who has invited Iran in, who has invited Hezbollah. Hezbollah, of course, being a surrogate and a proxy for Iran would potentially have access to weapons that could be used against us. This is Chavez who champions the Bolivarian Revolution movement and is spreading dictatorships and tyranny throughout Latin America. This is Chavez who supports FARC and other terrorist activity in nations like Colombia, that are our friends. The idea that this nation, this president doesn’t pose a national security threat to this country is simply naïve. It’s an extraordinary admission on the part of this president to be completely out of touch with what’s happened in Latin America. Latin America is critical to America, United States of America. And the President needs to focus on what’s happening there, what Chavez is doing, what the Castros are doing. These are people who call for terrible acts against America and to suggest that somehow this is isn’t important is, I think, a very misguided and misdirected thought on the part of our President.”

Obama’s remarks come just a few weeks after former CIA officer Brian Latell told the Heritage Foundation that the Venezuelan regime’s spy operations have become an “adjunct” of Castro’s intelligence service, the DGI.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Bring in Migrants to Cut Billions From Deficit, Says Osborne’s Watchdog

OBR figures sound alarm on plans for drastic limits to immigration

Higher levels of immigration over the next 50 years would spare taxpayers from the need to endure much greater austerity, the Government’s fiscal watchdog has said. The ageing population will put growing financial pressure on future taxpayers and governments, and Britain will need to undergo an extra £17bn of spending cuts and tax rises to bring down the national debt to 40 per cent of gross domestic product by 2062, the Office for Budget Responsibility said. This is on top of the £120bn fiscal consolidation the Chancellor, George Osborne, is pushing through as he seeks to close the budget deficit. But higher levels of immigration would help the economy to grow faster and ease the pressure to cut spending, according to the OBR. Boosting immigration would prove controversial, however, because the Coalition has pledged to reduce the annual figure to the “tens of thousands” of people by the end of this parliament in 2015, down from the current official level of 260,000 a year.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Croatia: Assisted Reproduction Law Liberalized

Opposition from Church, conservatives

(ANSAMed) — ZAGREB, JULY 13 — Parliament today approved a new version of the assisted reproduction law, guaranteeing the right to assistance to all couples unable to have children naturally, including unmarried ones, as well as single women.

The measure, which passed by an 88-vote majority on 151 seats, expands the existing law, which is among the most liberal in Europe because it allows for freezing embryos as well as sperm and eggs. But the law still explicitly bans assisted reproduction for lesbian couples.

The law favors the use of sperm and eggs from the couple as a first option, but allows for external sperm and/or egg donors in cases where the couple’s own are not viable or to avoid transmission of hereditary diseases. It also allows for embryo donations. Embryos can be frozen for 5 years in specialized centers, and for an additional 5 years on the couple’s request.

A maximum of 12 eggs can be artificially fertilized, and a maximum of 2 embryos can be implanted in the woman’s body per procedure, which can be repeated a maximum of 6 times.

Surrogate motherhood is still banned. The law also calls for parents to inform artificially conceived offspring of their origin once they come of age, including the identity of their biological donors. Some opponents of this measure argued it will limit potential donations, especially from men.

The new measures were voted against by center-right parties, and was opposed by most religious organizations. The Croatian Episcopal Conference called the new law “profoundly immoral and inhumane, because it will dissolve the fundamental values of family and marriage.” Christian Croatian bishops said freezing embryos “does not guarantee life to people conceived in this way, but rather sentences them to death.” Damir Jelic, vice president of the Croatian Democratic Union, the biggest opposition party, compared the new law to “the human tragedies of the Holocaust and the crimes of the Communist regime.” “No one who feels one or more measures of the new law are unethical is forced to undergo them,” the government said in its defense. “We must give couples who want children but are unable to the opportunity to choose, and to be assisted in their choice by the public health system.” One in 6 couples in Croatia have trouble conceiving, according to Health Ministry data.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: 50% Do Not Want Gay Friend, Survey

Intolerance towards homosexuals remains high

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, JUNE 27 — Homosexuals are still meeting strong intolerance and bias in Serbia, according to a recent survey. A third of people interviewed in this poll would not like to have a gay or lesbian neighbour, and nearly half of them don’t want them as a friend. In the survey, carried out in April by Strategic Marketing based on a sample of 1000 people, 68% of interviewees said they believe Gay Pride is only meant to show a different sexual orientation, while just 29% think the event is organised to denounce the discrimination of homosexuals. Only 26% of people in Serbia, according to the survey, think the state should defend the rights of sexual minority groups, on the same level as any other minority, while 62% have different ideas. Of these 62%, 28% said that homosexuality is a disease, while 34% see gays and lesbians as harmful.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


What is Sharia?

The Muslim way of life, dictated by sharia law, leaves no room for prized Western tolerance, “multiculturalism,” and religious freedom. We take these so for granted that it is hard for us to imagine any other way to live. However, our involvement in Muslim countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan and the middle east has exposed the sordid treatment of women and raw tribalism of that culture.

Western hospitality has welcomed millions with this mindset. As we watch their failure to assimilate as generations of other immigrants have done, concern is growing. And the threat is very real. One need only look to Europe. France has Muslim enclaves that are no-go areas for local police. England has whole communities where polygamy, honor killings, jihad indoctrination, flogging of children and women are practiced. Non-Muslims are not welcome or even afraid to enter these areas.

One school teacher in England wrote a telling letter how things have changed since the school chose to accommodate the influx of Muslim students: “Out went nativity plays and in came winter festivals, no making of Easter cards drawing pictures of Easter bunnies, no art classes drawing your friend’s face, in came halal meat for school dinners without asking all parents.

“Boys and girls are to sit apart. No changing for PE for girls. No mixed swimming lessons. No admiring of the teacher’s litter of tiny puppies. No after-school activities. Little girls cocooned in nicabs and hijabs, quiet and demure, and as I have discovered, with sore welts on their backs for not making prayers correctly. One such little child with welts on her back disclosed to me that her brother of 13 years had also been badly beaten and sent away to relatives in another city so as not to have the acts discovered.” (From Europe News, May 24, 2012.)

No need to study sharia law; just look at the results when it is in force.

[Return to headlines]



Why is Islam So Dangerous?

Islam is dangerous because Western man assumes it works by the same ground rules as the Judeo-Christian culture. But it doesn’t. Islam’s code of ethics was born in the caldron of seventh century middle eastern tribal warfare.

Although we have strayed in recent years, our society is still rooted in biblical concepts. Obedience to the ten commandments ensures a peaceful culture with maximum personal freedom.

A brief comparison with Islam produces a striking difference.

[Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120713

Financial Crisis
» Croatia: Gov’t to Privatize Biggest Public Insurance Co.
» Germany Rejects Greek Plea for More Time
» Greece Awash in Crime and Guns
» Greek Unemployment Hits Record Level
» Italy: Monti Hits Back at Accusations of ‘Social Butchery’
» Italy: Officials Irked by Moody’s Downgrade
» Moody’s Probe Wraps as Ratings Agency Downgrades Italy
» Situation Very Difficult, Croatia Finance Minister
» Spanish Civil Servants Protest Wage Cuts
 
USA
» Brown Appoints California’s First Muslim Superior Court Judge
» Confronting Pamela Geller
» Florida: Muslims Say Group’s Police Training Maligns Faith
» House GOP Intel Committee Chair Calls Bachmann’s Muslim Brotherhood Witch Hunt ‘Very Important’
» No Veep Condi
» Was America First Colonised by Two Cultures at Once?
» What Communists Were for Joe McCarthy, The Muslim Brotherhood is for Michele Bachmann
 
Canada
» Mounties Instructed to Avoid ‘Inflammatory’ Islamist Terms
» Six Security Threats in Mounties’ Crosshairs
 
Europe and the EU
» European Armies Recruiting Muslim Soldiers
» Germany: Do Baby Hatches Really Save Lives?
» Greek Orthodox Head Defends Church Over Tax Scandals
» Italy: Berlusconi Wants to be Premier for Fourth Time, May Run in Spring
» Lithuania Warned on Soviet Power Plant
» Romania’s Interim President Fires Back at EU Critics
» UK: Firm at Centre of Olympic Security Shambles ‘Has Seen Fee Rise by £53m’
» UK: Fishermead Says No But Council Says Yes to New ‘Mosque’
» UK: Islamophobic Buddhist Sect Gets Planning Permission for Meditation Centre in Lambeth
» UK: I Hate the Olympics
» UK: Irish and Al Qaeda Terrorists in Olympic Threat
» UK: John Terry Cleared: Chelsea Captain Not Guilty of Racial Slur on Anton Ferdinand
» UK: Keep Britain Clean — No Muslims Please
» UK: Muslim Women Quiz Baroness
» UK: Owen Jones: Islamophobia — for Muslims, Read Jews. And be Shocked
» UK: The UFO Files: Aliens ‘Might Come Here for Holidays’
 
North Africa
» A Visit to the World’s Deadliest Dive Site
» Caroline Glick: Obama’s Spectacular Failure
» Egypt: Slapping, Stabbing and Slaying for Sharia
» Egypt: Two US Tourists Kidnapped in Sinai
» US Policy on Egypt Prepares for a Protracted State of Chaos
 
Middle East
» Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood to Boycott Early Elections
» MI6 Chief Sir John Sawers: ‘We Foiled Iranian Nuclear Weapons Bid’
» Qatari Investors Buy Valentino
» Syria Unrest: ‘Massacre Leaves 200 Dead’ In Tremseh
» Syria’s Bloody Troubles Are More Complex Than the Media’s Dreamy-Eyed Coverage Would Have You Believe
» Syria Crisis: Tremseh ‘Massacre’ — Live Updates
» Turkey: Winning Arab World Hearts, Minds Through Soaps
» Turkey: Erdogan’s Party Wants to Limit Press Freedom
» Turkey: Erdogan Most Popular Leader in Sunnite Countries
» Valentino Sold to Qatar Royal Family
» White House Not Interested in Iranian Role in Syria
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Suicide Bombers Kill Two Children in Kandahar
» Indonesia: Court Chief Tells Merkel of ‘Freedom to be Atheist or Communist’
» Pakistan: Militants Who Attacked Pakistan Village, Took Hostages, Flee Back to Afghanistan
» Three Killed in Afghanistan Blasts
 
Australia — Pacific
» Byron Bay Hosts Muslim Students
» Extremist Material Distributed in Mosque Battle
» Gungahlin: Mosque Phobia Moves to Australia
» New Zealand: Foundations Set for Massive Manurewa Mosque
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Mali: Revealed: Proof That Al-Qaeda’s Men Are Operating in Northern Mali
» Most Complete Skeleton of Ancient Relative of Man Found
» Somalia: Documents Found on Body of Al Qaeda’s African Leader Detail Chilling Plans for Kidnapping, Attacks
 
Immigration
» Foreign Workers Face Tighter Rules in Singapore
» Italy: Permits for Migrants Who Tell on Exploiting Bosses
» Refugee Hopes for New Life in Australia Come to Dust
» Saudi Arabia: Thousands of Immigrant Workers Die From Exploitation, Torture and Alcoholism
» Spain: Migrant Pressure Rises on Melilla, Door to Europe
» The European Muslim and Islamic Catastrophe: Will Those Responsible be Prosecuted?
 
Culture Wars
» Muslim and Christian Scholars Team Up to Ask Hotel Chains to Stop Offering Pay-Per-View Porn
 
General
» Asteroid Miners to Hitch a Ride With Virgin Galactic
» Earth’s Water Piggybacked on Asteroids, Not Comets
» Message of Islam Can Always Prevail Over Islamophobia
» Why Not Confront Muslim Extremism?
» Why the Courts Will Always Favour the Left — in Britain and America

Financial Crisis


Croatia: Gov’t to Privatize Biggest Public Insurance Co.

Croatia Osiguranje has 1/3 national market share

(ANSAMed) — ZAGREB, JULY 13 — The center-left Croatian government plans to privatize Croatia Osiguranje (CO), the country’s biggest insurance company with one third of national market share, local press made known today.

The state, which owns 82% of CO shares, is putting 50% of these on the block at an estimated value of 270 million euros, but plans to maintain a 25% control in order to have a say in strategic company decisions.

“We took this decision because new capitals will enable CO will to reinforce its market share, especially in the life insurance sector, and also because the state needs the money for deficit financing,” Finance Minister Slavko Linic said.

Over the next 30 days, the government will be accepting bids from prospective investment advisors, who will then present the government with a sales strategy and possible buyers, Linic explained. The government recently also privatized Hrvatska Postanska Banka, the country’s sole remaining publicly-owned bank, in an effort to fulfill its campaign promise to reduce public debt from 4.1% of GDP in 2011 to 2.8%, through a mix of state property sell-offs, tax hikes, and savings incentives.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Germany Rejects Greek Plea for More Time

Earlier this week, Greek leaders suggested they would ask for more time to hit austerity targets demanded by their creditors. Germany, though, is opposed, according to Friday media reports. IMF head Christine Lagarde also said it is “premature to discuss extension.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Awash in Crime and Guns

Kalashnikovs the weapon of choice

(ANSAMed) — ATHENS, JULY 5 — As in every recession, crime is on the rise in Greece, and handgun sales are rising along with it. The country is averaging 10 armed conflicts a month between police and thieves, and 35 people have died in armed robberies in the first six months of 2012, according to police sources. More than 40 armed gangs have been demolished in the past two years, but 15 gangs are still out there robbing banks, stores and homes. Greece averages 7,000 armed robberies a year, or 20 a day, and the weapon of choice is the Kalashnikov machine gun, according to To Vima weekly. “We import them from Albania along with other weapons, usually hidden among livestock,” one arms trafficker who asked to remain anonymous told To Vima. “There are over 1000 Kalashnikov deposits all over Athens, and we sell them in small quantities.

The most expensive is the Glock, at 4,000 euros, the Zastava model costs 1,000 euros and the folding ones between 1,200-1,500 euros.” There are 600,000 Kalashnikov machine guns in circulation in Greece, and demand is on the rise due to increased police presence on the streets, the anonymous arms trafficker explained.

Law-abiding citizens, usually ones who have already been victims of a robbery or a mugging, are also arming themselves, mostly with rubber bullet weapons.

“Arms sales rose 60% in the past few months, and arms importers have exhausted their stocks,” Andreas Plastourgos, owner of a gun shop in the working class Athens neighborhood of Peristeri told Newsitgr.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek Unemployment Hits Record Level

Unemployment figures in Greece for the month of April hit 22.5 percent, a new record. Analysts predict the figure will worsen despite a dip during the summer months. Greece has been in recession for five years. Its economy is expected to contract by 6.9 percent in 2012, reports Reuters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti Hits Back at Accusations of ‘Social Butchery’

Premier says Squinzi’s comments will hit borrowing costs

(ANSA) — Rome, July 9 — Premier Mario Monti has hit back after the leader of industrial employers’ confederation Confindustria, Giorgio Squinzi, used the term “social butchery” when criticising the government’s spending review.

The spending-review package features, among other things, big cuts to health expenditure and to the public-sector workforce as part of a bid to raise 26 billion euros over the next three years. It comes after Monti’s emergency government of non-political technocrats introduced a series of controversial economic reforms, including labour-market measures that make it easier for companies to dismiss staff, and an austerity package of tax hikes and spending cuts in December. Monti said Squinzi’s comments risked damaging market confidence in Italy’s ability to weather the eurozone debt crisis and push up the country’s borrowing costs even higher.

“Statements like this cause the (bond yield) spread and interest rates to increase,” the premier said. “This does not just affect the State, it hits companies too”.

Squinzi’s comments were also criticised by some figures inside the business confederation.

“These statements are damaging and they certainly do not express the position of the civil, responsible part of part of Confindustria,” said Ferrari Chairman and former Confindustria head Luca Cordero di Montezemolo.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Officials Irked by Moody’s Downgrade

Some call for commission of inquiry against ‘campaign’

(ANSA) — Rome, July 13 — Italian officials were irked by Moody’s double downgrade of Italian debt Friday.

“I think our manufacturing country is much stronger than what appears in Moody’s assessments,”, said Giorgio Squinzi, head of the industrial employers’ association Confindustria.

Fabrizio Cicchitto, Senate whip for ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, said, “the problem lies in Europe rather than Italy”.

PdL colleague Rocco Girlanda called Moody’s “latest attack on Italy the umpteenth interference of a political nature by a private agency against a sovereign state which is making major efforts to raise the euro and tackle its huge public debt”.

Girlanda called for a commission of inquiry into what he termed a campaign by Moody’s.

Francesco Boccia of the centre-left Democratic Party called on Italian regulators to intervene against what he called an unfair downgrade, just after Italy’s debt-cutting moves had been given pass marks by the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

Italian politicians have reacted similarly to past downgrades by Moody’s and Italian prosecutors are investigating the ratings agency.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Moody’s Probe Wraps as Ratings Agency Downgrades Italy

Accused of market manipulation

(ANSA) — Rome, July 13 — Italian prosecutors closed a probe Friday into Moody’s on the same day the New York-based ratings agency downgraded the entire country to two notches above junk status.

The investigation, launched by prosecutors in the southern town of Trani, accuses Moody’s of “spreading false, unfounded and imprudent judgements” on Italy’s financial, economic and banking system, and “manipulating the market”. The news of a Moody’s downgrade Friday came just hours before Italy, the eurozone’s third largest economy, was due to go to the financial markets to raise some 5.25 billion euros in an auction of medium and long-term government bonds.

Responding to complaints from consumer associations Adusbef and Federconsumatori, the same office has opened probes into the two other major New York ratings agencies, Fitch and Standard & Poor’s. “Adusbef and Federconsumatori recalls the damages caused by the three ratings-agency sisters,” said the groups in a statement, calculating damages to the Italian economy of 120 billion euros due to the downgrades. Financial police in January searched the Milan offices of Fitch six days after S&P downgraded Italy along with eight other countries including France and Spain.

The Trani probe into suspected market manipulation began last year and gathered pace after the S&P downgrade and Fitch’s threat to follow suit.

The pan-European markets regulator last week opened an investigation into whether the three big US ratings agencies are sufficiently “rigorous and transparent” in the way they evaluate banks.

The two-year-old European Securities and Markets Authority (EMSA) was alarmed by the rating agencies’ mass downgrade of 15 banks last month, and expects to finish the probe by the end of the year.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Situation Very Difficult, Croatia Finance Minister

Zagreb might have to ask IMF for aid

(ANSAMed) — ZAGREB, JULY 11 — “Croatia’s economic situation is extremely difficult and will get worse next year, to the point where we might have to ask the IMF for help,” Finance Minister Slavko Linic told Globus weekly in an interview today.

“There is no other way to define a situation in which GDP is in permanent decline and unemployment is constantly on the rise,” the minister said. “Our foreign debt right now is 47 billion euros (equal to 100% of GDP) and public spending is too high. To really solve our problems we should be spending more, and we have no other choice but to spend less. If the real economy does not recover by the end of the year, 2013 will be even worse. We need to grow at least 5% a year, anything less will not allow us to revert this trend.” Croatian GDP contracted in the first semester, but should post overall 0.8% growth by the end of 2012, according to the latest statistics.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spanish Civil Servants Protest Wage Cuts

Spanish civil servants took to the streets on Friday to protest against a second round of pay cuts. The fonctionnaires are normally entitled to 14-months of pay but Madrid wants to scale it back as part of its larger package to shave €65 billion off the government’s budget through 2015.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Brown Appoints California’s First Muslim Superior Court Judge

The Los Angeles-based Muslim Public Affairs Council said it had advocated for Dhanidina’s appointment for more than a year. “Dhanidina’s appointment is an important step in ensuring that California’s leaders accurately reflect the communities present in our great state,” said Aziza Hasan, MPAC’s Southern California Government Relations director, in a press statement.

Dhanidina earned his law degree at UCLA, where he served as the co-chair of the Asian Pacific Islander Law Students Association. He earned his bachelor’s degree at Pomona College, where he founded the first Muslim Students’ Association, and currently sits on the Board of Governors of the Asian Pacific American Bar Association Los Angeles.

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]



Confronting Pamela Geller

by Harris Zaffar

“As a Jew, I am offended to my core. Muslims have no right to invoke Moses and Abraham. This is a delegitimization of Judaism. It is offensive and vile. And while Jesus is not my guy, the same thing goes for him. It is a delegitimization of Christianity. These are not Muslim prophets.”

This typical quote from Pamela Geller perfectly represents her perplexing manner of argumentation and the blatant ignorance deeply rooted in her work. In this particular case, Geller takes exception with Islam’s acceptance of the prophethood of Abraham, Moses and Jesus Christ. Whereas most people view common beliefs as a means of building bridges of kinship between Jews, Christians and Muslims, Geller feels Muslim’s belief in such prophets is “offensive and vile.” Apparently she feels that Jews have exclusive rights to believe in Moses and Abraham. Paradoxically, her ignorance has no problem granting Christians the right to invoke Moses and Abraham without delegitimizing Judaism.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Florida: Muslims Say Group’s Police Training Maligns Faith

Law enforcement officials across Florida have been repeatedly exposed to training on Muslim extremism “full of inaccuracies, sweeping generalizations and stereotypes,” a complaint filed Wednesday claims. The classes have maligned the Prophet Muhammad and promulgated mistruths about Islam, according to the Council on American-Islamic Relations and a number of mosques and smaller Muslim organizations.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



House GOP Intel Committee Chair Calls Bachmann’s Muslim Brotherhood Witch Hunt ‘Very Important’

Yesterday on Center for Security Policy President Frank Gaffney’s radio show, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI) appeared to endorse Rep. Michele Bachmann’s (R-MN) paranoid quest to root out the Muslim Brotherhood’s alleged infiltration of the U.S. government. Gaffney himself is best known for promoting this particular conspiracy theory but Bachmann picked it up last month and sent letter to various federal departments’ inspectors general asking to them to investigate.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



No Veep Condi

by Diana West

Drudge posted a scare piece last night that gave me nightmares: Condi Rice is supposedly a frontrunner for the Romney 2012 ticket.

This Condi-flutter happened before in 2008 and I was horrified then, too.

Just on the most basic political calculations, you don’t have to be a high-priced political consultant to know that no voter who isn’t already attracted to Romney will flock to a Romney-Rice ticket. No black person, no woman, no state, no constituency would suddenly decide boost a Romney vote count just because Condi was there.

Second (and I can sense the Obama camp licking its chops), selecting Rice would link (manacle) Romney to George W. Bush — a political bonanza for Democrats!

Third, fourth, fifth, etc. are contained in a series of columns and posts I’ve previously written about Rice. The bottom line is that Condoleezza Rice looks at both the United State and the world through a very murky prism of race, seeing in the segregated South she was born in not only the template for struggle everywhere, but also the actors in struggle everywhere. This shockingly parochial view sharply limits her understanding of war and peace at home and abroad. Football Commissioner, fine. Nominee for Vice President, disastrous.

A selection below:…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Was America First Colonised by Two Cultures at Once?

What a difference a day makes. Some 25 hours after a comprehensive genetic study suggested humans colonised North America in three successive migrational waves, a new study suggests there might have been a fourth.

Genetic evidence published on Wednesday by David Reich of Harvard Medical School in Boston suggests that there were at least three migrations into the Americas from Asia. The first, sometime before 13,000 years ago, was the most important, leaving descendants throughout the two continents. The other two came later, and remained in the far north (Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature11258).

However, while Reich used samples from contemporary Native American groups in Canada, Central and Southern America, he had virtually no data from those in the US, because of political problems over the use of samples.

Today, Eske Willerslev of the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and colleagues report results of their analysis of stone tools and human DNA from the Paisley Caves in Oregon. The result suggests there may have been two migrations before 13,000 years ago rather than one. Because Reich identified two later migrations, the new result suggests there may have been four migrations into the Americas in total.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



What Communists Were for Joe McCarthy, The Muslim Brotherhood is for Michele Bachmann

by Aaron Rupar

Michele Bachmann thinks the Muslim Brotherhood has made “deep penetration” into the U.S. government, and she wants five federal agencies to launch an investigation into its influence. And you thought McCarthyism was a relic of the 1950s! In a June interview with radio host Sandy Rios, Bachmann said “It appears that there has been deep penetration in the halls of our United States government by the Muslim Brotherhood… that there are individuals who are associated with the Muslim Brotherhood who have positions, very sensitive positions, in our Department of Justice, our Department of Homeland Security, potentially even in the National Intelligence Agency.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Canada


Mounties Instructed to Avoid ‘Inflammatory’ Islamist Terms

OTTAWA — There is new trouble for the RCMP over a manual that tries to wash out terms like “Islamist” and “jihad” from officers’ mouths when they talk about terrorism. “Distorted and inflammatory linkages between Islam and terrorism can serve to convince Muslims — both in the West and in the larger Islamic world — that the West is, in fact, their enemy,” the manual says. That doesn’t impress anti-terror expert David Harris, of Insignis Strategic Research. “This is, if I may be blunt, an Islamist’s wet dream,” Harris said. “It misstates fundamentally the established history, and undermines warnings of many moderate Muslims about jihad and its possibilities.”

The manual, called Words Make Worlds, dates back to 2009 and also tells Mounties not to fear organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood, despite its terrorist links. American anti-terror expert Brian Michael Jenkins says cultural sensitivity is often appropriate, but the RAND Corp. advisor adds that terms the RCMP dislikes are needed to analyze security threats. “The term ‘jihad’ is on the banner of al-Qaida,” says Jenkins. “If they use it, I can use it.”

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has openly called “Islamicism” a threat to Canada, while Public Safety Canada’s counter-terrorism strategy refers to “Islamist extremism.” Still, Public Safety Minister Vic Toews said he doesn’t consider the RCMP’s soft language on terror a concession to Islam. “I think it’s a matter of moving sensitively in what is an area where we need the co-operation of these groups,” he said in Winnipeg. The RCMP had no one available for comment.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Six Security Threats in Mounties’ Crosshairs

OTTAWA — The RCMP expects to make arrests or otherwise “disrupt” at least six suspected terrorist and other national security threats in the coming months. The projection is contained in an RCMP headquarters’ planning document and offers no further details. Such estimates are generally based on the status and progress of ongoing national security criminal investigations, primarily within the force’s five Integrated National Security Enforcement Teams across the country, including one in Ottawa.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


European Armies Recruiting Muslim Soldiers

by Soeren Kern

Germany is seeking to recruit more Muslims into its army: it cannot find enough native Germans to fill its ranks after it abolished the draft. German Defense Minister Thomas de Maizière announced his intention to “multiculturalize” the German Bundeswehr (Federal Defense Force) during a June 20 headhunting mission to the Turkish capital Ankara, where he declared: “I want the [German] army to be representative of a cross-section of the German population.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germany: Do Baby Hatches Really Save Lives?

Germany has over 80 so-called baby hatches, where mothers can anonymously give up their children for adoption. But there is disagreement over whether the facilities help save lives, or if they actually give women the idea of dumping their newborns. Now the government is trying to regulate the legal gray area.

The “baby hatch” is largely hidden from view at the back of a parking lot. From a distance, it looks like no more than a dark hole in the white plastered wall of the clinic.

This facility — intended as a place where anyone can anonymously give up a baby — has been in place here in the town of Erbach im Odenwald in the German state of Hesse since mid-March. It is designed so that once the human cargo has been slid through the confines of the slot, the hatch can no longer be opened from outside.

The crib frame that stands behind the hatch is custom made. An alarm system is in place to alert caregivers when a baby has been placed inside the crib, and heat lamps ensure the child’s survival. Technically speaking, everything is here and ready for mothers or fathers who might wish to give up a newborn child anonymously.

Yet so far the baby hatch has remained locked shut, and it’s unclear whether the facility will ever go into operation. “We have been left totally uncertain,” says Christiane Karnovsky, 53, deputy director of the clinic. “We no longer know if it’s even legal to run this sort of facility.”

That’s a question that’s occupying many people in Germany these days. There are believed to be between 80 and 90 baby hatches in Germany, known here as Babyklappen, but no one knows the exact number. The operation of such facilities raises legal and ethical questions: Does the opportunity to potentially save a child’s life take precedence over that child’s right to later know his or her family background? What about the father’s rights, if a mother gives up a child without his knowledge? Might the very existence of such drop-off points plant the idea in women’s minds to get rid of their children in this supposedly simple way?

Those who run the facilities have been operating without a clear legal basis since the first baby hatch opened in Germany 12 years ago. Some specialists in this field have raised concerns that the subsequent handling of these children is just as nontransparent as the legal status of the operations as a whole.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek Orthodox Head Defends Church Over Tax Scandals

Taxes in Greece continue to slip through state scrutiny as some corporations, wealthy Greek-ship owning families, and the Greek Orthodox Church are either exempt or use loopholes to hide millions of euros.

In the first five months of 2012, the Greek ministry of finance registered a €300 million shortfall in collected taxes. The shortfall, notes the ministry, is primarily due to corporations having not submitted their taxes on time.

Meanwhile, ordinary Greek citizens are on the front-line of a tax collection scheme that has channelled revenue directly from their electricity bills into the state coffers to help plug the country’s debt.

Associate professor of economics Rapanos Vasileios at the University of Athens says that Greek ship owners are exempt from “some laws”. Most, he told this website, register their boats overseas like in the Cayman islands even if they fly the Greek flag.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Wants to be Premier for Fourth Time, May Run in Spring

Rome, 11 July (AKI) — Three-time Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi will be a candidate when Italians elect a premier no later than the Spring, according to a news report.

Berlusconi, 75, who in November resigned in disgrace during an out-of-control debt crisis, had expressed interest in taking on Italy’s largely ceremonial role of president but would leave the leadership for the country’s centre-right to a his successor as secretary of the People of Freedom party — forty-one-year-old Angelino Alfano.

Mario Monti and a group of un-elected technocrat ministers were appointed to implement cost cuts and reforms to rein in the world’s fourth-biggest debt load and boost confidence among international investors.

Berlusconi came to the decision to run after studying the political landscape and concluding he has enough popular support to win the national election, the Corriere della Sera newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Berlusconi last year appeared to have anointed Alfano as his successor, but Alfano on Wednesday on his Facebook page said he would support a candidacy by his much older mentor.

“If he decides to run, I’ll be at his side,” Alfano said.

The billionaire media tycoon will forego a summer vacation at his Sardinia estate to stay at his villa near Milan in order prepare for the campaign, the report said

Berlusconi is Italy’s most divisive politician. Critics say he has used power to create laws custom-made to solve his own legal problems. They say his playboy antics are an international embarrassment. But his supporters praise him as a skilful free-market populist who keeps communism at bay.

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



Lithuania Warned on Soviet Power Plant

The European Parliament warned Lithuania the European Commission may freeze funds aimed at decommissioning its Soviet-era nuclear power plant Ignalina unless it improves its management. Lithuania has until 17 July to convince the Commission it can dispense the available EU funds appropriately. Delays have threatened its 2029 projected completion date.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Romania’s Interim President Fires Back at EU Critics

(BUCHAREST) — Romania’s interim president shot back at European Union officials Friday after they pressured the ex-communist state to safeguard its democratic institutions amid a deepening political crisis.

Romania, one of Europe’s poorest countries, has been embroiled in political turmoil as the government of centre-left Prime Minister Victor Ponta has moved to impeach centre-right President Traian Basescu and curb the powers of the constitutional court.

The EU, the United States and other observers have voiced concerns that the country, which joined the EU in 2007, is undermining its democratic institutions amid the political battle.

Crin Antonescu, the interim president, warned in a speech on Friday: “The president of Romania, even the interim president, doesn’t take orders… from anyone except parliament and the Romanian people.”

His comments came the same day EU officials said they would maintain pressure on Romania to respect the rule of law, but the EU is learning it has relatively few tools at its disposal to sanction difficult members.

Romanian lawmakers last week voted to suspend Basescu in an impeachment drive to be decided in a July 29 national referendum.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Firm at Centre of Olympic Security Shambles ‘Has Seen Fee Rise by £53m’

The company responsible for the Olympic security debacle is being paid £53 million extra for its work, after London 2012 organisers increased its “management fee” almost tenfold.

Confidential Home Office documents seen by The Daily Telegraph show that G4S has had its fee for managing civilian security staff for the Games rise from £7.3 million to £60 million.

The fee the company takes for running its Olympic office has risen more than 10 times faster than its spending on recruitment, the documents show. The firm’s failure to provide enough staff for Olympic sites this week forced ministers to assign an extra 3,500 Armed Forces personnel to security work for the Games. The new military deployment yesterday led to intense scrutiny of the contract and prompted calls for G4S to be banned from future government work.

[…]

[Reader comment by country_exile on 13 July 2012 at 09:43 AM.]

They have had seven years to prepare for the Olympics. It is unbelievable that the security firm say they are unable to provide the security people they were contracted to do at a time of mass unemployment two weeks before the games start. It is beyond belief the government have not had a closer handle on this. In any company I have worked for, people would have got fired for this. If this doesn’t constitute incompetence of the first order, what does? My heart goes out to all the servicemen and their families whose holidays have been cancelled, their plans thrown into disarray. Yet again these clowns fall back on the only part of the state machine that actually works. What a shame they are making thousands of them redundant. A national disgrace. Disgusting actually.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Fishermead Says No But Council Says Yes to New ‘Mosque’

PLANS for a Sri Lankan Community Centre in Fishemead have been given the go-ahead despite angry protests by residents. Members of the Fishermead Residents’ Association, carrying banners and shouting slogans, met members of the council’s development control committee at a site visit at Fishermead Boulevard on Monday. The proposed Sri Lankan centre will see a new two-storey building with three classrooms, a meeting room, a gym, library, two separate commercial units and two large community halls — one to be used primarily as a place of worship which the residents’ association fears would become a mosque. Harry Sharpe, vice-chairman, said he was not against the idea of mosques, but that he felt it was in the wrong place.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Islamophobic Buddhist Sect Gets Planning Permission for Meditation Centre in Lambeth

The biggest Tibetan Buddhist meditation centre in London will be created following planning approval — despite protests from Muslim and Christian groups. On Tuesday evening, Lambeth council’s planning committee approved the plans for the former Beaufoy Institute, in Black Prince Road, Kennington, to become the Diamond Way Buddhism (DWB) organisation. However, more than 40 protesters from the Lambeth Muslim Forum and the Lambeth Interfaith Network protested outside Lambeth Town Hall, in Brixton Hill amid claims the organisation is anti-Muslim and anti-Christian.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: I Hate the Olympics

by James Delingpole

Why do I hate the Olympics? Well, apart from those who are participating — or snouting at the sponsorship trough — I can’t imagine there’s anyone out there who doesn’t hate the Olympics, is there? But what I particularly hate is the strutting arrogance of the Olympinazis in charge of the Olympic games’ brand preservation. The Spectator (which is launching an anti-Olympic campaign of its own this week) lists some of the more egregious examples:

  • Sally Gunnell photoshoot promoting easyJet’s new London Southend service in July 2011. Locog executive stopped photoshoot of her raising a Union flag above her shoulders. Union flag was removed & she had to change from a white tracksuit to an orange T-shirt.
  • Butcher in Weymouth. Was told to remove his display of sausages in the shape of the Olympic rings.
  • Olympicnic. A small village in Surrey has been stopped from running an “Olympicnic” on its village green.
  • ‘Flaming torch breakfast baguette’ offered at a café in Plymouth to celebrate the arrival of the Olympic torch was outlawed by Locog.
  • ‘Cafe Lympic’ & ‘Lympic Food Store & Off License’. Both had to drop the ‘O’ at the start of their names. But Alex Kelham, a brand protection lawyer at Locog, says: ‘The legislation actually catches anything similar to the word ‘Olympic’ as well. It’s not a fool-proof get-around.’
  • Florist in Stoke-on-Trent. Was ordered to take down a tissue paper Olympic rings display from the shop window.
  • Oxford Olympic Torch stalls. Traders will have to cover up their logos, and can only sell soft drinks from the Coca-Cola product range (inc. bottled water)
  • Webbers Estate Agents in North Devon. Threatened with legal action for displaying makeshift Olympic rings in its windows.

Of course I appreciate that all countries unlucky enough to host the Olympics have to sign contracts agreeing to this nonsense. But what’s different about other countries and us is that we’re British.

[…]

[JP note: Spectator link www.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/politics/2012/july/the-battle-with-the-olympic-censors

where Fraser Nelson sums up:

“We value freedom of speech far too little in this country. The British taxpayer has forked out a fortune to host the Olympics — but they should come here on our terms, respect our freedoms and respect the right of British people to do and say what they please. We badly need the equivalent of America’s 1st amendment protection: a clear right guaranteeing freedom of speech as paramount. Our failure to do this has created what Nick Cohen rightly calls a ‘corporatist dystopia’ during the Olympic games. As he says, Britain has not won the Olympics. The Olympics has won Britain. And we should have never allowed this to happen.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Irish and Al Qaeda Terrorists in Olympic Threat

Irish republican terrorists could attack the Olympics while American and Israeli athletes may be a target for al Qaeda, MI5 fears.

The security service has also warned that foreign rival factions or ethnic groups could use the world stage of the Games to attack one another. The threats emerged as a group of MPs said the “unprecedented pressure” the Olympics has placed on the intelligence and security agencies has put the UK at greater risk. The parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) — which oversees the work of MI5, MI6 and GCHQ — fears the focus on securing the summer event means other vulnerable areas of the agencies’ work are at risk of attack. In its annual report, the ISC said Jonathan Evans, the director general of MI5, had highlighted three potential treats to the Olympics.

They were:

  • An attack by al Qaeda and its affiliates — particularly on US or Israeli nationals.
  • An attack or a hoax by Irish republican terrorist groups aimed at causing disruption rather than mass casualties.
  • Clashes between rival groups or ethnicities present in London during the Games who would not normally be considered a security threat to the UK.

The committee heard that staff in the agencies had been taken off lower priority areas of work so that they could concentrate on the potential threat to the games.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: John Terry Cleared: Chelsea Captain Not Guilty of Racial Slur on Anton Ferdinand

Chelsea captain John Terry was dramatically cleared today of racially abusing Anton Ferdinand. The verdict at Westminster Magistrates Court saves his England career and rescues his reputation in the multi-cultural Premier League and across the country. Chief Magistrate Howard Riddle found Terry not guilty of a racially aggravated public order offence after four days of bitterly-disputed evidence and argument. The case exposed the routine use of shocking, obscene language at the heart of Premier League football and the childish antics of the multi-millionaires who play the game.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Keep Britain Clean — No Muslims Please

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — There are many well know Islamophobic people and groups, but below I have listed some groups and people that aren’t as well known to the average Muslim. They are spreading their Islamophobic ideas however they can to the wider community.

1) Pat Condell. A one man show with his web cam. How much damage can one man do? I hear you ask. Look him up on YouTube, he has made many Islamophobic videos. All of his videos have over 100,000 views. His message is spreading far. He insults Islam and the Prophet PBUH. He also supports the Zionist state of Israel and is against the rights of Palestinians.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Women Quiz Baroness

The state of the economy and Islamophobia were among the topics discussed when Conservative Party co-chairman Baroness Sayeeda Warsi met a group of Bradford Muslim women yesterday. Around 50 Muslim women attended the Bradford Circle forum held at The Carlisle Business Centre, to engage in a debate with Baroness Warsi, the most senior Muslim woman politician in Britain. Other issues discussed included education and young people’s futures. Baroness Warsi said: “Every time I meet a large group of Muslim women I get exactly the same experience — I walk away thinking wow. They are energetic, articulate, they’ve thought about the issues they are engaging in and are warm. This is again one of those experiences.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Owen Jones: Islamophobia — for Muslims, Read Jews. And be Shocked

Imagine our alarm if nearly half the UK population said they believed that ‘there are too many Jews’

To be a prominent Muslim means suffering a daily diet of bigotry and even outright hatred. This week, Mehdi Hasan — who, other than my colleague Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, is Britain’s only prominent Muslim journalist — wrote of how, every day, he is attacked as a “jihadist” and a “terrorist”. He has been described as a “dangerous Muslim s***head”, a “moderate cockroach”, and worse. The message from his critics is clear: Muslims have no legitimate place in public life.

[…]

Anti-Muslim hate is a European pandemic. I’m proud to stand with Mehdi Hasan and other Muslims facing Islamophobia. But — I implore, I beg fellow non-Muslims — stand with them too, before this hatred spirals further out of control.

[JP note: There are too many Muslim colonists in the UK, and it is a moral duty to explain this to dhimmis such as Owen Jones.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The UFO Files: Aliens ‘Might Come Here for Holidays’

Government officials believe aliens may visit Earth and suggest harnessing UFO technology for UK defences, files say.

Documents from the Ministry of Defence classified archives show staff believed aliens could visit for “military reconnaissance”, “scientific” research or “tourism”.

In a 1995 briefing now published by the National Archives, a desk officer said the purpose of reported alien craft sightings “needs to be established as a matter of priority”, adding there did not appear to be “hostile intent”.

The unnamed official said it was “essential that we start with open minds”, explaining “what is scientific ‘fact’ today may not be true tomorrow”.

Clarifying he did not “talk to little green men every night”, he said: “We have a remit that we have never satisfied. That is, we do not now (sic) if UFOs exist.

“If they do exist, we do not know what they are, their purpose or if they pose a threat to the UK.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


A Visit to the World’s Deadliest Dive Site

It doesn’t have the nicest coral formations nor the most fish. But the Blue Hole in the Gulf of Aqaba is a magnet for divers, primarily because of its reputation. Dozens of adventurers have lost their lives here over the years and, when they do, Tarek Omar pulls them back to the surface.

Tarek Omar says that he doesn’t know exactly how many bodies he has recovered. “I stopped counting at some point,” he says. But he can still remember the names of the first two he pulled up from the depths of the Red Sea, bringing them back onto the Egyptian shore.

“They were Conor O’Regan and Martin Gara. Irish. They were considered cautious divers. Both died here on Nov. 19, 1997. They were only 22 and 23. Sad.”

Omar is sitting under an awning on the edge of the desert, drinking tea with milk and looking out over the waters of the Gulf of Aqaba, which wash against the east coast of the Sinai. The nearest settlement, the resort town of Dahab, is 10 kilometers (six miles) to the south.

“I found the bodies at a depth of 102 meters (335 feet),” says Omar. “They were holding each other in an embrace. This is how it must have happened: One of them had problems and kept sinking deeper down. The other wanted to help him. And then both of them lost consciousness. What can you do? Their memorial stone is up there.”

He steps out of the shade and walks along a dusty path. Sunburned tourists in life vests are snorkeling in the water. At the end of the cliff-lined bay, Omar stops walking and points to a slab of black marble set into the ground, with the words “In Loving Memory” inscribed onto it. “It’s only one of many memorials,” he says, and turns around.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Caroline Glick: Obama’s Spectacular Failure

Two weeks ago, in an unofficial inauguration ceremony at Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt’s new Muslim Brotherhood President Mohamed Mursi took off his mask of moderation. Before a crowd of scores of thousands, Mursi pledged to work for the release from US federal prison of Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman.

According to The New York Times’ account of his speech, Mursi said, “I see signs [being held by members of the crowd] for Omar Abdel-Rahman and detainees’ pictures. It is my duty and I will make all efforts to have them free, including Omar Abdel-Rahman.”

Otherwise known as the blind sheikh, Abdel Rahman was the mastermind of the jihadist cell in New Jersey that perpetrated the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. His cell also murdered Rabbi Meir Kahane in New York in 1990. They plotted the assassination of then-president Hosni Mubarak. They intended to bomb New York landmarks including the Lincoln and Holland tunnels and the UN headquarters.

Rahman was the leader of Gama’a al-Islamia — the Islamic Group, responsible, among other things for the assassination of Anwar Sadat in 1981. A renowned Sunni religious authority, Rahman wrote the fatwa, or Islamic ruling, permitting Sadat’s murder in retribution for his signing the peace treaty with Israel. The Islamic group is listed by the State Department as a specially designated terrorist organization…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Slapping, Stabbing and Slaying for Sharia

by Raymond Ibrahim

Prior to Egypt’s presidential elections, Islamists made clear that the electoral process was an obligatory form of “holy war.” Then, any number of Islamic clerics, including influential ones, declared that it was mandatory for Muslims to cheat during elections — if so doing would help Islamist candidates win; that the elections were a form of jihad, and those who die are “martyrs” who will attain the highest levels of paradise. Top Islamic institutions and influential clerics, such as Yusuf al-Qaradawi, issued fatwas decreeing that all Muslims were “obligated” to go and vote for those candidates most likely to implement Sharia law, with threats of hellfire for those failing to do so.

The point was simple: democracy, elections, voting, even the individual candidates, were all means to an end — the establishment of Sharia law. Cheat, fight, and kill during elections, as long as doing so enables Sharia; vote only for whoever will enable Sharia; avoid hell by enabling Sharia. (It is precisely for this reason that the very first demand made by Islamic leaders is that President Morsi implement the totality of Sharia law in Egypt. That is, after all, why so many voted for him.) That many Egyptian Muslims heeded these commands to lie, cheat, steal, and kill in order to empower Sharia, there is no doubt. Story after story appeared in the Egyptian media — much of it missed in the West — demonstrating as much.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Two US Tourists Kidnapped in Sinai

Bedouin kidnappers will exchange them for jailed relative

(ANSAMed) — CAIRO, JULY 13 — Two US tourists, a man and a woman, were kidnapped along with their Egyptian guide by a group of Bedouins while traveling by car in the Sinai area, Egyptian security sources said today. The kidnappers, who are from the largest Sinai Bedouin tribe, demanded a relative that is in prison on drug trafficking charges be released in exchanged for the tourists, the same sources said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



US Policy on Egypt Prepares for a Protracted State of Chaos

Alan Philps

Intercontinental travel is confusing at the best of times, but spare a thought for Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, who is on an eight-country tour taking in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Although she is probably used to the diplomatic carousel by now, this trip is even more confusing as the problems she has to deal with rarely coincide with the country she happens to be passing through.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood to Boycott Early Elections

Jordan’s powerful Muslim Brotherhood decided on Thursday to boycott early elections expected later this year because of a “lack of reform,” in a move that is likely throw the country into political crisis. “The Muslim Brotherhood’s shura (advisory) council voted today (Thursday) to boycott parliamentary elections this year,” Zaki Bani Rsheid, deputy leader of the movement, told AFP.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



MI6 Chief Sir John Sawers: ‘We Foiled Iranian Nuclear Weapons Bid’

MI6 agents have foiled Iran’s attempts to obtain nuclear weapons but the Middle Eastern state will succeed in arming itself within the next two years, the head of the Secret Intelligence Service has warned.

Sir John Sawers said that covert operations by British spies had prevented the Iranians from developing nuclear weapons as early as 2008. However, the MI6 chief said it was now likely they would achieve their goal by 2014, making a military strike from the US and Israel increasingly likely. Sir John gave a secret briefing to the Cabinet in March about Iran’s growing military threat but this is the first time his views on the issue have been made public. It is extremely rare for the head of MI6 to disclose details of operations by the intelligence service. Sir John made the remarks at a meeting of around 100 senior civil servants in London last week in only his second public speech since he was appointed to the post in 2009.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Qatari Investors Buy Valentino

Qatari investors outlined plans Thursday to acquire the Italian fashion house Valentino, adding to the Gulf state’s growing stable of premium brands.

Valentino is famous for its trademark red hue and several decades’ worth of celebrity customers, ranging from Jacqueline Kennedy to Sarah Jessica Parker.

An investment firm called Mayhoola for Investments will acquire Valentino Fashion Group from Red & Black Lux, which is controlled by European private equity firm Permira, the companies said in a statement.

The deal includes VFG’s Valentino and M Missoni businesses.

Qatar’s emir, Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, holds near-absolute power in the OPEC member nation, and the most high-profile of his wives, Sheika Mozah bint Nasser al-Missned, is known to appreciate haute couture.

Natural gas-rich Qatar has increasingly been pumping cash into prominent Western luxury brands, though many of those purchases were done using the country’s sovereign wealth fund. Its holdings include London’s Harrods department store, as well as stakes in New York-based jeweler Tiffany & Co. and French luxury conglomerate LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria Unrest: ‘Massacre Leaves 200 Dead’ In Tremseh

Some 200 people have been killed in an attack on the Syrian village of Tremseh, opposition activists say.

If confirmed, it would be the bloodiest single event in the Syrian conflict. Residents said the village, in Hama province, was attacked with helicopter gunships and tanks, and later by the pro-government Shabiha militia, who carried out execution-style killings. State media blamed “terrorist groups” who were trying to raise tension ahead of a key UN Security Council meeting.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria’s Bloody Troubles Are More Complex Than the Media’s Dreamy-Eyed Coverage Would Have You Believe

by Peter Mullen

Every day, it seems, there comes news of fresh massacres in Syria. Assad’s men are reported to have killed a further two hundred people this morning. There is no doubt that Assad is particularly persevering in his malevolent self-interest, but it is the naivety of our media which rubs me up the wrong way. Listen to the BBC, read most of the papers, and what you get relentlessly is something like this: the brave and idealistic young rebels, armed only with raw courage and mobile phones, are daring to challenge the evil dictator Assad and promote democracy in their land. Yes, yes, there is some truth in this. But the larger truth is that the Westernised kids with their tweeting and twittering are very similar to those Soviet sympathisers in the West to whom Stalin referred as “useful idiots.” The reality in Syria is that Assad is fighting desperately against an extremist Sunni revolt which aims to exterminate alike Allawites, Christians and Druze. Naturally, al Qaeda is opportunistically lending them a hand.

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[Reader comment by bryan_stives on 13 July 2012 at about 11:15 AM.]

Rev, you consistently tell it like it is. I simply cannot believe that the west refuses to see what is going on in Syria even tho’ the exact same situation has occured in other middle eastern countries as you so rightly describe. As I have said before politicians such as Hague will not be happy until Assad is gone and Syria is presented, gift wrapped, to the muslim brotherhood. If we think the ‘slaughter’ is bad now just wait until the retribution of the hardline muslims is on the streets.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria Crisis: Tremseh ‘Massacre’ — Live Updates

1.36pm: This week’s message from the protesters in the Idlib town of Kafranbel is: “God hates Assad for shedding innocent blood, Annan’s heart which devised wicked plans, and Putin for his lying tongue.”

Today’s banner is a little more difficult to make out than usual. As ever there is more from the Banners from Kafranbel Facebook group, including a cartoon placard of Putin and Assad as Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Titanic.

1.18pm: Compared to the turmoil elsewhere in Syria, Damascus is still relatively calm. But how long will that last? An article in the Washington Post, by an unnamed special correspondent, says the city now seems ready to explode.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Winning Arab World Hearts, Minds Through Soaps

Top Turkish export, ousts American series

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA, JULY 10 — Turkish soap operas have become the country’s top export over the past decade, and are conquering hearts, minds, and market share throughout the Arab world with their combination of Turkish stars playing hip, sexy and independent-minded characters who experience the travails of love in over-the-top Bollywood-style sets. With 100 serials sold in over 20 countries all over the Mediterranean area at a yearly income of 60 million dollars, Turkey’s flourishing soap opera industry has out-rivaled the American one, with some of its titles, such as Valley of the Wolves and Forbidden Love, breaking all audience records in the Middle East. The two top performers are Nour, whose female lead plays a beautiful, modern and emancipated Istanbul girl and starring Kivanc Tatlitug, the Turkish equivalent of Brad Pitt, and Muhtesum Yuzil, a retelling the story of Suleiman the Magnificent with Turkish hearthrob Halit Ergenc in the lead.

“They work because a Moroccan woman is more likely to identify with a Turkish heroine than an American one,” sociologist Nilufer Narli explained.

Turkish soaps are also in demand because of their portrayal of women: 50 million of them, or half of the entire female population of the Middle East, watched the final episode of Nour. “The female characters are like the Turkish women of today, modern without being degenerate,” sociologist Aydin Ugur said.

Of course, these signs of the times are not without their critics. Saudi Arabian mullahs have already outlawed Nour as “malicious and devilish,” issuing a fatwa against anyone who watches it and calling for the execution of the owner of MBC satellite TV, which broadcast the show. And in Turkey in 2010, 75,000 people protested about what they said was a “Westernized and false” version of Suleiman the Magnificent, who was portrayed as a lover of wine, women and song. “It’s a fictional account, not a historic reconstruction,” screenwriter Meral Okay said at the time.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Erdogan’s Party Wants to Limit Press Freedom

Nationalist ‘Grey Wolves’ want death penalty

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 13 — The nationalist Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP) of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyp Erdogan has presented to Parliament a measure to limit freedom of the press protected under article 28 of the constitution, local media in Ankara reported.

Article 28 presently states that “the press is free and must not be censored”. There are however limitations in the name of national security, public order and the republic’s fundamental principles, the Milliyet newspaper noted.

Under the new article proposed by the AKP to the commission drafting a constitutional reform, freedom of the press can be limited on a number of other accounts including ‘public morality’. According to Milliyet, the proposal states that ‘freedom of the press can be limited to protect national security, public order, public morality, other individual rights, privacy, to prevent crimes, safeguard impartiality and freedom of the judicial system, to prevent pro-war propaganda, discriminations and hate’.

According to international media associations, some 100 journalists are currently detained in Turkey.

According to the Vatan daily, the Nationalist Movement Party, the so-called Grey Wolves has presented a reform in the commission to reinstate the death penalty in Turkey.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Erdogan Most Popular Leader in Sunnite Countries

65% favor Erdogan, 58% King Abdallah, 39% Ahmadinejad

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA, JULY 13 — Turkey’s Islamic nationalist Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the most popular leader in 6 Sunnite majority Middle Eastern countries, according to a Pew Research Center survey published by Hurriyet daily today.

Erdogan is the favorite leader of 65% of respondents in Turkey, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Pakistan and Jordan, followed by Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah at 58%, according to the survey.

Iran’s Shiite President Mahmud Ahmadinejad came in at 39% and Syria’s President Bashar al Assad, also a Shiite Muslim, came in at 11% in those countries, the survey said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Valentino Sold to Qatar Royal Family

Permira Fund cedes control to Mayhoola for 600-750 mln euros

(ANSAmed) — Rome — The Qatar royal family has bought Valentino Fashion Group (VFG), the clothing company announced Thursday. The company, which was owned by the Permira Fund since 2007, reportedly was sold for 600-750 million euros to Mayhoola for Investments Spc.

The deal cedes control of Valentino to Mayhoola, an investment vehicle backed by the Qatari royal family, as well as the license of clothing brand Missoni, which also belongs to Permira. The deal does not include other brands under parent company VFG, such as Hugo Boss and Mcs-Marlboro Classics.

Permira bought VFG in 2007 for 5.3 billion euros, but had to restructure its debt and outlay 250 million euros due to the crisis a year later, according to Bloomberg news. Permira’s management, who found new, younger markets in Asia and the United States, have had positive results in spite of the economic crisis, with VFG this year posting sales of 322.4 million euros, up 20% from 2010.

Valentino is Mayhoola’s first wholly owned haute-couture brand. “Valentino has always been a brand of unique creativity and undisputed prestige,” said Mayhoola in a statement. “We are impressed by the work of the two Creative Directors, Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli, and by the management team led by Stefano Sassi”.

The Qatari royals already own the Harrods upmarket department store as well as parts of Porsche, Barclays, and 1% of French apparels-and-accessories giant LVMH.

VFG is not the first Italian fashion house to go East.

French-Italian luxury brand Cerruti was acquired by Hong Kong’s Trinity Ltd. in 2010. The Gianfranco Ferre’ brand was bought by Dubai’s Paris Group a year later.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



White House Not Interested in Iranian Role in Syria

(AGI) Washington — The U.S. continue not wanting Iran involved in resolving the Syrian crisis, in stark contrast to efforts by the U.N. and Arab League’s special envoy Kofi Annan. The White House maintains that Iran’s role in Syria has not been productive, advantageous and cannot be constructive. The U.S.

intends to continue cooperating with nations that want a democratic future for the Syrian people, said White House spokesman Jay Carney.

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

South Asia


Afghanistan: Suicide Bombers Kill Two Children in Kandahar

(AGI) Kandahar — Three suicide bombers killed two children and wounded six in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar in southern Afghanistan. The attackers rode motorbikes and seemed to be aiming for the police headquarters, attacked later by an armed commando. Their suicide vests exploded by mistake earlier than expected near a group of children who were playing. The incident was reported by the spokesman for this province Jawed Faisal, who specified that the children were all aged between 8 and 12. The attack on the police headquarters laster for an hours and six officers were wounded while all three attackers were killed.

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



Indonesia: Court Chief Tells Merkel of ‘Freedom to be Atheist or Communist’

Jakarta, 11 July (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Indonesian Supreme Court chief Mahfud MD is told the German chancellor Angela Merkel that the Indonesian Constitution guarantees the the freedom to be atheist or communist.

Mahfud answered Merkel’s question about the freedom of religion and democracy in Indonesia during a visit to the Supreme Court on Tuesday evening.

“Since its inception, the Supreme Court has guaranteed the freedom of atheists and communists in this country, as long as they do not disturb the freedom of people of other religions. Freedom is equality.” Mahfud said.

Merkel arrived in Indonesia Tuesday for her first official visit to Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

Mahfud said that the nation would deny human rights and democracy if it denied atheists and communists their rights.

The chief justice’s comments come after a 32-year-old civil servant was imprisoned for 30 months for saying he was an atheist in June, and after local military commanders in East Java banned the television broadcast of an opera about Tan Malaka, a prominent Indonesian nationalist and communist, in 2011.

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



Pakistan: Militants Who Attacked Pakistan Village, Took Hostages, Flee Back to Afghanistan

KHAR, Pakistan — Dozens of militants who came from Afghanistan to attack a village in Pakistan’s northwest and took scores of hostages fled back across the border, leaving behind the captives and carrying the bodies of 15 fighters killed in a battle with the army, Pakistani officials said Friday. Elsewhere in the country, a bomb exploded near a political rally in the southwestern city of Quetta, killing at least five people, officials said.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Three Killed in Afghanistan Blasts

Two separate bombings in Afghanistan have killed a Nato service member as well as an official with the Afghan ministry of women’s affairs and her husband. Nato said the service member was killed by a roadside bomb in the south of the country. No other details were released. Sarhadi Zwak, a spokesman in eastern Laghman province, said the local official, Anifa Safi, and her husband died when a bomb hidden in their car exploded in the provincial capital of Mehterlam.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Byron Bay Hosts Muslim Students

Byron Bay families are hosting 35 teenagers from Abu Dhabi who are studying English in Australia for a month

Take a group of middle-class Muslim teenagers from the United Arab Emirates and move them to a renowned, hedonistic party town on the other side of the world. Sound like a recipe for trouble? Apparently not. The Abu Dhabi Education Council has done just that, in sending 35 boys aged 16 and 17 to study English and live with local families in Byron Bay.

They arrived at the start of July and will spend four weeks soaking in the culture while studying at the Byron Bay English Language School. School director Michael O’Grady said it was the second time the program had taken place and cultural clashes experienced by the first group appeared to have been overcome. “Last year was our first year and it was much more difficult and there is a difference between last year and this year, the boys seem a lot more open and their English levels are a lot better,” he said. “Last year when they got off the bus we didn’t know what to expect, and we did have some problems with the families, particularly a little bit in relation to how the females are seen in the family, but that isn’t really evident this year and that’s a really welcomed change.”

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Extremist Material Distributed in Mosque Battle

Members of Gungahlin’s evangelical community are distributing extremist material from overseas in their campaign against the construction of a mosque on The Valley Avenue. A senior pastor at a Gungahlin evangelical church contacted The Canberra Times and supplied a video of far-right agitator Paul Weston, the chairman of the British Freedom Party. In the eight-minute video, Mr Weston says Islam was “worse than Nazism” and claimed Islamic influence in Britain would lead to civil war. The Gungahlin pastor declined to be interviewed yesterday, but said the video had been circulated via email through associates in the community.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Gungahlin: Mosque Phobia Moves to Australia

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — “The Council still believes the site is an appropriate one for a Mosque and concerns about traffic will prove unfounded once the proposed ring road system is completed,” the Gungahlin Community Council said in an online statement. “Until recently there has been no suggestion that there are parking or traffic issues with the Valley Way site.” The Canberra Muslim Community Inc has submitted a development application to build a 500-seat mosque in Gungahlin city. Though the Community Council has approved the application, residents have filed complaints with the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) government against the Muslim worship place.

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[JP note: Fear of mosques is entirely rational.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



New Zealand: Foundations Set for Massive Manurewa Mosque

The foundations have been laid for a Manurewa mosque that, when complete, will be New Zealand’s largest. The Ahmadiyya Muslim community last week held a ceremony to mark the start of work on the Dalgety Dr site. The site is in a largely industrial area. The community hopes the mosque, which will hold about 600 worshippers, will be finished by May next year. Community national president Mohammed Iqbal said: “We are earnestly praying and hoping that this will be [completed] in April next year, God willing. This project is an extremely important one for us because a mosque symbolises a house of peace and from here we intend to attract families from all walks of life… helping each other despite our beliefs.”

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Mali: Revealed: Proof That Al-Qaeda’s Men Are Operating in Northern Mali

by Colin Freeman

When is al-Qaeda really al-Qaeda? That’s a question often asked by security pundits when it comes to the group’s central African franchise, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM. Rather like the shifting sands of its Saharan stomping ground, AQIM has often been seen as rather hard to pin down: for every hardcore jihadi, there are also smugglers, bandits, and Tuareg separatist guerrillas operating under the AQIM banner, which acts as a useful flag of convenience for any outfit wanting to scare its rivals. It’s often also argued that the AQIM threat has been exaggerated by states like Mauritania and Algeria to help get Western military funding, and respected think tanks like the International Crisis Group have even produced papers asking whether the whole phenomena is “fact or fiction”.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Most Complete Skeleton of Ancient Relative of Man Found

South African scientists claim they have uncovered the most complete skeleton yet of an ancient relative of man, that was hidden in a rock excavated three years ago.

The remains of a juvenile hominid skeleton, of the newly identified Australopithecus (southern ape) sediba species, are the “most complete early human ancestor skeleton ever discovered,” according to Lee Berger, a paleontologist from the University of Witwatersrand. “We have discovered parts of a jaw and critical aspects of the body including what appear to be a complete femur (thigh bone), ribs, vertebrae and other important limb elements, some never before seen in such completeness in the human fossil record,” said Prof Berger.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Somalia: Documents Found on Body of Al Qaeda’s African Leader Detail Chilling Plans for Kidnapping, Attacks

NAIROBI-A cache of intelligence found on the body of Al Qaeda’s African leader, and inside the bullet-ridden Toyota truck he tried to ram through a Somali government checkpoint, provides a chilling look at the global aspirations of Somalia’s al Shabab. Obtained exclusively by the Toronto Star, the meticulously prepared documents that detail plots for a kidnapping and attacks on the prestigious Eton College, Jewish neighbourhoods and the posh Ritz and Dorchester hotels in London, were uncovered last year when senior Al Qaeda leader Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, 38, was shot dead by Somali forces. Fazul was indicted in the United States for the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya that killed 224. He was a close ally of Osama bin Laden and considered the key link between Al Qaeda’s top leaders in Afghanistan and Pakistan and the Shabab, the terrorist group that has grown out of Somalia’s decades of chaos.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Foreign Workers Face Tighter Rules in Singapore

New immigration rules come into effect on 1 September, affecting family reunification. Harsher penalties will be imposed for marriages contracted to obtain immigration privileges.

Singapore (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Stricter rules will apply to foreign workers in Singapore. The city-state has adopted a series of measures that modify existing immigration laws. The new rules will apply to family reunification. On his website, the prime minister indicated that he hoped the flow of foreigners seeking employment would be better managed. Their greater presence has generated public disquiet.

As of 1 September, foreign workers must earn at least S$ 4,000 (US$ 3,150) a month compared with the current S$2,800 to sponsor their spouses and children for their stay in Singapore. Foreign workers whose families are already in Singapore will not be affected by the changes.

Job competition between foreigners and locals is, with inflation, Singapore’s main problem. Prime Minister and People’s Action Party leader Lee Hsien Loong based his election campaign last year on the issue. However, none of his policies has worked so far, with the result that his party is down in the polls.

Under the proposed amendments, permanent residents who flout the city’s laws or are involved in any activity that “threatens a breach of peace or is prejudicial to public order” will lose their permanent residency status or have their re-entry permit cancelled.

The new rules will make marriages of convenience to obtain immigration privileges an offence. The proposed penalty for sham marriages includes a maximum fine of S$ 10,000 (US$ 7,875) and a jail term of up to ten years.

Forging documents may be punishable with a fine of up to S$ 8,000 (US$ 6,300) and a maximum jail term of five years.

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



Italy: Permits for Migrants Who Tell on Exploiting Bosses

A decree gives additional bites to existing sanctions for employers

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Work and residence permits will be granted to migrants who blow the whistle on bosses who exploit them, according to a decree approved Friday by Italian Premier Mario Monti’s cabinet.

The decree is aimed at bringing Italy into line with European law on penalties for employers who hire undocumented migrants. The provision gives additional bite to existing sanctions. The draft decree also increases penalties for those who hire more than three undocumented migrants, hire minors or have working conditions that are particularly harsh.

In these more extreme cases, an exploited worker who collaborates with the justice system will be rewarded with a six-month permit renewable for one or more years. Employers will be given a brief amount of time to align their workplaces with the law, but face possible fines of around 1,000 euros.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Refugee Hopes for New Life in Australia Come to Dust

ABDIKADIR Omar’s dream of bringing his wife Aisha and their three young sons to Australia is turning to dust inside the world’s largest and most dangerous refugee camp.

His hopes, and those of a generation of displaced people in camps around the world, are being crushed by a gross distortion in Australia’s humanitarian program, caused by the flood of asylum-seeker boats. People such as Mr Omar in Kenya’s giant Dadaab camp do not have the money or access to people-smugglers and their boats. He has no choice but to apply through proper channels for the fast-shrinking number of humanitarian places being offered to those who do not arrive in Australia by boat.

“I thought about going somewhere to catch a boat (to Australia) because I have been waiting so long to go there,” Mr Omar told The Weekend Australian from the Dadaab camp yesterday. “But I have no money and going by boat is illegal and dangerous. So I worry I have no hope of ever getting my family to Australia.”

Instead, Mr Omar and his family are forced to live in desperate conditions in the 465,000-person camp, which Medecins Sans Frontieres says is rife with “bomb attacks and assassinations” and where women live under constant threat of attack and rape.

This is a dark side of the asylum-seeker debate that is frequently ignored by proponents of liberal onshore processing of boat arrivals. The world’s poorest and most helpless asylum-seekers are being increasingly displaced by those who, while also desperate, at least have the financial means to self-select and pay people-smugglers for a passage to Australia.

This tragic clash is the result of government policy.

Since 1996 Australia has capped its total humanitarian intake at about 13,000 by linking its onshore intake, which includes asylum-seeker boat arrivals, with its offshore intake, which includes both the refugee and special humanitarian category.

So a rise in the onshore category (mostly boat arrivals) leads directly to a reduction in the offshore category in order to stay under the government’s self-imposed 13,700 humanitarian cap.

Although Australia has maintained its offshore “refugee” intake at 6000 in recent years, the other component of its offshore intake, the “special humanitarian” visas, which cover those subject to gross human right violations as well as family members of refugees already in Australia, has been all but destroyed by the surge in boat arrivals.

The number of special offshore humanitarian visas issued each year has fallen from 5183 in 2006-07, when boat arrivals were in single figures each year, to barely 800 in 2011-12 and is likely to vanish this financial year, amid the current surge in asylum-seekers.

This is despite the Government receiving 25,000 applications for these visas each year.

The collapse of the special humanitarian visa program is heartbreaking for thousands of refugees already in Australia because it has destroyed hopes of reuniting their families.

Monica Aweng, 28, who arrived as a refugee in Australia in 2006 after escaping war-torn southern Sudan, has tried and failed twice in the past four years to obtain special humanitarian visas for her mother and sister who live in squalid conditions in the Kakuma refugee camp in northwest Kenya.

“The (Australian) government did not tell me a reason why they do not let them come here,’ she told The Weekend Australian.

“No-one is taking care of them over there and I have to send them my money which is very hard for me because I have five children here. I don’t think the government wants more people from Africa to come here.”

Her neighbour, Haleul Machar, has a similar story. A refugee from southern Sudan, Ms Machar has tried twice and failed twice to bring her older sister Yar to Australia from Egypt where she is living in poverty.

Ms Machar came to Australia in 2005 with her two daughters after living for 13 years in the Kakuma camp. She thought Yar, who was separated from her during the Sudanese war, was dead. But several years ago, someone noticed a striking similarity in looks between Ms Machar and a Sudanese refugee they knew in Cairo.

Ms Machar eventually make contact and realised it was her sister.

“I cried tears of joy that we had finally found each other,” she said. “I thought I would be able to bring her to Australia, but in January this year they rejected our application for the second time. Now I cry tears of sadness that I will not see her.”

Another Sudanese refugee in Melbourne, Helen Nyandeng, says almost everyone in the city’s Sudanese community knows of a family that remains divided because there are no available visas for relatives under the special humanitarian program.

“We know so many people who in our (Sudanese) community who have tried to get their parents, sisters, brothers here but can’t get them in apparently because their spots have been taken by all the boat people,’ she says.

“The government won’t admit that but that is what is happening. Our people in Africa do not have money, we can’t hire boats to come here. We come from the camps and we are genuine long term refugees.”

The Refugee Council of Australia recently warned that “tensions and frustrations are being created between communities” because of the policy of linking the onshore and offshore components of the humanitarian program.

The African refugees in Melbourne interviewed by The Weekend Australian this week were frustrated and angry about their situation, but blamed the government policy rather than those coming by boat.

“I don’t blame the boat people because for many of them it is a matter for them of life and death,” Ms Machar said. “ It is heartbreaking that they are drowning. But some of the people who do travel on the boats are doing it for economic reasons and that is not right.”

William Maley, director of the Asia Pacific College of Diplomacy at the ANU and vice president of the Refugee Council of Australia, said the government must take action to reinvigorate humanitarian family resettlement, either through the special humanitarian program or another special category. Otherwise it will play into the hands of people smugglers because the only effective way for refugees to bring family members to Australia will be on boats.

“One way to undercut people smuggling is to have an effective mechanism for immediate family members of refugees to come to Australia, but at the moment that does not exist,” Professor Maley said.

For Mr Omar and his family, the current situation effectively rules him out of contention for a life in Australia. A refugee since the age of 11 when his parents were executed in Somalia, he has lived his entire adult life in the sprawling Dadaab camp, which has a population larger than Canberra.

He has a long list of qualifications and glowing references from working variously as a mechanic, a health carer, a conflict facilitator and a charity volunteer in the camps. He also has friends in Australia who are in the process of sponsoring his application for a special humanitarian visas.

An Australian documentary maker, Felicity Blake, who met Mr Omar, while filming a documentary in the camp said yesterday. “I have never met a more inspirational individual than Abdikadir Omar; he and his family deserve refugee status in Australia,” Blake said.

But Mr Omar, and many others like him, are losing hope in their Australian dream.

“We have been here for so long and life in the camp is very dangerous,” he says. “I want to protect my wife and my children, but who can help me now?”

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia: Thousands of Immigrant Workers Die From Exploitation, Torture and Alcoholism

Revealed in report by Nepalese Embassy in Riyadh. Since 2000 more than 3 thousand Nepalese migrant workers have died. One in every 162 people.

Kathmandu (AsiaNews / Agencies) — In 12 years over 3 thousand Nepalese migrant workers in Saudi Arabia have died because of their poor working conditions and exploitation. Of a total of 484,701 migrants in the Arab country, the average is 1 in every 162. The shocking findings were revealed in a report by the Nepalese Embassy in Riyadh, which identifies the abuse of black market alcohol a major cause of deaths. Udaya Raj Pandev, Nepal’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia and promoter of the study, explains that to withstand the grueling and demeaning working conditions, thousands of workers give in to the vice of alcohol circumventing bans in force in the Muslim country. According to the diplomat, over 30 people die each month due to alcoholism. Many of them come home exhausted, drink and die in their sleep. Another factor is accidents in the workplace.

Due to the severe economic crisis, every year thousands of people leave the country in search of a job. Unlike the Philippines, which has a proliferation of agencies in foreign countries, in Nepal people prefer to start with a tourist visa and find work on site with family and friends. This, however, prevents the state from protecting its citizens in case of accidents in a foreign country, increasing the percentage of illegal immigrants and the criminal business of human trafficking. The are over 50 destinations for Nepalese migrants. Topping the list, Qatar (68.844), Saudi Arabia (44,741) and Malaysia (31,157).

Mahdendra Pandev president of Parvasi Nepali Coordination Comitee, for years denouncing the appalling conditions of Nepalese migrants in Islamic countries, states that “workers need training and an orientation period before leaving the country.” The activist urges the government to create employment agencies that force Saudi Arabia and other states to respect minimum standards of safety in the workplace, where in many cases it verges on slavery. Exploitation is worsened by the total absence of justice for immigrants charged with crimes. To date, over 200 Nepalese citizens are detained in Saudi custody awaiting trial. Many of them do not even know the reasons for their detention and are not entitled to a lawyer or an interpreter.

In total there are about 7 million migrant workers abroad, especially in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Malaysia. They are employed in construction and heavy industry, but also as caretakers and domestic workers. Many leave the country to feed their families and foreign workers have become a major resource in the economy of the small Himalayan country. With their remittances migrants account for almost 40% of the state budget.

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



Spain: Migrant Pressure Rises on Melilla, Door to Europe

Melilla on alert after Moroccan border patrol officer death

(ANSAMed) — MADRID, JULY 12 — Summer is the high season for illegal migrants from the Subsaharan zones, and they are growing more and more aggressive as their desperation rises, a government delegate in Melilla, Spain’s enclave in Morocco, told Spanish media today.

“Today they were armed with sticks and stones,” Prefect Abdelmalik El Barkani said. “They no longer come peacefully, and this has cost the life of a person who was doing his duty to defend the border between Nador and Melilla.” A Moroccan officer died at 3am on Tuesday in clashes between gendarmes and migrants, who were attempting a mass assault on the frontier at Beni Ansar. Melilla authorities arrested 26 migrants, and are investigating the incident, while Melilla President Juan Jose Imbroda expressed his condolences to the officer’s family and praised Morocco’s help in patrolling the border.

The officer had been hit with a stone, El Barkani said, adding that what happened shows the migrants “are desperate and willing to act barbarically in order to enter Spain.” The two countries, El Barkani added, “will continue to work together to prevent illegal entries.” Melilla is in high alert against possible tidal waves of migrants, hoping to prevent violence and fatalities, such as took place in 2005. Among the preventive measures, that of periodically shunting detainees from Melilla’s temporary detention center, which has capacity of 800 people, to other detention centers in Spain.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The European Muslim and Islamic Catastrophe: Will Those Responsible be Prosecuted?

by Nicolai Sennels

The immigration of non-Westerners, especially of Muslims, has proven to be an economic, social and safety catastrophe. The costs for social benefits and services to Muslim immigrants and their descendants is an unbearable millstone around the European economy’s neck. Thousands of cities in Western Europe are cut in pieces by the Muslim parallel societies that are segregating when it comes to language, culture, laws and so some extent also economy. The growing amount of terror, violence and crime coming from this specific population are changing the very basis of our civilized societies: feeling and being safe.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Muslim and Christian Scholars Team Up to Ask Hotel Chains to Stop Offering Pay-Per-View Porn

A Christian scholar and a Muslim leader have teamed up to ask hotel chain to stop offering pay-per-view porn. Robert P. George, Princeton University professor and former chairman of the Christian group the National Organization for Marriage wrote a letter to hotel owners along with Shaykh Hamza Yusuf, the founder of Zaytuna College, a Muslim university. Both men requested that the hotels ‘do what is right as a matter of conscience’ and stop selling pornography to guests.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Asteroid Miners to Hitch a Ride With Virgin Galactic

Billionaire-backed Planetary Resources, the company that in April announced ambitious plans to mine space rocks for minerals, will hitch a ride with space tourism company Virgin Galactic.

The new union is a sign that the nascent commercial space-flight industry could soon become self-sustaining. It was prompted by LauncherOne, a low-cost satellite-launching rocket that Virgin founder Richard Branson revealed on 11 July at the Farnborough International Airshow, UK.

Virgin Galactic, headquartered in Las Cruces, New Mexico, is best known for its plans to ferry paying tourists to the edge of space. The idea is to take the tourist-carrying SpaceShipTwo rocket to an altitude of 7 kilometres using aircraft WhiteKnightTwo. SpaceShipTwo will then be dropped so it can fire its engine and climb to an altitude of 100 kilometres — giving passengers a 5 minute spell in microgravity and an out-of-this-world view. An air launch means the rocket itself does not have to push through the densest part of the atmosphere, making the launch extremely fuel efficient.

The idea behind LauncherOne is to use the same process to launch satellites. From 2016, Virgin plans to sling LauncherOne beneath WhiteKnightTwo in place of SpaceShipTwo for satellite launches.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Earth’s Water Piggybacked on Asteroids, Not Comets

Whether comets or asteroids were the source of Earth’s water has long been the subject of debate. Now an analysis of the composition of meteorites suggests the water did not originate in the outer solar system, a finding that favours asteroids as the vehicle for its arrival.

Both asteroids and comets are found in a region of the solar system known as the asteroid belt, which occupies a wide swathe of space between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. However, comets with their icy tails would have been born in the chillier region of space between Saturn and Jupiter and then migrated into the asteroid belt.

To find out whether comets or asteroids were the parents of carbonaceous chondrites: rare meteorites which delivered water and volatile elements such as nitrogen, carbon and hydrogen to Earth, a team led by Conel Alexander from the Carnegie Institution of Washington in Washington DC measured the amount of deuterium — a heavy isotope of hydrogen — in 86 chondrite samples found on Earth.

The further from the sun an object was formed, the more deuterium-rich it tends to be. The chondrites Alexander tested turned out to contain significantly less deuterium than comets, indicating that the chondrites most likely originated in a different place. “So, they probably formed closer in to the sun,” says Alexander, most likely in the asteroid belt itself.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Message of Islam Can Always Prevail Over Islamophobia

Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu

Muslims with a real understanding of their religion believe that the word and the essence of Islam emanate and preach peace, compassion, tolerance of all religions and beliefs, and respect for humanity and human dignity. These have been the fundamental principles of Islam since the Prophet Mohammed first spread its message over 14 centuries ago. Furthermore, throughout history Muslims have promoted peaceful coexistence with their fellow human beings across the world regardless of differences in religion and culture. It cannot be denied that Islam’s contribution to civilisation has been great, essential and irrefutable in all fields, and Muslims have always recognised other peoples’ religions and great contributions to humanity. Unfortunately, due to the rise of Islamophobia, mainly in the West, Muslims nowadays are facing various types of discriminatory acts, particularly by extremists and racists who irrationally equate Islam with terrorism based on false premises and assumptions.

[…]

Countering extremists and racists of all religions — whether in the form of anti-Islam, anti-Christian or anti-Semitism — is best served through dialogue and the exchange of views and information, in addition to sound government policies. The OIC believes that dialogue is the key to bridge the differences, build mutual trust among diverse religious groups and societies, and foster tolerance. In this context, the OIC has been a pioneer of the concept of “dialogue among civilisations” for almost a decade with the aim of reaching out to grassroots communities around the world.

However, reaching out to grassroots communities is not an easy task and requires immense resources. The OIC believes and calls for greater and more concerted efforts by community leaders, religious leaders, academics, various types of media institutions, and human rights organisations to address the scourge of Islamophobia and all forms of religious intolerance. It is an inclusive engagement that goes beyond diplomatic and political circles. The OIC calls on the concerned parties to unify their efforts and take collective bold initiatives to prevent human conflicts based on religions and belief to build together a better future for the generations to come. It is our moral duty to take action now before the extremists gain more ground and cause further destruction and suffering.

Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu is the secretary general of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why Not Confront Muslim Extremism?

by Brian Lilley

I know this has happened to you. You’ve been watching a newscast and there is a story about a terrorist plot being busted. You hear all about the plot, you know how many people were arrested, what they were generally attempting to do, but there is something the police seem to be avoiding. The M word or the I word. You know what I mean. Police bust an Islamic terror cell, people that plan to blow up a building or shoot others in the name of Islam, and yet police will not say the words Muslim, Islam or any variant thereof. Even when the people arrested have clearly stated their goal is to carry out an attack in the name of Islam, police will not use the M word or the I word.

A document issued by the RCMP may help you understand why this happens. It’s called Words Make Worlds and it details how the Mounties are supposed to talk about Islam.

This booklet has a chapter on jihad, but it’s not the jihad you and I have come to know — the kind where people claim they will wage a holy war. No, this booklet is all about how jihad is an internal struggle “striving in the path of God.” I’m disturbed any time government or a government agency tries to define religion, but that is what is happening here.

The document also makes a defence of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group that now controls much of Egypt. During his campaign for the Egyptian presidency, Mohammed Morsi, a man closely tied to the Brotherhood, told a crowd, “The Qur’an is our constitution. The Prophet Mohammed is our leader. Jihad is our path and death for the sake of Allah is our most lofty aspiration.”

That doesn’t sound like a peaceful striving in the path of God to me. And it doesn’t show the Brotherhood as the benign group the Mounties want you to think they are. The document goes on to tell the Mounties never to link Islam and terrorism. “Terms like ‘Islamic terrorism,’ ‘Islamist terrorism,’ ‘Jihadism’ and ‘Islamofascism’ succeed only in conflating terrorism with mainstream Islam, thereby casting all Muslims as terrorists or potential terrorists.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why the Courts Will Always Favour the Left — in Britain and America

The US Supreme Court’s Obamacare decision shows that the legal establishment is inherently biased against the Right — and it’s worse in Britain, argues Henry Hill.

The recent drama over the Supreme Court’s ruling on the constitutionality of Obamacare was a reminder of how strongly the vesting of political authority in the judicial establishment favours the Left. Despite having been defeated in every junior court to which it was presented, the Conservative-appointed Chief Justice John Roberts reduced himself to fundamentally rewriting the President’s landmark legislation to spare the Court striking it down. If the leaks coming out of the Court are to be believed, his eleventh-hour flip was the result of the intense political pressure placed on him by Left-wing politicians and media in the run-up to the vote.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120712

Financial Crisis
» French Auto Group PSA Announces Major Job Cull
» Italy: Monti Believes Italy Faced a Struggle Against Prejudice
» Italy: Number of Mortgages Plunged in First Quarter
» Italy Central Bank Chief Says Liquidity for Banks Must be Guaranteed
 
USA
» A Pro-Murfreesboro Mosque Filmmaker Does a Radical About-Face
» And the Oscar Goes to … Batman? Could Happen
» Muslim Congressman Tied to Terror Co-Conspirator
» Obama Asks Congress to Extend Certain Bush Era Tax Cuts
» Sandusky Sex Abuse Investigation Faults Paterno and Others at Penn State
» September 11 Attacks ‘Most Memorable TV Moment in Last 50 Years’
» US Billionaire Black is ‘Scream’ Buyer: Report
 
Europe and the EU
» At Least Nine Killed in Avalanche in France
» European Right Wing Stirs Up Middle East Peace Process — Seeking an Alternative to Two States
» European Jewish Leaders on Circumcision Ruling: ‘Worst Attack on Jewish Life Since the Holocaust’
» Finding the Anti-World: The Next Holy Grail for Physics
» France: Brigitte Bardot Supports Renegade Cow
» France: Chinese Cyber Attacks Hit Elysée Palace: Report
» Historian Gives Readers Glimpse of Medieval Life
» Italy: Gaddafi Soccer Son’s SUV Towed After 4 Years in Ligurian Resort
» Majority of Germans Lack Sufficient Vitamin D
» Norway: Attacks Could Have Been Prevented
» Norway: Oslo Mayor Wants Begging Banned
» Norwegian Police Trained for Breivik the Week Before.
» Olympic Military Security Ranks Swell Further in London
» Silver Treasure Found at Swedish Shipwreck
» Sweden: Man Gunned Down in South Stockholm Suburb
» The Catholic Church’s Fading Influence in Poland
» UK: Former Imam of Wellingborough Mosque Guilty of Molesting Girls
» UK: Mosque to be Built in Al Maktoum College in Dundee
» UK: Mod Fury as Soldiers Forced to Carry Out Menial Security Tasks for Olympic Games
» UK: Online Racist Abuse: We’ve All Suffered it Too
» UK: Some Online Hatreds Are Prosecuted, Others Applauded
» UK: The Liberal Media’s War on ‘Trolling’ Is Becoming Increasingly Intolerant and Censorious
 
Balkans
» Bosnia: Witness Says Muslims Tried to Provoke Intl Intervention
 
North Africa
» Calls to Destroy Egypt’s Great Pyramids Begin
» Egypt: TV Channel With Only Fully-Veiled Women ‘Is Part of Fight Against Discrimination’
» Group Against Ramadan Fast Created in Morocco
» Police Open Fire on Students in Khartoum
» Tunisia: Fewer Bikinis, More Veils on Public Beaches
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Neighbors Trade Vows of Mideast Peace
 
Middle East
» 16 Palestine Liberation Army Soldiers Kidnapped, Killed on the Aleppo-Misyaf Road, Near Idlib
» Kuwaiti Professor Locks Self in US Embassy Toilet
» Kuwait English School Special Needs Teacher Murdered in Bristol
» Pew Survey: Middle East Muslims Support Democracy, Islam in Politics
» Syrian President Accuses U. S. of Destabilizing Syria
» Turkey: Alevis Demand Worship Sites, Tension With Cabinet
» Turkey: Oldest Christian Monastery at Risk
» Turkey: Islamic Group Wants Rock Fest Banned
» Yemen: Bomber Targets Police Cadets
 
South Asia
» Afghan Massacre Defendant to Have Court Hearing in September
 
Far East
» Weisswurst and Beer: Tourists Flock to South Korea’s ‘German Village’
 
Australia — Pacific
» Community Group Backs Gungahlin Mosque
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» More Than 100 Die in Nigeria in Attacks Against Christians
» Muslim Tribesmen Kill Nigerian Politicians During Funeral
» Nigerian Senate: Talks With Boko Haram as Soon as Possible
» Nigeria Fuel Tanker Explosion Kills at Least 95
» Nigerian Christian Urges US Action on Islamic Group
» Northern Mali Risks Starvation Thanks to Al-Qaeda, Drought and No Aid
 
Immigration
» Italy: Boat Carrying 61 Migrants Rescued at Pozzallo
» Italy: 45 Migrants Land on Salento Coast Overnight
» Italy: Motorboat Carrying 63 African Migrants Lands in Portopalo
» Italy: Coastguard Intercepts Boatload of Syrians and Kurds
» Malta: 84 Somali Migrants Rescued at Sea
» UK: Five Million Non-EU Immigrants Living in UK
 
General
» New Muslim Prayer Mat Points to Mecca
» Why the West Loves Lying to Itself About Islam

Financial Crisis


French Auto Group PSA Announces Major Job Cull

French automobile conglomerate PSA Peugeot Citroen has said it will axe 8,000 jobs in response to increasing sales problems in crisis-stricken Europe. The announcement triggered a storm of protest among trade unions.

French auto group PSA Peugeot Citroen on Thursday announced it would cut 8,000 jobs to adapt to a sharp downturn in the European market.

A company statement said production at its Aulney site near Paris would be halted, meaning the loss of 3,000 jobs. An additional 1,400 jobs would be axed at the plant in Rennes, with the rest of the job cull to be enforced through cuts across the corporate structure.

“The depth and persistence of the crisis impacting our business in Europe have now made this reorganization project indispensable in order to align our production capacity with foreseeable market trends,” PSA Chairman Philippe Varin said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti Believes Italy Faced a Struggle Against Prejudice

(AGI) Rome — Speaking to the ABI assembly, Prime Minister Mario Monti did not mince his words in describing the current situation, saying that Italy will still have to face “a very serious confidence course.” Italy, added the prime minister, has made “progress on the deficit and the books will be balanced by 2013”, but to do so the country has had to fight “a battle against widespread prejudice.” This also happened at the Cannes G20, when, said Monti, “my predecessor Berlusconi was put under extremely unpleasant pressure and, I imagine, close to experiencing humiliation that in the intention of those present would have resulted in Italy surrendering a significant part of its sovereignty and directionality.” The test, “although far more peaceful, is not yet over” but, “one can reasonably hope, although I do not know in which month of 2013 or who will will be prime minister, to see the first results of Italian society’s collective realisation.” However, Monti admitted, as far as growth and employment are concerned, we will need more time. It is sufficient to look at the figures provided by the Chairman of the Bank of Italy, Ignazio Visco, who believes that the Italian economy “is still in recession” and that this year the GDP will fall by almost 2%. “According to estimates,” said Visco — the GDP will on average fall by a little less than two percentage points. This worsening of the scenario is also the result of the rising cost and deteriorating availability of credit due to the sovereign debt crisis.” According to Visco “the spread between the yields on Italian and German government bonds is far higher than justified by the fundamentals of our economy. This reflects widespread fear of a currency break-up in the Eurozone, a remote possibility that is, however, conditioning choices made by international investors.” In this phase, he added, “banks are called upon to make tough decisions, such as ensuring there is financing for solid companies, avoiding support being extended to those with no prospects.” Banks must also protect themselves. “Progress made on capitalization must be consolidated,” warned Visco. The government was fully supported by ABI’s president, Giuseppe Mussari, who said, “The government has never been soft with banks”, but in spite of this’, “we renew our full and firm support to the government, emphasizing how the tasks awaiting it and awaiting the country are so difficult they demand loyal support from everyone.” ..

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



Italy: Number of Mortgages Plunged in First Quarter

Rome, 9 July (AKI) — Italians during the first three months of the year took out 47 percent fewer mortgages as a deepening recession in the euro-zone’s third-richest economy created pessimism and kept Italians from taking on new debt, according to a new report.

The drop in mortgages “has underlined a substantial caution with acquisitions, above all with durable goods of high value and real estate investments,” said the report by the Association of Consumer Credit and Real Estate.

Italy’s Confindustria trade association expects the Italian economy to shrink 2.4 percent this year and 0.3 percent in 2013. The country is in its fourth recession since 2001 and unemployment is a 12-year high of more than 10 percent, but 36 percent of workers between 15 and 24 years old can’t find a job. Almost 12,000 businesses closed their doors in 2011.

Startng from the second half of last year the Italian housing mortgage market started progressive decline reflecting a deteriorating climate of confidence in the prospects for the residential housing market, the report said. The pessimistic climate discouraged requests for housing loans.

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



Italy Central Bank Chief Says Liquidity for Banks Must be Guaranteed

Rome, 11 July (AKI) — Bank of Italy Governor Ignazio Visco said the euro-zone’s central bank must guarantee that their is enough liquidity for lenders.

“The ECB (European Central Bank) has no choice but to pursue these aims” he said on Wednesday during a speech in Rome.

The ECB in June said it would step in to buy bonds from the 17 countries that use the euro currency in order to shore up demand and keep borrowing rates from spiralling out of control.

The European central bank chief bank, Italian Mario Draghi, earlier this month cut interest rates to 0.75 percent, the lowest ever since the beginning of monetary union.

The rate cut “came after other moves adopted last month designed to guarantee there is enough liquidity for the banking system and to fight the effects of the fragmentation of the monetary and financial markets,” he said during a speech at the annual conference of Italy’s largest banking association.

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

USA


A Pro-Murfreesboro Mosque Filmmaker Does a Radical About-Face

Imagine if Michael Moore, in the midst of making Fahrenheit 9/11, had suddenly decided he’d made a mistake, and President George W. Bush wasn’t such a bad leader after all. That’s something of the situation involving a filmmaker who started out directing a documentary in support of the so-called “Murfreesboro Mosque,” but has now converted into one of its most ardent opponents.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



And the Oscar Goes to … Batman? Could Happen

“The Dark Knight Rises” probably has the best chance ever for a superhero film to rise into the best-picture mix at February’s Oscars. The film is the last in a celebrated trilogy that elevated comic-book movies to operatic proportion, and Hollywood likes sending finales out with a lovely door-prize (Peter Jackson’s first two “Lord of the Rings” films were Oscar also-rans before the trilogy’s conclusion won best picture).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Muslim Congressman Tied to Terror Co-Conspirator

Carson wants U.S. schools to be modeled after Quranic madrassas

Rep. Andre Carson, D-Ind., who now is under fire for suggesting the U.S. needs to be “looking at” the Islamic madrassa model of education which teaches the Quran, has a history of association with a radical Muslim group that was an unindicted co-conspirator in a scheme to raise money for Hamas. The group in question, the Islamic Society of North America, was listed by the Muslim Brotherhood as a “likeminded” organization that shares the goal of an Islamic nation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Obama Asks Congress to Extend Certain Bush Era Tax Cuts

(AGI) Washington — President Obama has asked Congress to extend certain Bush era middle-class tax cuts for a year for Americans with incomes lower than $250,000 a year. Republicans instead want all the Bush era tax cuts expiring at the end of this year to be maintained. President Obama believes the time has come to “abolish tax cuts for the more wealthy Americans” and has said that the majority of Americans should not be “held hostage” while Democrats and Republicans clash over tax cuts for the rich.

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



Sandusky Sex Abuse Investigation Faults Paterno and Others at Penn State

The most senior officials at Penn State University failed for more than a decade to take any steps to protect the children victimized by Jerry Sandusky, the longtime lieutenant to head football coach Joe Paterno, according to an independent investigation of the sex abuse scandal that rocked the university last fall.

“Our most saddening and sobering finding is the total disregard for the safety and welfare of Sandusky’s child victims,” said Louis J. Freeh, the former federal judge and director of the F.B.I. who oversaw the investigation. “The most powerful men at Penn State failed to take any steps for 14 years to protect the children who Sandusky victimized.”

[Return to headlines]



September 11 Attacks ‘Most Memorable TV Moment in Last 50 Years’

The September 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center is the most memorable moment shared by US TV viewers in the last 50 years, a study has found.

The only thing that came close was John F. Kennedy’s assassination and its aftermath in 1963, but that was only for people aged 55 and over who experienced those events as they happened instead of replayed as an historical artefact. The survey, by Sony Electronics and the Nielsen TV research company, rank TV moments for their impact, not just by asking people if they remembered watching them, but if they recalled where they watched it, who they were with and whether they talked to other people about what they had seen.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



US Billionaire Black is ‘Scream’ Buyer: Report

US investment billionaire Leon Black is the mystery buyer who paid a record-breaking $119.9 million for Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” at an auction in May, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

The painting, one of the most recognizable in history and the only privately-held version of Munch’s famous scene, was sold at Sotheby’s in New York in a dramatic 12-minute sale — but the buyer remained anonymous.

The Wall Street Journal said it learned from “several people close” to Black that the well-known art collector had bought the painting. The $119.9 million price tag was the highest ever for a work of art at a public auction.

Black’s spokesman refused to confirm or deny the report Wednesday, telling AFP: “We are not commenting on the story in the Wall Street Journal.”

Leon Black, a 60-year-old New Yorker, is the founder and senior partner of Apollo Global Management, an investment fund. He is estimated to be worth $3.4 billion, according to Forbes magazine.

The 1895 work is one of four versions Munch painted. Its nightmarish central figure and lurid, swirling colors symbolized the existential angst and despair of the modern age.

Another version of “The Scream’ belongs to the National Gallery of Munch’s native Norway, while the remaining two belong to the Munch Museum in Oslo.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


At Least Nine Killed in Avalanche in France

At least nine people have been killed in an avalanche that struck a mountain range in France on Thursday. Several others were being treated in local hospitals. At least nine climbers were killed in an avalanche that hit a mountain in the French Alps on Thursday.

A spokesperson for Haute-Savoie prefecture said the victims included three Germans, two Spaniards, one Swiss and three Britons, according to the DPA news agency.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Right Wing Stirs Up Middle East Peace Process — Seeking an Alternative to Two States

By Charles Hawley

Right-wing populists are not widely known for pursuing peace in Europe. But in the Middle East, they are seeking to change that reputation. A conference right-wing politicians helped organize between Palestinian clan leaders and Jewish settlers took place on Thursday in Hebron. They are billing it as an alternative path to peace in the region.

Info

European right-wing populist parties are widely vilified back home. Deeply wary of the euro, extremely — and vocally — suspicious of Muslim immigrants and virulently opposed to the center-left multicultural ideal, they are broadly seen as little more than dangerous makers of mischief on the political stage. Often, they are conflated with neo-Nazi groups even further to the right.

Overseas, however, particularly among Israeli right-wing politicians and West Bank settlers, they are often viewed more favorably. On Thursday, representatives from several European right-wing political parties joined senior settler leaders, second-tier Israeli politicians, Orthodox Jewish leaders and a number of Palestinian clan leaders at the home of Sheikh Farid al-Jabari in Hebron. They came together with no less than the goal of establishing an alternative to the two-state, Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

“First and foremost, we are interested in achieving peaceful coexistence in the region. I think that needs to be the goal of all efforts,” Heinz-Christian Strache, head of the right-wing populist Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), told SPIEGEL ONLINE. “To that end, it is important to begin a dialogue. I am convinced that a solution can be found in the near future that is acceptable to all sides.”

Strache himself was unable to attend the Thursday meeting, but his party, primarily his close confidant David Lasar, an FPÖ member of the Viennese city-state government, played an instrumental role in putting it together. Joining Lasar in Hebron were Filip Dewinter, a Flemish parliamentarian from the right-wing party Vlaams Belang, and Kent Ekeroth of the similarly minded Swedish Democrats.

‘Not Beloved by Everyone’

It wasn’t the first such meeting between Sheikh Jabari and senior settler leaders — represented most prominently by Gershon Mesika, head of the Shomron Regional Council, which administers 30 West Bank settlements — to have been midwifed by European right-wing populists. It follows on the heels of a meeting hosted at the headquarters of European Parliament in mid-May by Fiorello Provera, a member of the Italian anti-immigration party Liga Nord and vice chair of the European Parliament’s Foreign Relations Committee. Although the meeting was not official parliamentary business, it nevertheless carried symbolic value taking place as it did in Brussels.

“Palestinian society is nuanced. There is Hamas and there is the Palestine Liberation Organization. But you also have ordinary people who think and act differently than they do,” Provera told SPIEGEL ONLINE in an interview. “The settlers, too, are not beloved by everyone in Israel, they are considered to be extremists. But they have to be understood. How do people expect to build a peace agreement without listening to the various groups of Israelis and Palestinians?”

Provera’s question is a revealing one. European right-wing populists have spent much of the last two years building relations with conservative Israeli politicians and West Bank settlers. Provera himself went on a tour of the West Bank earlier this year, following the path of several populist leaders before him, Strache included.

Most went to Israel with a deep-seated conviction that the country — given its presence on the front line in the conflict with Islam, as Strache told SPIEGEL ONLINE last year — deserves greater support from Europe. Most came back with an even deeper mistrust of the Palestinian Authority and concern that the two-state solution could merely result in another radical Muslim state on Israel’s doorstep. Their skeptical view of the Arab Spring — as an uprising of Muslim fundamentalism — has only reinforced such fears.

It is a position, of course, which closely parallels that of the populists’ main partners in Israel: conservative politicians from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, parliamentarians from the ultra-orthodox religious Shas party and settler leaders, who are concerned that the two-state solution would force them to give up their homes and their claims to part of what they see as the Jewish homeland…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



European Jewish Leaders on Circumcision Ruling: ‘Worst Attack on Jewish Life Since the Holocaust’

An influential group of European rabbis on Thursday used unusually strong language to attack a German court ruling against the circumcision of boys. If the ruling is allowed to stand, the group’s president warned, “then I don’t see a future for Jews in Germany.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Finding the Anti-World: The Next Holy Grail for Physics

The apparent discovery of the Higgs boson was hailed as a historic milestone, but for particle physicists it mainly marks the beginning of a new search. Rival teams at CERN in Switzerland are trying to decipher the secrets of antimatter. If they succeed, the laws of physics will have to be rewritten.

One of the central puzzles that could pave the way into this new territory lies in the question that Jeffrey Hangst has chosen to pursue: Why does the world consist of matter? And what happened to antimatter?

Hangst is particularly interested in an unusual material. It behaves just like ordinary matter, and yet it’s completely different. The properties are the same, meaning that anti-glass would splinter like glass, anti-gold would shine like gold and anti-water would splash like water. And there would also be no visible difference between a person made of normal matter and a person made of antimatter. They would be completely identical.

But heaven forbid that both — matter and antimatter, image and copy — come into contact with one another. If that happened, there would be a bright flash of light and suddenly both would have disappeared.

The most important thing, however, is the fact that antimatter doesn’t actually exist on a sustained basis. The anti-world is nothing more than a possibility, one that nature has apparently not made into a reality. In the theorists’ equations both the world and the anti-world play equal roles. But in the real, observable universe, everything consists of matter, not antimatter.

“Understanding why this is the case has always fascinated me,” says Hangst. Physicists are convinced that properly understanding the relationship between matter and antimatter would be tantamount to a revolution in comprehending the universe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Brigitte Bardot Supports Renegade Cow

A cow has escaped a slaughterhouse in the Alps and has been on the run since last week. Brigitte Bardot’s animal welfare foundation says it wants to give the renegade cow a home.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Chinese Cyber Attacks Hit Elysée Palace: Report

Two cyber attacks have hit the presidential Elysée Palace in the last couple of months, daily Le Télégramme reports. Officials suspect the attacks originated in China.

The Elysée Palace faced a massive cyber attack just before François Hollande came to power in May. According to Le Télégramme, the attacks were so serious that computer experts had to rebuild the palace’s IT systems from scratch. Officials did not reveal the attacks to the press but spent three days fixing the Elysée systems.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Historian Gives Readers Glimpse of Medieval Life

In a SPIEGEL interview, British historian Ian Mortimer discusses the often brutal reality of everyday life during the Middle Ages, the violent excesses of the time, his lively approach to writing historical tomes and his need to empathize with the subjects he is covering.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Gaddafi Soccer Son’s SUV Towed After 4 Years in Ligurian Resort

(ANSAmed) — Genoa, July 6 — A sports utility vehicle belonging to the former soccer-playing son of late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi has been impounded by Italian tax police after being parked outside a luxury hotel in the Ligurian resort of Rapallo for the last four years.

The Guardia di Finanza tax police taped up Al-Saadi Gheddafi’s SUV outside Rapallo’s Hotel Excelsior.

According to local media, it had been parked there since Al-Saadi’s brief spell at Genoa club Sampdoria in 2006-2007.

Previously the soccer-mad Gaddafi played sporadically for Perugia before having a very short experience at Udinese. Sources said the tax police seized the car as part of efforts stemming from a request by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, which is collecting former Gaddafi assets in order to compensate victims of his 32-year regime.

In 2011 al-Saadi was the commander of Libya’s Special Forces in the Libyan civil war and is wanted by Interpol.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Majority of Germans Lack Sufficient Vitamin D

A new report finding that a majority of Germans lack sufficient vitamin D has set off a debate in the country between dermatologists and nutritionists, who recommend a simple, natural remedy for gaining more of the essential vitamin: sunshine.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Attacks Could Have Been Prevented

A confidential report from the US Customs Service on the anti-terror program Global Shield suggests the terrorist attacks on Norway last summer could have been prevented, if Norway had stronger and better coordination between its own police and customs officials. Police intelligence unit PST could have registered information it received on Breivik from customs officials, if it had been made a priority

           — Hat tip: LN [Return to headlines]



Norway: Oslo Mayor Wants Begging Banned

Oslo Mayor Fabian Stang wants to ban begging in the Norwegian capital amid a controversy over the erection this week of a temporary Roma camp outside a city church.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Police Trained for Breivik the Week Before.

Only hours before Anders Breivik Behring began firing at the youths at Utøya, police emergency squad completed an exercise where they practiced an almost identical situation.

Aftenposten has received confirmation from key sources in the management of the Oslo police that the exercise was terminated at 1500 the same Fridays.

           — Hat tip: LN [Return to headlines]



Olympic Military Security Ranks Swell Further in London

The British government has put a further 3,500 military personnel on standby for the 2012 Olympics, bringing the total to around 17,000. A security contractor’s inability to deliver what it promised prompted the move.

Home Secretary Theresa May came under fire in parliament on Thursday after announcing that another 3,500 troops would be put on standby to make sure that security services were equipped for the Olympic Games. Roughly 13,500 military personnel had already been mobilized.

“I can confirm to the House that there remains no specific security threat to the Games and the threat level remains unchanged,” May said. “And let me reiterate that there is no question of Olympic security being compromised.”

A private security contractor, G4S, had been hired to provide in excess of 10,000 security guards for the Games, but it issued a statement calling the Olympic deployment “unprecedented and very complex” and saying it had encountered delays when processing applicants. May told parliamentarians in Westminster that the “absolute gap in numbers was only crystallized” one day earlier.

An opposition Labour party MP with internal security responsibilities, Keith Vaz, was highly critical of May and G4S alike.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Silver Treasure Found at Swedish Shipwreck

Divers have recovered a number of 16th century silver coins from the wreckage of the legendary Swedish warship Mars, which was discovered last year off the coast of the Baltic sea island of Öland.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Man Gunned Down in South Stockholm Suburb

A 35-year-old man was shot dead in the south Stockholm suburb of Enskede on Wednesday night, with the suspected assailants fleeing the scene on a scooter.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Catholic Church’s Fading Influence in Poland

Twenty years ago, the Catholic Church played a major role in the fall of communism in Poland. Today, with the country changing rapidly, the church’s influence is quickly waning. Once considered the most Catholic country in Europe, the faithful are vanishing.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Former Imam of Wellingborough Mosque Guilty of Molesting Girls

THE former imam of Wellingborough mosque has been convicted of sexually abusing two girls while privately teaching them passages of the Koran. Abdul Marin, 41, was found unanimously guilty of seven sexual assault charges at Northampton Crown Court today having told a jury he was the victim of a conspiracy. The imam, who resigned last year, was accused of sexually touching two girls, who cannot be named, kissing them and putting his hands inside their clothing during religious lessons.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Mosque to be Built in Al Maktoum College in Dundee

It will be open not only to Al Maktoum College students but also to the public

Dundee: A ceremony was held on Tuesday to mark the official launch of a £1 million mosque development for the Al Maktoum College of Higher Education campus in Dundee. More than 70 jobs are expected to be created during the construction phase, which is due to start in September with completion next summer. The mosque, the first in the city with a minaret, will be a three-storey building with a community area at ground-floor level. Prayer and worship areas will be on the first and second floors. It will be open not only to Al Maktoum College students but also the community in general.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Mod Fury as Soldiers Forced to Carry Out Menial Security Tasks for Olympic Games

Thousands more Armed Forces personnel will be forced to carry out “menial” security work for the Olympic Games, leaving defence chiefs furious.

The British Army has been ordered to provide more troops for the Games to make up for a shortfall in staff provided by private security contractors. The Daily Telegraph understands that defence chiefs have angrily complained to Olympic organisers, accusing them of mismanaging their security contract and leaving the Armed Forces to bear the burden. The Ministry of Defence last year said that 13,500 military personnel would be assigned to Olympic duties, with 7,500 of them in security roles at Olympic venues.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Online Racist Abuse: We’ve All Suffered it Too

by Inayat Bunglawala

Mehdi Hasan revealed the Islamophobic abuse he’s endured online. It’s something all racial minority writers face

Considering that Muslims are Britain’s largest religious minority group — according to census figures they number more than the UK’s Jews, Sikhs, Hindus and Buddhists put together — it makes it all the more perplexing why there are not more Muslim columnists in our national media. Mehdi Hasan, in his column on online Islamophobia, could name only Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and himself. It seems that, for many of our fellow citizens, the Muslims they would like to see in our public life — if there have to be any — should be those that are voluble in their gratefulness that they have been allowed to live in the UK but are otherwise utterly docile.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Some Online Hatreds Are Prosecuted, Others Applauded

by Daniel Hannan

The Guardian is again agonising over the nasty comments on its online opinion section, Comment is Free, aimed at ethnic minority contributors, especially Muslims. It has a point. You don’t have to be squeamish to be revolted by a great deal of what happens beneath the line. Here are three typical comments, posted within 20 minutes of each other on a single thread:

Jeez, have you even met any Muslims? They’re like a cross between Fagin & Goebbels.

I have always found Muslims to be nasty, selfish, lying, despicable, evil, grasping, ignorant, duplicitous wastes of oxygen.

Muslims are extremist scum. End of story.

Actually, I’ve played a little trick on you. These comments were posted on CiF in response to a piece by Tim Montgomerie, editor of ConservativeHome. In each case, I’ve changed a single word, substituting ‘Muslims’ for ‘Tories’.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Liberal Media’s War on ‘Trolling’ Is Becoming Increasingly Intolerant and Censorious

by Brendan O’Neill

Jonathan Freedland has written an article for the Guardian about Islamophobic trolling on the internet. It contains an extraordinary line. Freedland says Muslim journalists are frequently subjected to vile racist abuse by some of the crankier commenters who lurk on the world wide web, including being branded “**********”. But there are also “subtler” forms of racism, he says, such as when trolls “dress up in progressive, Guardian-friendly garb … slamming Islam as oppressive of gay and women’s rights, for example”. “Call it progressives’ prejudice”, says Freedland.

What is extraordinary about this is that it represents an explicit conflation of racial prejudice and political opinion, a mashing together of what we can all agree is irrational hatred of Muslims with what is surely just criticism of Islam. Now, you may agree or disagree with the idea that Islam is repressive of women and gays, but it is an idea nonetheless, a view some individuals have arrived at after thinking about various issues. To lump such an outlook together with abusive terms like “**********”, as if they both come from the same spectrum of racial hatred, is a see-through attempt to demonise certain political ideas by branding them racist.

[…]

[Reader comment by danoconnor on 11 July 2012 at 07:28 PM.]

It is not a right to criticize mainstream Islam, Islamization or mass population replacement and balkanization of Western peoples, it’s a moral DUTY. And anyone who doesn’t, or even worse attacks those who do, has lost the faculty to distinguish good from evil and right from wrong. They have committed intellectual and moral suicide. Those who do not stand against evil, by their actions or silence condone it. It is quite simply moral bankruptcy, cowardice, criminal ignorance and treason of the highest order. Their collabortion will in the end cause great harm and suffering to Western societies. It is not question of IF, but WHEN.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia: Witness Says Muslims Tried to Provoke Intl Intervention

The Hague, 11 July (AKI) — A witness for the prosecution in the trial of wartime Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic told the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on Wednesday Bosnian Muslims tried to provoke international intervention in 1992-1995 war, even at the cost of killing their own people.

Second prosecution witness, David Harland, who served with United Nations mission in Sarajevo (UNPROFOR) from 1993 to 1995, told the court that Bosnian Serb army terrorized civilians in Sarajevo during the 44-month siege by indiscriminate shelling and sniper fire, but added that Muslims didn’t stand by doing nothing.

Mladic’s lawyer Branko Lukic quoted in court one of Harland’s reports from Sarajevo that Muslim army targeted “not only UNPROFOR soldiers, but local pedestrians as well” in sniper attacks.

“Yes, there were many such cases,” Harland responded. Asked whether he knew that Serb civilians were also killed in Sarajevo, Harland responded that to his knowledge about 1,000 Serbs were killed, but not 5,000 as claimed by the defense.

He said many Serbs were killed because they were forced by Muslim forces to dig trenches around the city and to clear mine fields. Harland said UNPROFOR never determined who fired a shell on Sarajevo market Markale in February 2004, killing 66 people, but Serbs were blamed for the attack.

“Some on the Bosnian (Muslim) side believed that some moves would help them to provoke international intervention,” Harland said. “Izetbegovic (wartime Muslim president) personally told me that civilians shouldn’t be allowed to leave Sarajevo,” he added.

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

North Africa


Calls to Destroy Egypt’s Great Pyramids Begin

by Raymond Ibrahim

According to several reports in the Arabic media, prominent Muslim clerics have begun to call for the demolition of Egypt’s Great Pyramids—or, in the words of Saudi Sheikh Ali bin Said al-Rabi’i, those “symbols of paganism,” which Egypt’s Salafi party has long planned to cover with wax. Most recently, Bahrain’s “Sheikh of Sunni Sheikhs” and President of National Unity, Abd al-Latif al-Mahmoud, called on Egypt’s new president, Muhammad Morsi, to “destroy the Pyramids and accomplish what the Sahabi Amr bin al-As could not.”

This is a reference to the Muslim Prophet Muhammad’s companion, Amr bin al-As and his Arabian tribesmen, who invaded and conquered Egypt circa 641. Under al-As and subsequent Muslim rule, many Egyptian antiquities were destroyed as relics of infidelity. While most Western academics argue otherwise, according to early Muslim writers, the great Library of Alexandria itself—deemed a repository of pagan knowledge contradicting the Koran—was destroyed under bin al-As’s reign and in compliance with Caliph Omar’s command.

However, while book-burning was an easy activity in the 7th century, destroying the mountain-like pyramids and their guardian Sphinx was not—even if Egypt’s Medieval Mamluk rulers “de-nosed” the latter during target practice (though popular legend still attributes it to a Westerner, Napoleon).

Now, however, as Bahrain’s “Sheikh of Sheikhs” observes, and thanks to modern technology, the pyramids can be destroyed. The only question left is whether the Muslim Brotherhood president of Egypt is “pious” enough—if he is willing to complete the Islamization process that started under the hands of Egypt’s first Islamic conqueror…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Egypt: TV Channel With Only Fully-Veiled Women ‘Is Part of Fight Against Discrimination’

Cairo, 11 July (AKI) — A new satellite tv channel managed completely by women donning the niqab, or the full veil, will begin broadcasting operation on 20 July, the first day of the Ramandan holy month.

“It will be the most viewed during the month-long Ramadan,” said Maria TV owner Abu Islam Ahmad Abdallah, in an interview with Adnkronos International.

The channel’s name is a reference to Maria, the wife of Muslim prophet Maometto.

The idea for the channel came from “discrimination” against women who wear the niqab, he said.

“A veiled woman applied for work at a television channel but didn’t get the job. How come in that environment women wearing the niqab are victims of discrimination?” he said. “For this reason I decided to start a channel and help pave their way in the hope that others follow my lead,” Abdallah said.

The owner of the upstart station says he is reacting to an Egyptian media establishment which claims to support democracy, but doesn’t accept divergence of opinions.

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



Group Against Ramadan Fast Created in Morocco

In campaign for freedom to eat in public during holy month

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 12 — Young Moroccan activists with the Alternative Movement for Individual Freedoms have set up a new group called ‘Masayaminch 2012’, or we do not fast, to end the ban on public eating during the daylight hours of the month of Ramadam which this year begins on July 20.

The group says its campaign is not against their religion — Muslims are supposed to observe a fast during the day throughout Ramadam — but is aimed at giving Muslims the personal freedom to choose.

A group of young people staged a demonstration in 2009 attempting to eat in public during Ramadam but were stopped by police in a previous campaign against fasting during Ramadam.

Under Moroccan law, eating in public during Ramadam’s hours of daylight can lead to a fine of 100 euros and up to six months in jail.

‘Masayminch 2012’ has also posted a video on the internet to campaign for Muslims’ right to eat freely during the holy month.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Police Open Fire on Students in Khartoum

(AGI) Khartoum — Police have opened fire trying to disperse on students rotesting against Omar Al-Bashir’s regime at Khartoum University and there are reports that a number have been wounded. The news was reported by al Jazeera specifying that the clashes between police forces and students are still ongoing. For a number of weeks there have been continuous anti-government protests demanding regime change, justice and democracy, and students have often used slogans similar to those used in the Arab Spring uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

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



Tunisia: Fewer Bikinis, More Veils on Public Beaches

Fearing Salafists’ insults, women prefer tourist resorts

(ANSAMed) — TUNIS, JULY 11 — Fewer women go to the beach wearing bikinis now than during the previous regime, because they are increasingly being harassed by salafists.

“Ben Ali was a tyrant, he fleeced the country,” 22-year-old Halim told ANSAMed. “But at least back then we could be ourselves, like European people our age.” Women who go to the beach wearing bikinis are being increasing insulted, beaten or otherwise harassed, reportedly by Islamic fundamentalist men. Police and soldiers are patrolling the public beaches in an effort to protect the women. More and more women are going to the public beach, and even bathing, covered from head to toe, while women who reject totally covering their bodies are increasingly going to private clubs or tourist holiday resorts, where the majority of the clientele is foreign.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Neighbors Trade Vows of Mideast Peace

By Jodi Rudoren / The New York Times

HEBRON, West Bank — Peace talks between Palestinians and Israelis resumed this week, in an elaborate tent off a dirt road south of this hotly disputed city where Abraham, the patriarch of both peoples, is believed to have buried his wife.

Representatives of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas were not invited. Instead, the summit meeting Thursday was hosted by Sheik Fared al-Jabari, head of a huge clan claiming 35,000 members in Hebron and 1 million loyalists overall, and it was attended by right-wing Jewish settlers as well as several European Parliament members from conservative factions.

There were no maps traded back and forth, no treaties drafted. The question of what to do about Jerusalem was never mentioned, and the refugee issue was only nodded at.

If Track I negotiations are between the political principals, and Track II diplomacy engages intellectuals in constructive dialogue, call this Track III: local leaders with no official authority, sitting barefoot on cushions in a light breeze, trading promises of peace among neighbors amid platters of grapes, pears, peaches and plums…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Middle East


16 Palestine Liberation Army Soldiers Kidnapped, Killed on the Aleppo-Misyaf Road, Near Idlib

Resheq: We condemn the killing of Palestinian conscripts in Syria as cowardly

TUNIS, (PIC)—

Hamas condemned in the strongest words the killing of a group of Palestinian conscripts in Syria as “racist, cowardly”.

Ezzet Al-Resheq, a political bureau member of Hamas, told the PIC at dawn Thursday that the “brutal killing of 17 conscripts in the Palestinian liberation army (PLA) in Syria was a racist, cowardly act”.

He said that the Palestinians in Syria are guests, who do not interfere in the internal affairs of the country and who look forward to the day when they return to their homeland from which they were forcibly uprooted.

Palestinian sources said on Wednesday that 16 PLA members were kidnapped and killed on Tuesday night while on the Aleppo-Misyaf road near Idlib. Their number varied from one source to another.

16 Palestinian soldiers found killed, mutilated in northern Syria

DAMASCUS, July 11, 2012 (Xinhua) —

The bodies of 16 Palestinian soldiers have been found tossed in an area between the Syrian northern provinces of Aleppo and Idlib, media reports said Wednesday.

The killed Palestinians were conscripts in the Syrian-based Palestinian Army of Liberation.

The details surrounding the carnage remain unclear due to lack of official comments. However, initial speculations indicate that the 16 young men had been ambushed en route to the Nairab Palestinian camp in Aleppo…

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]



Kuwaiti Professor Locks Self in US Embassy Toilet

KUWAIT: Representatives of the US Embassy in Kuwait refused to press charges against a Kuwaiti University professor who locked himself in the embassy’s toilet for an hour before he was forced out by the embassy security, said security sources. The sources added that the professor, who had been known as a trouble-maker, was referred to state security for two hours before he was sent to the police station near the embassy. However, on calling the embassy to file a case, official representatives refused to press any charges saying that they were well-aware of the professor’s health and psychological state and that he ‘meant no harm to anybody’.

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]



Kuwait English School Special Needs Teacher Murdered in Bristol

KUWAIT: She was expected to return to Kuwait on Aug 28 to continue her teaching career here but sadly, that won’t happen now. Judith Ege, 58, was murdered while on vacation to Horfield, Bristol, in Southwest England. Based on online accounts, Ege was stabbed to death while on a visit to Horfield with her stepdaughter on July 4. Ege was a brilliant special needs teacher at the Kuwait English School (KES) for over a year.

According to Bristol police, Barach Bandavad, a Ministry of Defence employee, was the lone suspect for Ege’s murder. Bandavad has been arrested and is currently in police custody. The suspect was the former partner of Ege’s stepdaughter. Police confirmed her stepdaughter used to live in Bristol and suggested they went to Bristol to collect some of her stepdaughter’s belongings…

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]



Pew Survey: Middle East Muslims Support Democracy, Islam in Politics

(CNN) –Just as an Islamist president takes office in Egypt, a major survey shows that most Muslims in nations in or close to the Middle East want both democracy and a strong role for Islam in politics and government. The survey, released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center, finds that most people in many predominantly Muslim nations remain optimistic that democracy can succeed in the Middle East, more than a year after the Arab Spring began sweeping across the Middle East and North Africa.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syrian President Accuses U. S. of Destabilizing Syria

(AGI) Berlin — During an interview with the German TV station ARD, Syria’s President Bashar al Assad charged the United States of “supporting and protecting the rebels to destabilize the country.” According to the text of the interview, which was prepared on July 5, Assad explained that he remained in Syria because he wanted to “face” the country’s challenges. “The president does not run away before a challenge and now we have a national challenge in Syria.” Staying, added Assad, “means you have strong support from the people.”

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



Turkey: Alevis Demand Worship Sites, Tension With Cabinet

Shiite minority victim of violence in the past

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 12 — The Turkish government of nationalist Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Sunni Muslim, and the Shiite Alevi community are at odds over the Cemevi, places of worship of Turkey’s minority which are not officially recognized by the state.

In the past few days the president of Ankara’s parliament Cemil Cicek rejected a request by an Alevi MP with the Social Democrat opposition Huseyn Aygun to open Cemevi prayer sites in Turkey’s Great Assembly.

Cicek had responded that the Alevis, a minority liberal branch of Islam, are Muslims and therefore must pray in mosques, a stance supported by deputy premier Bekir Bozbag who said ‘the Alevi is not a separate religion’.

Alevi leader Ali Kenanoglu, president of the association Hubyar Sultan, responded saying that ‘the ‘progressive’ democracy of the AKP is like the tolerance of the Ottomans, a real lie’. ‘Our places of worship, the Cemevi, are not a negotiable issue’, he also said.

Turkey’s Shiite Alevi minority has often been the victim of violence in the past. Nineteen years ago, 37 people were burnt to death in an attack on a hotel in Sivas, Anatolia, where they were taking part in a festival on Alevi poetry and literature.

Prominent intellectuals including Asim Bezirci, poets Nesimi Cimen and Metin Altiok and singer Hasret Gultekin were among the victims. A trial against the alleged perpetrators of the carnage ended without a verdict after the statute of limitation had expired.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Oldest Christian Monastery at Risk

After high court rules against monks

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA — The Mongolians failed to destroy it 700 years ago despite the massacre of 40 friars and 400 Christians. Yet the existence of the oldest functioning Christian monastery in the world, the fifth century Mor Gabriel Monastery in the Tur Abdin plane (the mountain of God’s servants) near the Turkish-Syrian border, is at risk after a ruling by Turkey’s highest appeals court in Ankara.

Founded in 397 by the monks Samuel and Simon, Mor Gabriel in eastern Anatolia has been the heart of the Orthodox Syrian community for centuries. Syriacs hail from a branch of Middle Eastern Christianity and are one of the oldest communities in Turkey.

Today the monastery is inhabited by Mor Timotheus Samuel Aktash, 3 monks, 11 nuns and 35 boys who are learning the monastery’s teachings, the ancient Aramaic language spoken by Jesus and the Orthodox Syriac tradition.

Although the monastery is situated in an area at the centre of conflicts between Kurdish separatist with the armed PKK group and the Turkish army, Mor Gabriel welcomes 20,000 pilgrims every year.

The Syriac Orthodox community — estimated to be 2.5 million across the world — is under the authority of the Patriarch of Antioch and considers the monastery a ‘second Jerusalem’.

The monastery’s reputation 1500 years ago was such that Roman Emperors Arcadius, Theodosius and Onorio built new buildings around it and enriched it with art and mosaics. But in the past 150 years Mor Gabriel has gone through a decline after the massacres of Christians by nationalists at the end of the 19th century — 3,000 Christians were burnt to death in Edessa’s Cathedral in 1895 — and clashes between Turks and Kurds in the area during World War I.

In the mid 1960s the community in Tur Abdin numbered 130,000.

Today only 3,500 people are left and the ‘second Jerusalem’ is in danger. The heads of the three neighbouring Muslim villages, Kurds with the Belebi tribe, filed a lawsuit against the monastery years ago with the support of an MP member of the Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP) of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Under the lawsuit, the Syriacs are accused of practicing ‘anti-Turkish activities’ by providing an education to young people, including non Christians, and of illegally occupying land which belongs to the neighbouring villages.

After a number of contrasting verdicts, the highest appeals court in Ankara, which is close to the government, has ruled in favour of the village chiefs and said the land which has been part of the monastery for 1,600 years is not its property, Turkish newspaper Zaman reported.

The lawsuit also claimed that the sanctuary was built over the ruins of a mosque, forgetting that Mohammed was born 170 years after its foundation.

The verdict has been slammed by the Turkish media and Zaman wrote that the judges had ‘lost’ property and fiscal documents ‘proving that the land in question belongs to the monastery’.

Mor Gabriel now needs to appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in order to survive, a move already undertaken with success a few years ago by the Greek Patriarch of Constantinople to re-obtain the building housing the Orthodox orphanage of Buyukada in Istanbul.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Islamic Group Wants Rock Fest Banned

Beer-sponsored event encourages youth drinking, Yesilay says

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA, JULY 12 — Islamic group Yesilay (Green Crescent Moon) has asked authorities to ban the One Love rock music festival, which is sponsored by Turkish beer Efes, because “it incites young people to drink alcohol,” Hurriyet daily reported today.

Yesilay President Muharrem Balci has asked Istanbul’s governor to shut down the festival, to be held at Istanbul’s progressive Bilgi University this weekend, alleging that Turkish law forbids festivals with alcoholic beverages in their name, Hurriyet said.

Yesilay has successfully petitioned for the sale of alcohol to be banned around the Galata tower, and its anti-smoking campaign is supported by first lady Emine Erdogan.

One Love festival organizers told Hurriyet they are not worried and “have not made changes to the program.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Yemen: Bomber Targets Police Cadets

A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a police academy in the Yemeni capital of Sanaa yesterday, killing at least 22 people. Investigators said the incident bore the hallmarks of an al Qaeda operation. Policeman Fadel Ali said police cadets were leaving the college when the bomber attacked, saying: “We ran to the place and found dozens of cadets covered in blood. The scene was horrific.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghan Massacre Defendant to Have Court Hearing in September

(Reuters) — The U.S. Army has scheduled a preliminary court hearing in September for the soldier charged with killing 16 Afghan civilians in rampage in March.

U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales is to have an Article 32 hearing on September 17, Army Lieutenant Colonel Gary Dangerfield said Wednesday. Dangerfield said he did not know where the hearing would be held. Bales, a decorated veteran of four combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, is accused of walking off his base under cover of darkness and opening fire on civilians in their homes in at least two villages. The March 11 mass shooting in Afghanistan’s restive Kandahar province eroded already strained U.S.-Afghanistan relations.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


Weisswurst and Beer: Tourists Flock to South Korea’s ‘German Village’

It has an Oktoberfest, German sausages and immaculate front gardens. South Korea’s “German Village” is home to Koreans who spent years as migrant workers in Germany and their German spouses. Today, thousands of tourists come to visit the quirky settlement — much to the annoyance of some residents.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Community Group Backs Gungahlin Mosque

The Gungahlin Community Council says it supports the development of a mosque in Canberra’s north. There are plans to build Canberra’s second largest mosque on Valley Avenue in Gungahlin. A group calling itself the Concerned Citizens of Canberra has objected to the social impact of the mosque and aired concerns about traffic and noise. Individual submissions to the planning authority include complaints that women wearing burkas would disturb children.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


More Than 100 Die in Nigeria in Attacks Against Christians

(AGI) Lagos — More than 100 people died in violent attacks against Christians in the Nigerian state of Plateau during the weekend. Two deputies of the State are also among them, as made known by the governor. At least 80 people died on Saturday, when shepherds of the Muslim tribe of Fulani attacked a few villages. 22 other people were massacred in the course of a raid by armed men on Sunday, during the celebration of the funerals of the people killed the day before.

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



Muslim Tribesmen Kill Nigerian Politicians During Funeral

(AGI) Lagos — Shepherds belonging to the Fulani tribe, who are Muslim, have killed a federal senator and local MP, both Christians and both from the Biron tribe in Plateau State. The two politicians were taking part in a large funeral for victims of another attack, carried out by Fulanis, when the attack took place. “Senator Gyang Dantong and the leader of the local assembly, Gyang Fulani, were attacked and killed by Fulani shepherds” said spokesman for Palteau State government, Pam Ayuba. Plateau is in the middle of Nigeria that divides the Muslim north from the Christian south.

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



Nigerian Senate: Talks With Boko Haram as Soon as Possible

(AGI) Abuja — The senate of the Nigerian Capital Abuja is calling for a start to talks with islamic terrorist group Boko Haram as soon as possible. This group killed more than 1,600 people since 2009. The call was launched during a special sitting that was set up to discuss the death of senator Dantong Gyang, who got killed during the recent wave of ethnic and religious violence upsetting the Plateau Federal State, in the central and northern part of the coutry. The President of the Senate David Mark said “We need to start talks as soon as possible as they are the only way out of the crisis which is engulfing the country”. He also deplored the spread of light weapons and bombs and asked Nigerian law enforcement agencies to “take all necessary measures to end the dealing and the spread of weapons in the country”.

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



Nigeria Fuel Tanker Explosion Kills at Least 95

A crashed fuel tanker has blown up in Nigeria, killing nearly 100 people. The victims literally died for oil as they were scooping up the “black gold” spilling out of the vehicle before it exploded.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Nigerian Christian Urges US Action on Islamic Group

WASHINGTON — The leader of Nigeria’s Christians called Tuesday on the United States to declare the Islamist group Boko Haram to be terrorists, but a US official said it was more important to address social inequalities. In an unusually blunt appeal by a foreigner before the US Congress, the head of the main Christian body in religiously divided Nigeria said that a decision to blacklist three Boko Haram leaders as terrorists did not go far enough.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Northern Mali Risks Starvation Thanks to Al-Qaeda, Drought and No Aid

Almost the entire population of northern Mali risks starvation because al-Qaeda’s capture of the area coincided with drought and hindered the delivery of aid.

War is not the only reason why at least 340,000 people have fled their homes since gunmen loyal to “al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb” (AQIM), along with rebels from the local Tuareg tribe, began their advance across northern Mali in January. A desperate shortage of food is also taking hold in this arid Saharan region. More than 1.6 million people in northern Mali are in a “situation of severe, close to extreme, food insecurity,” according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Italy: Boat Carrying 61 Migrants Rescued at Pozzallo

(AGI) Rome — 61 migrants (58 men and 3 women) were rescued by the Coast Guard off the Sicilian coast at Pozzallo at around 4:30 am. The Operating Center was informed by the Maltese Coast Guard that they had escorted a 10-meter long dinghy carrying approximately 60 persons claiming to be Somalian until the border of their territorial waters with Italy. A motor launch was sent on site by the Port Authorities of Gela and Pozzallo.

At approximately 6:15 am the migrants (all reported to be in good health conditions) were transshipped on Pozzallo’s patrol boat which is now headed into port.

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



Italy: 45 Migrants Land on Salento Coast Overnight

(AGI) Lecce — 45 migrants landed on the Salento coast between Terre Vado and Marina di Presicce (Lecce) around midnight last night. All 45 are Afghan or Pakistani males, and were taken to the Don Tonino Bello reception centre at Otranto (Lecce) for recognition procedures. Calm seas have been conducive to landings along the Salento coast over the last few days.

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



Italy: Motorboat Carrying 63 African Migrants Lands in Portopalo

(AGI) Palermo — A light motorboat with 62 Sub-Saharan Africans aboard has been rescued by a Tax Police patrol boat. The 10m vessel was spotted 30 miles south of Portopalo (Capo Passero) at 1300 hours CET today. The group of 62 included 11 women. It is understood that the human cargo departed from Libya and was helped by favourable weather conditions.

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



Italy: Coastguard Intercepts Boatload of Syrians and Kurds

Reggio Calabria, 11 July (AKI) — Italian coastguard Wednesday intercepted 25 migrants off the southern Italian coast who claimed to be Syrians and Kurds. The migrants included women and children and said they were hoping to settle in Germany.

Red cross workers who examined the migrants when coastguard brought them ashore in Guardavalle in the southern Calabria region said they were in quite good condition with the exception of one woman who had health problems.

The migrants have been transferred to a centre owned by the local council.

Another group of migrants who set sail from Libya was less fortunate. Of the 55 who set sail in an effort to reach Italy, 54 perished from dehydration after winds blew the rubber boat back towards North Africa and it gradually deflated, the UN refugee agency said on Tuesday. A sole passenger, an Eritrean, survived.

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



Malta: 84 Somali Migrants Rescued at Sea

Valletta, 6 July (AKI) — Eighty-four Somali migrants were rescued Friday off of Malta’s coast, according to the dpa news agency.

The 51 men, 32 women and a young girl are part of a wave of clandestine migrants who sail for Europe from the North Africa coast.

Italian police late last month intercepted a 15-metre Egyptian fishing vessel transporting 115 north African migrants near the eastern Sicilian city of Catania.

The attempt to reach Europe by boat can be fatal. Eight Libyan migrants last week were feared dead after their boat sank off the coast of southern Italy and the Coast Guard rescued four others.

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



UK: Five Million Non-EU Immigrants Living in UK

The UK is home to almost five million people who were born outside the 27 EU member states, more than almost any other European country, new figures have shown.

Only Germany and France have a greater population of immigrants born outside of the EU than the UK, which has an estimated 4.9 million foreigners living in the country. There are also 2.3 million immigrants from other EU countries living in Britain, according to the research. The provisional data, from the EU statistics office Eurostat, suggested foreign citizens made up seven per cent of the UK population. While Germany had the highest number of immigrants, Luxembourg had the highest proportion with 43 per cent of the population born abroad. Overall, 2.5 per cent of the EU population were people living in another European country.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


New Muslim Prayer Mat Points to Mecca

Devout Muslims pray five times a day, facing the holy city of Mecca. But what if you don’t know what direction Mecca is? Try the new illuminated prayer mat. Invented by London-based Turkish designer Soner Ozenc, the mat lights up when facing the Saudi city. Currently, only two prototypes exist, one of which was purchased by the Museum of Modern Art in New York for its show last year on interactive design. Ozenc is trying to raise $100,000 through Kickstarter.com, the online fundraising tool, to bring the mat into mass production. If he reaches his goal, for $500, donors can expect one of the first mats out of the factory.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why the West Loves Lying to Itself About Islam

By Daniel Greenfield

Say that you get a tempting offer from a Nigerian prince and decide to invest some money in helping him transfer his vast fortune from Burkina Faso or Dubai over to the bank across the street. The seemingly simple task of bringing over the 18 million dollars left to him by his father hits some snags which require you to put in more and more of your own money.

Eventually you have invested more than you ever would have ever done up front, just trying to protect the sunk cost, the money that you already sank into Prince Hussein Ngobo’s scheme. And to protect your self-esteem, you must go on believing that, no matter what Prince Ngobo does, he is credible and sincere. Any failings in the interaction must be your fault. Anyone who tells you otherwise must be a Ngobophobe.

Now imagine that Prince Ngobo’s real name is Islam.

That is where Western elites find themselves now. They invested heavily in the illusion of a compatible Islamic civilization. Those investments, whether in Islamic immigration or Islamic democracy or peace with Islam have turned toxic, but dropping those investments is as out of the question as writing off Prince Ngobo as a con artist and walking away feeling like a fool. Western elites, who fancy themselves more intelligent and more enlightened than the wise men and prophets of every religion, and who base their entire right to rule on that intelligence and enlightenment, are not in the habit of admitting that they are fools.

The Arab Springers who predicted that the Muslim uprisings would bring a new age of secularism, freedom and an end to the violence between Islam and the West are busy writing up new checks. Thomas Friedman is penning essays explaining why the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood will mean regional stability and peace with Israel (and if it doesn’t, it will be our fault).

It’s not insanity; it’s the term that rhymes with a certain river in Egypt. The Brotherhood’s victory discredits the Arab Spring, which discredits the bid for Arab Democracy, which discredits the compatibility of Islam and the folks on Fifth Avenue. Follow the river back along its course and suddenly the Clash of Civilizations becomes an undeniable fact. It’s easier to give up and let the river of denial carry you further along until, five years from now, you find yourself explaining why Al-Qaeda ruling Libya is actually a good thing for everyone.

The Arab Spring, the Palestinian Peace Process and every similar bid to transform the region presumed that disempowerment was the cause of Muslim violence and that, conversely, empowerment was the solution. Give the poor dears some weapons, a country, a ballot box, free and open elections, and they’ll be less likely to blow themselves up while seeking 72 virgins on the downtown express. Instead, empowering people who were violent while disempowered only made them more violent. Some of the best minds in two hemispheres are engaged in seeking a solution to this paradox, which isn’t a paradox at all, but rather a straight-line projection.

If Abdul is beheading people when all he has to work with is a sword, then, if you give him a gun, he will start shooting them instead. If he’s blowing up buses when he only has a terrorist group, he will blow up countries when he has a country. Empowering Abdul does not diminish his grievances, because his grievances are a function of his capacity for violence. Increasing his capacity will increase his grievances until the entire world is on the wrong end of his empowerment scimitar.

The liberal projection that “Abdul + Power + Money + Bigger Guns = Peace” made as much sense as Prince Ngobo’s story about his transfer fees being cursed by witches, but, as the song goes, “You gotta have faith.” Some of the things that we have faith in are bigger than us and some are just us. Those who put their faith in Prince Ngobo and in the benign nature of Islam are really putting their faith in their own instincts, trusting that they are right, even while looking into the eye of the wrongness.

The sunk cost of the free world into the illusion that Islam is benign, that it is a positive influence and that it can be coexisted with is enormous. Even the dollar, euro and shekel costs make the wildest frauds seem tame…

           — Hat tip: HC [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120711

USA
» House Votes 244-185 to Repeal Obama Healthcare Reform Law
» Longview Mosque Opens Doors to Public
» Pastor Arrested for Holding Home Bible Study
» Visit Your Local Mosque This Ramadan
 
Europe and the EU
» Age of Extremes: Mehdi Hasan and Maajid Nawaz Debate
» France: Francois Hollande Falls Into ‘Trap’ To Look Like ‘Dwarf’ Alongside Coldstream Guards
» Tree-Rings Prove Climate Was Warmer in Roman and Medieval Times Than it is Now — and World Has Been Cooling for 2,000 Years
» UK: Can the Coalition be Rebooted?
» UK: Hundreds Flock to Crawley £1m Mega-Mosque Opening
» UK: Hate Meetings in Parliament
» UK: I Stand With Mehdi Hasan Against the Torrent of Islamophobic Abuse
» UK: Jewish Group: Church Synod Israel Vote ‘Inflammatory’
» UK: NF Supporter Arrested During Swansea Protest Against ‘Muslim Rapists’
» US Child Beauty Contest Struggles to Host Irish Event
» Without a Mosque, Greece’s Muslims Go Underground
 
Balkans
» Bosnia: Remembering the Dead of Srebrenica
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Europe United Against Israel
» Gaza Presents: ‘Prisoners’ Summer Camp’
» Levy Commission in Israel Advises PM That Settlements Are Not Illegal
 
Middle East
» Russia Sends Warships to Syria
 
South Asia
» A New Contract for Afghanistan
 
Australia — Pacific
» Preston Mosque in Strife Over Telling Wives to Share Their Husbands With Other Women
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Kenya: Muslim Leaders Pile Pressure Over Anti-Terror Bill
» Mali: How the West Cleared the Way for Al-Qaeda’s African March
 
General
» “The Fortunes of Permanence — Culture and Anarchy in an Age of Amnesia”
» Northern Lights Oddity: Strange Sounds of Auroras Explained

USA


House Votes 244-185 to Repeal Obama Healthcare Reform Law

The House voted again Wednesday to repeal the 2010 healthcare reform law, giving Republicans some revenge against the late June Supreme Court ruling that found the law to be constitutional.

Members approved the bill in a 244-185 vote, after five hours of debate that stretched over two days.

As expected, just a handful of Democrats supported the GOP repeal bill. Five Democrats, Reps. Dan Boren (Okla.), Larry Kissell (N.C.), Jim Matheson (Utah), Mike McIntyre (N.C.) and Mike Ross (Ark.), sided with Republicans in the final vote. Of this group, all but Matheson voted with the GOP in a procedural vote on the bill Tuesday.

Republicans insisted on passing the Repeal of Obamacare Act, H.R. 6079, in reaction to the Supreme Court ruling, even though Democrats pointed out that the bill would be ignored by the Democratic Senate. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) cast the bill as a way to give the Senate another chance to heed the will of Americans who oppose the legislation and see it as something that has led to increased healthcare costs and hindered job creation…

[Return to headlines]



Longview Mosque Opens Doors to Public

Members of Longview’s Muslim community announced they will hold an open house Friday for the city’s first mosque. “This room is called the musallah, the prayer hall,” said Saleem Shabazz, spokesman for the Islamic Centre of Longview, who welcomed reporters into a green-and-gold carpeted hall that dominates the roughly 3,000-square-foot mosque on Amy Street in far North Longview.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pastor Arrested for Holding Home Bible Study

When you hear of a pastor being arrested for holding a Bible study in his home what’s the first thing that comes to mind? Must be someplace like Iran where Christians are persecuted, right? Not this time. It happened right here in the good old U.S.A.

Pastor Michael Salman arrested for Bible study

Pastor Michael Salman and his family live on about 4 1/2 acres in the Phoenix area. Salman is an ordained minister who holds a number of biblical degrees, but since 2005, they have chosen to gather like the biblical church, in homes.

“Every day they devoted themselves to meeting together in the temple complex, and broke bread from house to house” (Acts 2:46)(HCSB).

Today, Michael Salman sits in jail following a raid on his home because the city doesn’t allow people to hold private Bible studies on their own property! Fox News quoted Phoenix City Prosecutor Vicki Hall as saying, “It came down to zoning and proper permitting. Anytime you are holding a gathering of people continuously as he does, we have concerns about people being able to exit the facility properly in case there is a fire.”…

           — Hat tip: Janet Levy [Return to headlines]



Visit Your Local Mosque This Ramadan

Research shows that American mosques have strong outreach in their communities, are involved in interfaith fellowship, and good works. Muslim congregants are patriotic Americans and good neighbours, writes Hesham Hassaballa.

On June 22, the Justice Department indicted a Texas man for threatening a Tennessee mosque that is currently under construction. According to the indictment, last September, Javier A. Correa left a message on the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro’s phone allegedly saying: “On Sept. 11, 2011, there’s going to be a bomb in the building.” This is the latest in a long-pitched battle in that small Tennessee town over the construction of a mosque. Opponents of the mosque worry about radical Islam and Sharia law: “We don’t want Shariah law. We don’t want a Constitution-free zone in Rutherford County [Tennessee],” said attorney Joe Brandon Jr. on National Public Radio.

Yet, the fight in Murfreesboro is nothing new. Muslim communities across the country have had to deal with angry opponents of the construction of mosques in their communities, including right here in my hometown of Chicago. Some of these fights are over traffic or storm water drainage concerns, but in many cases, there is overt hostility to Islam itself and, of course, wild suspicions of terrorism and impossible accusations of seeking to supplant the US constitution with Sharia. Anyone who looked at the facts about mosques in the United States would wonder why there is so much hostility.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Age of Extremes: Mehdi Hasan and Maajid Nawaz Debate

What’s to blame for persistent Muslim extremism — the violent appeal of political Islam, or botched western foreign policy? Mehdi Hasan goes head to head with Maajid Nawaz of Quilliam.

Dear Maajid, Assalam alaikum.

Your new memoir, Radical, exploring your journey from Hizb ut-Tahrir activist to self-professed “liberal Muslim”, is bold, fascinating and, at times, insightful. To be honest, I wasn’t always a fan of your work — and I am still bemused by the view in some circles that former extremists are the best (the only?) people qualified to identify and tackle extremism.

Nonetheless, you should be applauded for trying to answer one of the most uncomfortable questions of our time: what is it that turns a tiny minority of ordinary, young, Muslim men into fanatical, cold-blooded killers?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Francois Hollande Falls Into ‘Trap’ To Look Like ‘Dwarf’ Alongside Coldstream Guards

Francois Hollande has been ridiculed in France for allowing himself to look like a “dwarf” alongside the Coldstream Guards — the battalion that won battle honours at Waterloo and then occupied Paris.

During an official visit to London on Tuesday, the French president inspected a Guard of Honour from the 1st Battalion of the Coldstream Guards at the Foreign Office. He then appeared in photographs alongside Major General George Norton, who looked around two feet taller than the Gallic head of state. Comments alongside the image on a website of pictures taken by AFP, France’s national news agency, suggested Hollande had fallen into a “trap” made to make him look ridiculous. “Poor France,” wrote Jean-Marc Rameau, from Paris, while Dmitri Kovaley mocked Mr Hollande, who is 5ft 7 ins, with the words “Dwarfs rule the world”.

[JP note: Among the shortage of garden gnomes constituting the world’s leadership — Bungalow Barrack, Cast Iron Dave, and Mutti Merkel, Mr Hollande is not out of place.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tree-Rings Prove Climate Was Warmer in Roman and Medieval Times Than it is Now — and World Has Been Cooling for 2,000 Years

Rings in fossilised pine trees have proven that the world was much warmer than previously thought — and the earth has been slowly COOLING for 2,000 years.

Measurements stretching back to 138BC prove that the Earth is slowly cooling due to changes in the distance between the Earth and the sun.

The finding may force scientists to rethink current theories of the impact of global warming.

It is the first time that researchers have been able to accurately measure trends in global temperature over the last two millennia.

Over that time, the world has been getting cooler — and previous estimates, used as the basis for current climate science, are wrong.

Their findings demonstrate that this trend involves a cooling of -0.3°C per millennium due to gradual changes to the position of the sun and an increase in the distance between the Earth and the sun.

‘This figure we calculated may not seem particularly significant,’ says Esper, ‘however, it is also not negligible when compared to global warming, which up to now has been less than 1°C.

‘Our results suggest that the large-scale climate reconstruction shown by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) likely underestimate this long-term cooling trend over the past few millennia.’

The finding was based on semi-fossilised tree rings found in Finnish lapland.

Professor Dr. Jan Esper’s group at the Institute of Geography at JGU used tree-ring density measurements from sub-fossil pine trees originating from Finnish Lapland to produce a reconstruction reaching back to 138 BC.

In so doing, the researchers have been able for the first time to precisely demonstrate that the long-term trend over the past two millennia has been towards climatic cooling.

‘We found that previous estimates of historical temperatures during the Roman era and the Middle Ages were too low,’ says Esper. ‘Such findings are also significant with regard to climate policy, as they will influence the way today’s climate changes are seen in context of historical warm periods.’

The annual growth rings in trees are the most important witnesses over the past 1,000 to 2,000 years as they indicate how warm and cool past climate conditions were.

Researchers from Germany, Finland, Scotland, and Switzerland examined tree-ring density profiles in trees from Finnish Lapland. In this cold environment, trees often collapse into one of the numerous lakes, where they remain well preserved for thousands of years.

The density measurements correlate closely with the summer temperatures in this area on the edge of the Nordic taiga; the researchers were thus able to create a temperature reconstruction of unprecedented quality.

The reconstruction provides a high-resolution representation of temperature patterns in the Roman and Medieval Warm periods, but also shows the cold phases that occurred during the Migration Period and the later Little Ice Age.

In addition to the cold and warm phases, the new climate curve also exhibits a phenomenon that was not expected in this form.

For the first time, researchers have now been able to use the data derived from tree-rings to precisely calculate a much longer-term cooling trend that has been playing out over the past 2,000 years.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Can the Coalition be Rebooted?

by Tim Montgomerie

Forget for a moment that most of us didn’t want to be here. Most Tory members didn’t approve of the kind of changes Cameron made to the Conservative Party. Most Tory members didn’t think much of the awful Tory election campaign. Most Tory members wanted to govern as a minority government, not as coalition. Most Tory members then wish we’d pursued a more ambitious growth plan. In summary — — The wrong modernisation. The wrong election campaign. The wrong post-election strategy. The wrong economic policy. Those four things are all true but we are where we are. Can the Coalition be saved?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Hundreds Flock to Crawley £1m Mega-Mosque Opening

A MOSQUE has officially opened after the completion of a five-year extension project, costing more than £1 million. The Broadfield Mosque, in Broadwood Rise, held its opening ceremony last Saturday (July 7).

The work, which included building new wings onto the existing masjid to create five classrooms, a library, two halls, the Imam’s flat and a new kitchen, cost £1.2 million. The funds were raised through private donations. Imam Mohammad Huzaisa Bora said: “We had a fantastic turnout. About 750 people visited the mosque throughout the day. The extension has allowed us to create a whole new floor for people to use. The first floor used to only have a gallery and office area but it is now much larger in size.” Prior to the construction work, the mosque did not have enough space for worshippers to pray, with people forced to stand outside, exposed to the elements. The building has been extended to about four times its original size and now has two large prayer halls, with separate facilities for women, and it can accommodate about 1,800 people.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Hate Meetings in Parliament

Here is Labour MEP Richard Howitt, properly standing up against extremism and hatred in the European Parliament:

Socialist MEP Richard Howitt has demanded an investigation after right-wingers allegedly “hijacked” parliament’s facilities. It comes following what the deputy called a “clandestine” meeting of European far-right groups on Monday. The British member has now raised the issue with parliament’s president Martin Schulz.

On Monday afternoon, Tommy Robinson of the English Defence League (EDL) spoke to the meeting and described himself as the president of the British freedom party.

The meeting was hosted behind the “cover” of the launch of a new front organisation called the International Civil Liberties Alliance.

Here is Labour MEP Richard Howitt, standing up for extremism and hatred in the British Parliament. Two years ago, Richard Howitt spoke at a meeting the the House of Commons organised by Palestine Telegraph founder, director, and racist Sameh Habeeb on behalf of the pro-Hamas Palestinian Return Centre. The speaker line-up included Baroness Tonge. Habeeb is famous for inviting the neo Nazi MEP, Krisztina Morvai, to an earlier and similar event. Howitt has also invited the Hamas funders and thugs of the Turkish Islamist charity IHH to the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

[…]

[Reader comment by QM on 10 July 2012 at 5:55 pm.]

Nothing particularly extreme about the BFP either. Problem is of course that it’s not of the ‘left’ which means of course that it has to be labelled extreme despite the fact that the ‘left’ if history is to be believed has occasioned far more wars, strife and general human rights abuses than any or all parties of the right put together.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: I Stand With Mehdi Hasan Against the Torrent of Islamophobic Abuse

by Jonathan Freedland

By all means disagree with me below the line. But no one should have to put up with vile racism and bigotry

It’s a standard debating technique. Your opponent offers a counter-argument. You respond with a smile, saying, “You make my point for me.” It often works but only rarely is it completely true. One of those rare occasions has arisen right here on Comment is Free — via the thread below Mehdi Hasan’s valedictory piece for this site. Mehdi’s parting shot focused on the abuse he and other prominent Muslims regularly endure when they enter the public square, with insults often hurled via the medium of the online comment. Sure enough, many of those who disagreed with Hasan’s essay piled on to the discussion below the line to use language and imagery so vile it instantly confirmed the very case he had been making.

[…]

[JP note: Plenty of commentators below the line seem to think that Freedland is standing on the wrong side of the line.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Jewish Group: Church Synod Israel Vote ‘Inflammatory’

The representative organisation of British Jewry has condemned the Church of England’s General Synod for choosing to “promote an inflammatory and partisan programme at the expense of its interfaith relations”. In a strongly worded statement, the president of the Board of Deputies expressed its concern over the decision at the Synod yesterday to pass a motion endorsing the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI).

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: NF Supporter Arrested During Swansea Protest Against ‘Muslim Rapists’

A 21-year-old man has been arrested during a demonstration by Far Right campaigners in Swansea. Police intervened during the demonstration in the city centre on Saturday organised by the South Wales National Front in Union Street. Officers made the arrest for an alleged racial public order offence. They also confiscated banners and posters to ensure there was no breach of the peace. The 21-year-old man is believed to be from Swansea and has been released on bail following the arrest.

South Wales Evening Post, 9 July 2012

As the NF’s own report makes clear, the demonstration was directed against “Muslim rapists” and involved protestors brandishing placards featuring the popular racist slogan “Our children are not halal meat”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



US Child Beauty Contest Struggles to Host Irish Event

BOSSES of a contentious child beauty pageant are planning their first-ever event in Ireland, despite three separate snubs from worried hoteliers.

Chiefs of the Texas-based Universal Royal Beauty Pageant, which has been running competitions across the US for 18 years, are hoping to host their first-ever contest in this country in November.

Already three hotels have pulled the plug on a proposed event, fearing a backlash of protests from angry parents and regular customers.

But chiefs of the pageant claim they’ve been inundated by calls from over 300 parents of Irish toddlers, who they say “are desperate for us to come to Ireland”.

Texas-based organiser Annette Hill said yesterday she was still confident of running the pageant in November, shortly after she stages her first European competition at a venue in Manchester, UK, in October.

Ms Hill insists she doesn’t understand why her pageants are causing such controversy on this side of the water, adding yesterday: “I’ve seen videos of Irish dancing, with children who’ve had their hair and eyelashes done and wearing fake tan.”

But she said: “It’s proving very difficult to find a venue. Three hotels I’d been talking to have cancelled, because they’re worried about protesters turning up. It amazes me, because this is no big deal in America where pageants take place every day. But the media get on our backs as soon as we go outside America.”

Ms Hill also confirmed she’d be bringing over seven-year-old child pageant star Eden Wood who’s a household name in the US after featuring on hit reality show ‘Toddlers & Tiaras’.

Secretive

Eden has reportedly had almost $100,000 spent on her by her mother, including weekly spray tanning, photo sessions, catwalk coaching and dresses costing up to $3,000.

Although several secretive child pageants have taken place in Ireland since early last year, the sheer scale of Universal Royal’s events will cause concern to parents’ groups, who worry about the long-term psychological effects on children who take part.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Without a Mosque, Greece’s Muslims Go Underground

Muslims in Greece are left to pray in basement apartments, coffee shops, garages and old warehouses, many of which are targets of arsonists, as the Greek government has stalled for over a decade in building an official mosque. “All the other religions here — Jews, Buddhists — they have a place but we do not,” Osama al-Najjar, 48, a petroleum industry supervisor, told SETimes. “If we want to observe our religion, we have to do it underground. We are not doing anything wrong,” he said. Naim Elghandour, 57, chairman of the Muslim Association of Greece, which claims nearly 18,000 members, said he has not prayed in a mosque for 40 years since coming to Greece from his native Egypt. There are over 100 makeshift mosques in Athens, such as in the basement next to a convenience store owned by Elghandour’s friend, Mazen Rassas. “It is not the same,” Elghandour told SETimes. “Without an official sanction, Muslims are also without an imam,” he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia: Remembering the Dead of Srebrenica

On the anniversary of the Srebrenica massacre, Sayeeda Warsi says that we need to remember the atrocity, to ensure it never happens again.

Earlier this year I stood in the middle of a beautiful, quiet valley in rural Bosnia-Herzegovina. As I do every time I stand there, I asked myself: how could somewhere so peaceful be the site of Europe’s worst atrocity since the Second World War? That spot in the Drina Valley is the town of Srebrenica, the place where — 17 years ago to the day — eight thousand Bosnian Muslim men and boys were rounded up and murdered by Ratko Mladic’s Serb troops. Those hills are the place they fled their attackers. The nearby factory is where they sought shelter, and where they met their end.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Europe United Against Israel

Europe’s failure to run its own affairs doesn’t stop it from constantly interfering in Israel’s affairs

BERLIN — Just when the vision, or delusion, of Europe’s unity is facing a grave reality test, it’s amazing to see how one issue manages to unite the failing, disintegrating European bureaucracy: The grudge toward Israel.

Even the Euro crisis, which threatens to sink European unity into a new nationalist storm, cannot ease the inherent hostility of the European apparatus, located in Brussels, to the Jewish state. By now it looks like a sick obsession that blinds the patient’s eyes and prevents him from seeing his real problems.

Almost not a day goes by without the office of “foreign minister” Catherine Ashton or the EU “embassy” in Israel issuing a condemnation of Israeli actions in the West Bank, Gaza Strip or inside Israel. With zealousness that can only attest to disproportional devotion, EU emissaries — mostly with the help of Israeli collaborators who enjoy generous funding — monitor anything that could be perceived to undermine the rights of Palestinians or Israel’s Arab citizens.

For a long time now, the Europeans have not been protesting only matters pertaining to the occupation; rather, they are working methodically to undermine the very existence of Israel as an independent Jewish state.

Large sums of money provided to fund activities in different areas have created dangerous dependence between Israel and the European Union. Had this investment been aimed at developing human resources for the benefit of the EU there would be nothing wrong with it. However, the Europeans are aiming to exploit and rule: Take advantage of what Israel can give them, while at the same time dictate how it should conduct itself.

EU adopts Arab formula

An absurd situation has been created whereby the European Union, which cannot manage its own affairs efficiently, is working with great determination to decide for Israel how it should behave.

Meanwhile, the Europeans are pouring huge sums of money into the Palestinian Authority without a hint of criticism about Palestinian actions. Senior EU officials refrain from meeting with Israel’s foreign minister, yet preach for dialogue with Hamas. And in at a time where the Middle East is burning because of endless violations of human rights, condemnations are constantly being issued against Israel.

It appears that the Europeans have been taken captive by the Arab magic formula, whereby the conflict with Israel is at the heart of the region’s problems and only its resolution — that is, making Israel capitulate to Arab demands — will bring peace and stability. And please don’t bother the Europeans with other explanations. It could undermine their stability.

Israel has an interest in good relations with Europe. The European Commission President, Jose Manuel Barroso, will be awarded an honorary doctorate from University of Haifa Tuesday “in appreciation of his firm stance against anti-Semitism, his work to commemorate the Holocaust and his devotion to peace.” However, the Europeans must understand that such ties can only develop on the basis of dialogue between equals, while completely refraining from any attempt to undermine Israel’s sovereignty.

If someone in Brussels is truly interested in fruitful, mutual relations with Israel, which has much to offer, they should start to change their approach.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Gaza Presents: ‘Prisoners’ Summer Camp’

Hamas movement offers children throughout Strip unique chance to experience suffering of Palestinian prisoners held in Israel. Activities include tour of mock interrogation room, walking on rusty nails

Summer fun – Narrow hallways, interrogation rooms painted black, isolation cells and handcuffed mannequins — this is all part of the setting of a new summer camp operated by Hamas in the Gaza Strip. The Islamic group has been operating summer camps for children in all cities and refugee camps throughout the Strip. This year, the organizers came up with an original theme — “the suffering of the Palestinian prisoners” — allowing children to experience first hand the daily lives of prisoners held in Israel.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Levy Commission in Israel Advises PM That Settlements Are Not Illegal

by Ted Belman

The legal tsunami gathering strength in Israel could engulf the world. A report is soon to be released that says the Fourth Geneva Convention (FGC) does not apply to Judea and Samaria, aka West Bank, and that Israel has every right to build settlements there.

In January of this year, Prime Minister (PM) Netanyahu set up the Levy Committee to investigate the legal status of unauthorized West Bank Jewish building. The Committee was headed by Supreme Court Justice (Ret.) Edmund Levy. It included Tel Aviv District Court Judge (Ret.) Tehama Shapiro and Dr. Alan Baker, an international law expert, who was part of the team that devised the Oslo Accords.

The Committee reviewed legal briefs from right of center groups but also from far left groups such as Peace Now, Yesh Din and Btselem. Its 89 page Report was submitted to PM Netanyahu a few weeks ago and is now under review by his Ministerial Committee on Settlements. Though the Report has yet to be formerly published, the contents are already well known.

It found that the settlements are not illegal. To reach this conclusion it first found that the Fourth Geneva Convention which applies “to all cases of partial or total occupation of the territory of a High Contracting Party” does not apply to Judea and Samaria because “Israel does not meet the criteria of ‘military occupation’ as defined under international law” … as “no other legal entity has ever had its sovereignty over the area cemented under international law.”

Furthermore, it found that there was no provision in international law which prohibited Jews settling in the area.

The UN and the EU have for decades repeated the mantra that the land is occupied and the settlements are illegal, both pursuant to the FGC. However, there has never been a binding legal decision on which they based their assertions. The US has been more cautious and considers the settlements “an obstacle to peace” or “illegitimate”. Nevertheless, it leads the chorus in demanding an end to Israel’s settlement construction.

In 2010, Nicholas Rostow, in The American Interest, regarding the legality of the settlements, wrote:…

           — Hat tip: Jerry Gordon [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Russia Sends Warships to Syria

Russia despatched a flotilla of warships to its naval base in the Syrian port of Tartus on Tuesday in an apparent show of support for President Bashar al-Assad.

Two destroyers and three amphibious landing vessels carrying marines set sail from Russian bases in the Arctic and the Black Sea, according to Russian military sources.

Russia’s defence ministry insisted that the mission was part of a previously scheduled exercise in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Black Sea and at least one of the vessels in the flotilla has patrolled waters off Syria earlier this year. But Western diplomats say the purpose of the mission is to show tangible support for Mr Assad, to warn the West against military intervention in Syria and to prepare for the possible evacuation of Russian nationals from the country.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


A New Contract for Afghanistan

Afghanistan has at the international donor conference in Tokyo committed to meet the requirements of good governance, corruption and human rights, in particularly women’s rights. In return, the international community has up to and including 2015 guaranteed to provide financial assistance of 16 billion until 2015.

The Minister for Development Cooperation Christian Friis Bach said from Tokyo:

“It’s a robust result and it sends a clear message to the people of Afghanistan that we will not fail them when the foreign combat troops return home in 2014. It is a contract we have made, where we promise significant support to among others schools, health clinics and security with a clear Afghan promise of a continued reinforcement of the democracy, human rights, women’s rights and a stronger action taken against corruption and abuse. Denmark has committed to contribute 530 million DDK annually until 2017, if the Afghan government delivers.”

[…]

[JP note: The wonders of Danegeld benevolence in the never-never land of wishful utopia.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Preston Mosque in Strife Over Telling Wives to Share Their Husbands With Other Women

VICTORIA’S largest mosque has been forced into an embarrassing back-down after women were told they must “fulfil the rights” of their husbands and share him with other women.

In a move that has outraged local Muslim women, at least one Preston Mosque committee member authorised a post on its official Facebook page instructing women that polygamy was a better alternative to divorce and husbands were “someone you share”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Kenya: Muslim Leaders Pile Pressure Over Anti-Terror Bill

Nairobi — Muslim leaders and human rights lobby groups under the umbrella of the Muslims for Human Rights have vowed never to support the proposed Prevention of Terrorism Bill of 2012 until contentious clauses are amended. The leaders who spoke at a forum in Nairobi said the Bill is not acceptable in its current state. Human rights crusader Hassan Omar Hassan said unless the proposed legislation is amended, rights of Kenyans risk being violated blatantly by law enforcers in the name of fighting terrorism.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Mali: How the West Cleared the Way for Al-Qaeda’s African March

With the world’s attention elsewhere, Islamists and al-Qaeda have seized a vast area of northern Mali. David Blair reports.

A few days after desert gunmen swept out of the Sahara and captured Timbuktu, the city’s conquerors broadcast a message over its radio station. “We are going to welcome some foreigners,” the inhabitants of this ancient trading centre in northern Mali were told. “Do not be afraid when you see them: we must all welcome them.” A convoy of Land Cruisers duly arrived, laden with bearded fighters clad in sand-coloured turbans and robes. These were not rebels from the local Tuareg tribe, who had claimed credit for the fall of Timbuktu, but international jihadists from across the Muslim world including Algerians, Nigerians, Somalis and Pakistanis. This multinational parade drove home a harsh message: a new state had been born under the effective rule of al-Qaeda. Bewildered townspeople, who had only seen Tuareg insurgents up to that point, realised its true significance.

[…]

When Britain and France went to war to topple Gaddafi, they were inadvertently clearing the way for al-Qaeda to take control of a swathe of the Sahara. At first, AQIM allowed Tuareg rebels to take the lead, helping them to capture Mali’s three northern regions in April. Since then, AQIM has thrust the insurgents aside and become the dominant force in the area, acting through an offshoot known as “Ansar Dine”, or “defenders of faith”.

[…]

Al-Qaeda’s allies have imposed the rigours of Sharia, banning alcohol and music, blocking the local television signal and preventing radio stations from broadcasting anything but official announcements and Koranic verse. Earlier, Mr Maigar witnessed the flogging of a man and a woman in Sankore Square in Timbuktu, allegedly for having sexual intercourse outside marriage. Djenebou Traoré, 48, left the city in May after two men came to her door and demanded to know whether any of the women inside were unmarried. They would be handed to the new overlords for compulsory “marriage”. AQIM’s priority appears to be consolidating its control, rather than striking targets beyond the country’s borders. Officials warn this could change. “This could ultimately be the base to attack Europe,” said the diplomat.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


“The Fortunes of Permanence — Culture and Anarchy in an Age of Amnesia”

by Ruth King

It is summertime and the reading is hard. I am overdosed on the tomes that warn how our schools, our culture, our academies, and our justice system are failing. The “caliphate” is coming, capitalism is dying, pseudo environmentalism is ruining the planet and industry, we are on a downward spiral, the sky is falling and only obesity, the new bi-partisan national obsession, is going up. Don’t get me wrong. Most of those books are informative and worth reading, but I’m suffering from crisis fatigue and a desire for a touch of political amnesia and an Anthony Trollope novel.

[…]

His essays on Rudyard Kipling, Malcolm Muggeridge, G.K Chesterton, James Burnham (I confess to ignorance and James who?) are gems of information. A particular delight for me is the chapter “Rereading John Buchan. “ Buchan, who described himself as “high- low brow” was author of a spy thriller “Greenmantle” in 1916 which describes a German effort to manipulate a radical Islamist group in Turkey. Kimball quotes a protagonist in the book: “Islam is a fighting creed, and the mullah still stands in the pulpit with the Koran in one hand and a drawn sword in the other.”

There’s more. Kimball mines this from another character in the book. “There is a great stirring in Islam, something moving on the face of the waters….Those religious revivals come in cycles, and one is due about now. And they are quite clear about the details. A seer has arisen of the blood of the Prophet, who will restore the Khalifate to its old glories and Islam to its old purity.” Goodness gracious! Islamophobia in 1916!

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Northern Lights Oddity: Strange Sounds of Auroras Explained

The results vindicate folktales and reports by wilderness travelers, which have long described sounds associated with the northern lights.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120705

Financial Crisis
» One Third of Greek State Properties Used Illegally
 
USA
» Americans & Career Politicians Make a Mockery of Independence Day
» Dressage Wars
» Interfaith Event to Support Muslims in St. Anthony
» Lawyers and Judges at War With Constitutional Law
» UCSB Professor Writes Book About Controversial Headscarves
» Weight-Loss Pharmaceutical That Caused Tumors in Animal Studies Approved for Lazy America
» Why So Many People Think Obama is a Muslim
 
Europe and the EU
» Europe’s Angry Muslims
» France: Jewish Student Attacked in Toulouse
» GlaxoSmithKline Admits to Criminal Pharma Fraud in 3 Billion Dollar Case
» Italy: Can Berlusconi Make a Eurosceptic Comeback?
» Italy: Fiat CEO Considers Closing Another Plant
» Italy: Axe Falls on Public Sector
» Spain: Stolen Codex Calixtinus Recovered in Spain
» UK: Al-Qaeda ‘Propaganda Expert’ Arrested in London
» UK: Battle Begins Over Army Cuts as Five Infantry Battalions Set to be Axed
» UK: Revellers Urinating on Mosque Wall
» UK: Six Arrested on Terrorism Charges in London
» UK: The Celebrity Photographer and an ‘Assault in Tesco on Hijab-Wearing Muslim She Called a Terrorist’
» UK: Tower Hamlets Voter Fraud — Still Nothing is Done
» UK: Yet Another Dismal Repeat at the Top of the BBC
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Military Kills ‘18 Qaeda Militants’
» Egypt’s Islamist Future
» The Next Revolution: Islamists in Tunisia Take Their Jihad to Syria
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Leaked Foreign Office Documents Attack Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
 
Middle East
» 76.4% of Turks Against War With Syria
» Iran ‘Ready to Attack US Bases’
» Lebanon: Pope to Visit Lebanon, Meet Christians, Muslims in September
» Syria: Kurdish Opposition Says SNC Wants Islamic Regime
» Turkey: Çamlýca Mosque to Get Highest Minarets
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan’s Future Murky
» Andrew Mitchell Says Afghanistan Needs Long Term Aid Commitments
» India: ‘No Mini-Skirts’: Jamiat Wants Dress Code for J&K Tourists
» India: Road in Kolkata to be Named After Satyendra Nath Bose of Higgs Boson Fame
» Indonesia: More Likely to be Implicated in Koran Scandal
» Pakistan: Mob Kills Man for Insulting Koran
 
Immigration
» Australian Navy Rescue Stranded Asylum Seekers
» Border Patrol Officers Told Run and Hide From Armed Illegal Aliens
» Greece: EP VP Admonishes Cameron on Immigration Comments
» UK: Border Shambles Lets 150,000 Migrants Overstay Their Visas …
 
Culture Wars
» Derby: Muslim Group Plans ‘Biggest Ever’ Pride Protest Despite Gay Hate Convictions
 
General
» Can You Explain the Higgs Boson in a Tweet?
» Exposing the Vatican-Islam Alliance
» God Particle: Physicists Celebrate Higgs Boson ‘Triumph’

Financial Crisis


One Third of Greek State Properties Used Illegally

Would bring billions into state coffers if sold

(ANSAMed) — ATHENS, JULY 5 — State-owned real estate worth billions of euros is being used fraudulently by people or companies without any real rights to do so, Kathimerini daily said today.

A report by the Hellenic Commission for the Privatization of State Property (TAIPED), which was created by the former Socialist government of Giorgos Papandreu, revealed that out of a total of 80,714 state-owned buildings, 28,264 have been settled illegally. Of these, 3,152 have been assessed and could bring 10 billion euros into state coffers if repossessed, Andreas Taprantzis, who sits on the TAIPED executive council, told attendees at the Economist conference. The total number of soon-to-be recovered properties is 4,862, and these could bring in investments of 18 billion euros if converted to vacation homes, Taprantzis said. Another 13,600 state-owned properties are being evaluated, while 51,794 properties totaling 1,400 square kilometers have been crossed off the potential state repo list for now. And there is yet another group of 10,457 state-owned properties, which are listed as “special,” and which include 572 islands and islets. It will take another 18 months to free up these potentially profitable areas, Taprantzis said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Americans & Career Politicians Make a Mockery of Independence Day

Today, the words in the Declaration of Independence mean nothing to tens of millions of Americans who could care less about the sacrifices made to give us freedom and liberty because they have zero understanding of the history of their own country. Of course, that has been the goal for close to four decades in this country. Dumb down the population using government indoctrination centers called public schools. Get rid of civics and ridicule any patriotism. Remember those goals of the communist party?

Congressional Record — Appendix, pp. A34-A35 — January 10, 1963 Current Communist Goals Extension of Remarks of Hon. A.S. Herlong, Jr., of Florida in the House of Representatives Thursday, January 10, 1963

  • Get control of the schools. Use them as transmission belts for socialism and current Communist propaganda. Soften the curriculum. Get control of teachers’ associations. Put the party line in textbooks.
  • Discredit the American Constitution by calling it inadequate, old-fashioned, out of step with modern needs, a hindrance to cooperation between nations on a worldwide basis.
  • Discredit the American Founding Fathers. Present them as selfish aristocrats who had no concern for the “common man.”
  • Belittle all forms of American culture and discourage the teaching of American history on the ground that it was only a minor part of the “big picture.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Dressage Wars

by Diana West

Robert Strauss, a longtime correspondent of this blog, writes in today concerning an anti-Olympics op-ed in the New York Times by two academics: Jules Bykoff, an associate professor of political science at Pacific University, “who is writing a book on dissent and the Olympics,” and Alan Tomlinson, professor of “leisure studies” at the University of Brighton. Their piece critiques the commercialism of it all, the cronyism of it all, the privilege of it all (aha!) … and “Ann Romney’s horse,” which is probably the raison d’etre of it all.

Bob writes:…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Interfaith Event to Support Muslims in St. Anthony

Gathering is in wake of City Council rejection of Islamic center.

Three churches in St. Anthony plan to hold an interfaith gathering Sunday between Christian and Muslim leaders in response to anti-Islamic comments made at a City Council meeting during which board members rejected a proposed Islamic center. Members of Nativity Lutheran Church, Faith United Methodist Church and St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church organized the event in an effort to show that not all citizens in the small bedroom community north of Minneapolis are against Muslims worshiping there. “I thought it was unfortunate there weren’t Christians speaking on behalf of the Muslim community, showing their support and solidarity,” said Elsa Marty, the daughter of state Sen. John Marty and one of the organizers who attends Nativity Church, where the event will be held. “We want to make sure that’s not the reality here, that we are hospitable to our neighbors of other faiths.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Lawyers and Judges at War With Constitutional Law

It didn’t take long after the ratification of the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights in 1787 before Jefferson would realize just how insidious and dangerous the judiciary would become — That all of the Founders work to create and protect the Charters of Freedom for all posterity would soon be destroyed from within via an elite oligarchy known as the judiciary.

Today, it is no exaggeration to proclaim that true justice no longer exists in the United States. The government body created for the sole purpose of protecting and preserving freedom and liberty, upholding the Charters of Freedom as the Supreme Law of the Land, is the most insidiously corrupt and dangerous institution in America.

As Jefferson realized soon after the ratification of the U.S. Constitution, they had failed to tie the hands of the judiciary, preventing lawyers and judges with personal and political agendas from subverting the Constitutional Republic from the bench via precedent setting, broad ungrounded interpretations, new definitions of old language and court procedures designed to protect the evil cabal by denying public access to true justice.

Though I can write a book on literally thousands of cases of totally lawless injustice taking place across America today, I have chosen only a few examples for this piece. These cases demonstrate just how lawless our entire judiciary has become. As you will see, there is quite literally nothing within our judicial system worthy of salvation. The corruption reaches from the U.S. Supreme Court all the way down to your local traffic court, and exists at all points in between.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UCSB Professor Writes Book About Controversial Headscarves

Argues Headscarf Ban in Western Countries Exacerbates Issue of Women’s Rights

The most controversial article of clothing of the early 21st century may be the headscarf. In her new book, The Headscarf Controversy: Secularism and Freedom of Religion, UCSB professor Hilal Elver tackles the issue currently affecting Muslim women — and courtrooms — around the world. Elver, a global and international studies scholar, explains the legal and historical background of wearing headscarves in public places, specifically in Turkey but also in Germany, France, and the United States. Elver believes that due to the recent “war on terror” in the Middle East, many Western countries have banned public use of the headscarf, supposedly in the name of women’s rights. But rather than helping women, she argues, the ban has had the disastrous effect of excluding pious Muslim women from society.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Weight-Loss Pharmaceutical That Caused Tumors in Animal Studies Approved for Lazy America

For the first time in 13 years (thank Big Pharma and Big Lawsuits), the U.S. government has approved a weight-loss medication. The Food and Drug Administration has given the go-ahead to Arena Pharmaceutical, of Zofingen, Switzerland, to manufacture Belviq, a drug which, according to reports, can be utilized by overweight or obese adults with at least one of those conditions.

In clinical trials, the BBC reported, the drug achieved only “modest” results, helping folks lose an average of about five percent of body weight. To put that in perspective, someone who weighed 225 pounds (but maybe should only weigh about 170) only lost about 11 pounds.

But here’s the rub: Not only does the drug appear to only minimally affect obesity, it’s potentially deadly as well. It was rejected by the FDA in 2010 because officials were concerned about tumors that had developed in animals tested with the drug.

However, somehow after the San Diego-based Big Pharma resubmitted its application with more information, the FDA suddenly found “little risk of tumors in humans using the drug,” the BBC reported. Now, the medication is expected to launch in 2013.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why So Many People Think Obama is a Muslim

by Pamela Geller

A new Gallup poll shows that 11% of Americans think Obama is a Muslim, and the leftist media just can’t figure out why anyone would get that idea. Slate concluded that it must be because of “his exotic name and background, the color of his skin, or (most likely) some combination of the two.” But in reality, the reason why people think Obama is a Musli m is because of how he acts.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Europe’s Angry Muslims

by Lisa Kaaki

Muslims entered Europe as temporary workers during the postwar European economic boom, and eventually settled, bringing their families and their religion. They have inexorably and surreptitiously altered the continent’s cultural, political and security landscape. Governments gave out residency and work permits without consulting their respective citizens. Until the 1980s immigration was not the important political issue it is now. Bombings in London, riots in Paris, outrage over the veil and cartoons have shocked both Muslims and non-Muslims.

In this new release, Robert S. Leiken presents an engaging study of Muslims in Europe. The author, who defines himself as a “connoisseur of slums”, takes us inside some of Europe’s most notorious Muslims enclaves. Aware that analyzing Muslim anger in all European countries would end up in a book meant for a specialist but not the general public, Leiken decided to target both. “Europe’s Angry Muslims, The Revolt of the Second Generation”, focuses on the three European countries with the most Muslims: Britain, France and Germany. Spain is not included because the perpetrators of the March 2003 Madrid train bombings were first-generation immigrants.

[…]

[JP note: Muslims in general appear to exist in a permanent state of anger, but residing in Europe is perhaps not the most important factor. More likely, anger equals power.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Jewish Student Attacked in Toulouse

Student at the school where Merah killed teacher and 3 children

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, JULY 5 — A student from the Ozar Hatorah school in Toulouse where Mohamed Merah killed a teacher and three children in March, was the victim of an anti-Semitic attack on a train, the French interior ministry announced today.

The student is 17-years-old and was violently attacked yesterday while he was travelling on a train travelling from Toulouse to Lion.

The interior ministry said police identified the authors of the anti-Semitic attack and stressed the government’s commitment ‘to fight any resurgence of this deeply embedded illness which is anti-Semitism’.

Doctors gave the student a seven-day prognosis for the injuries reported.

On March 19 Merah, a radical Islamist, killed a teacher and three children.

France is home to Western Europe’s largest Jewish community, an estimated 500,000 people.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



GlaxoSmithKline Admits to Criminal Pharma Fraud in 3 Billion Dollar Case

British registered company, GlaxoSmithKline, faces $3 billion in penalties after pleading guilty to the biggest health care fraud case in history. GSK admitted that physicians had been bribed to push potentially dangerous drugs in exchange for Madonna tickets, Hawaiian holidays, cash and lucrative speaking tours. They also admitted distributing misleading information regarding the antidepressant Paxil. The report claimed that it was suitable for children, but failed to acknowledge data from studies proving its ineffectiveness in children and adolescents.

GSK faced charges that they had used the gifts to sell three drugs that were either unsafe, or used for purposes that were not approved. The first drug, Paxil also known as Seroxat, was touted as safe and effective for children and adolescents. The ineffectiveness of Paxil, and the link to suicides, meant that it was banned for kids under 18-years-olds in 2008.

The second drug, Avandia was used in Britain to treat diabetes until it was withdrawn due to safety fears, including increased risk of heart attacks. The US government claimed that GSK had attempted to conceal the data surrounding the dangers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: Can Berlusconi Make a Eurosceptic Comeback?

La Repubblica, The Guardian

It looked as though he had disappeared from politics, but now it seems that Silvio Berlusconi may be planning a comeback. In an attempt to surf the wave of euroscepticism that has made comedian Beppe Grillo the rising star of Italian politics, the ex-PM recently raised the issue of Italy leaving the eurozone. He also evoked the possibility of a German exit from the single currency in the event that Berlin refuses to endorse plans to reinforce the European Central Bank. None too pleased by Il Cavaliere’s re-emergence, La Repubblica believes that he is a threat to Mario Monti’s technocratic government —

… at a time when national cohesion is vitally important, the ‘Italian-style Grosse Koalition’ could break up if it succumbs to the temptation of early general elections. This amounts to a very difficult position for Mario Monti who is caught between a rock and a hard place. With only two days left to run before the European summit, Europe’s chancelleries continue to see Monti as a mediator who will play a key role in the success of any operation to resolve the crisis, whereas the leaders of Italy’s political parties see him as a catalyst that can easily be blamed if the initiative to resolve the crisis fails. […]

The PdL [Berlusconi’s political party] has been rocked by the improbable and inopportune resurrection of Il Cavaliere. This Berlusconian version of Golden Dawn [the Greek far-right party] has promised two things. A pathetic war against Germany, and an autarkic battle against the euro. This populist revenge […] is an act of political desperation. The government has no alternative. In spite of all of his faults and mistakes, Monti remains the most credible political option for Italy today. But it would be wrong to conclude this is the only reason that keeps Monti in power.

Berlusconi’s recent declarations have also become a source of worry beyond Italy’s borders. In a leader entitled “Please, not again”, British daily The Guardian writes —

The billionaire has seemingly limitless amounts of cash to throw at a campaign. And in recent comments in which he talked up the advantages to Italy’s export-led industry of trading again in lire, Berlusconi is on to a potential election winner. Italy is more Eurosceptic than it often appears. While it remains pro-European in the sense that Brussels is seen as a more consistent provider of good governance in Italy than Rome, the euro itself is associated with inflation. Today it has become the icon of stagnation. Mario Monti’s popularity, as the technocrat whose sole task is to reduce the budget deficit, has fallen off a cliff. Italy has no cash in the coffers to stimulate growth, as was demonstrated by a long-awaited growth decree. It was approved by cabinet only after it had been bled dry of its more radical provisions by the treasury. And yet without growth, Italy will be unable to repay its ever rising mountain of debt. The euro has acquired something of a bad smell and Berlusconi is far from being the only politician to latch on to the thought that Italy could regain growth through a return to the lira, devaluation and an export-led boom. But he could yet position himself to be its chief beneficiary.

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



Italy: Fiat CEO Considers Closing Another Plant

Turin, 4 July (AKI/Bloomberg) — Fiat Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne said he may close a second Italian factory as European auto deliveries sink for fifth straight year.

Fiat will shut another plant after closing one in Sicily last year unless it can come up with an economically viable plan to use excess capacity to build cars for North America, Marchionne told reporters late yesterday in Turin.

Fiat has delayed the introduction of new models in Europe and is cutting investment in the region by 500 million euros this year. Marchionne, 60, said yesterday that he expects European car sales to remain around the current level for the next two to three years. Fiat’s first-quarter operating losses in the region almost doubled to 207 million euros.

“If that is the demand in Europe, there is at least one extra car plant in Italy,” Marchionne said. “If we manage to utilize the capacity to export to the U.S., this issue will disappear.”

The drop in European car sales accelerated in May to 8.4 percent, the eighth consecutive monthly decline, according to the Brussels-based European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association. Fiat, PSA Peugeot Citroen and Renault SA (RNO) have posted the steepest slumps in the region this year, plummeting 15 percent or more in the first five months

The Italian carmaker extended temporary layoffs for about 5,000 workers, mainly white-collar staff, at its executive headquarters in Turin for 14 working days starting from July 30, a union official said this week.

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



Italy: Axe Falls on Public Sector

Cuts hit cars, procurement and healthcare. Roughly 100,000 public-sector workers to be made redundant. One per cent VAT increase put off until January

ROME — The spending review will bring savings of about €10 billion a year. It will finance demand-driven expenses such as peace missions and the 5‰ levy from income tax but it will not entirely avert the expected rise in value added tax. Instead of rising by 2.5% (2% in October and 0.5% in January 2014), the standard rate of value added tax will go up by just one per cent from 21% to 22% while the reduced rate will go from 10% to 11% in January and rise by a further 0.5% in 2014.

THE DRAFT — Currently there is a draft decree comprising nineteen articles in five sections, although the Prime Minister’s Office stresses that the text is still under review after yesterday’s meetings with the social partners and local authorities. But the decree will contain more than just cuts to public expenditure. In addition to finance for currently unfunded expenditure, there will also be the long-awaited reduction in the commission on taxes collected by the Equitalia agency. From 2013, the rate will fall from 9% to 8% but the reduction could be as much as four percentage points, if revenue exceeds expectations.

HEALTHCARE — Cuts to healthcare are expected to generate €1 billion this year and €2 billion from 2013, with a corresponding reduction in the national health fund (FSN). The healthcare savings plan is draconian. Ceilings for territorial and hospital spending on medicines have been realigned, contracts have been renegotiated, agreements with private healthcare structures have been reviewed and funds for the purchase of medical equipment have been reduced while budget compensation from pharmacies, and contributions from pharmaceutical companies to budget overruns, have been increased. For the second half of 2012, pharmacies will have to give the health service an extra discount of 6.5% on medicines. From next year, when the system is up and running, the discount will be 3.65% The regularly perforated ceiling for hospital medicine expenses has been raised from 2.4% to 3.2% while the ceiling for territorial spending (health service-funded medicines supplied through pharmacies) shrinks from 13.3% to 11.5% of total expenditure on healthcare. The contribution of pharmaceutical companies to any budget overruns has also been raised substantially. Pharma companies will now have to fork out for 50% of any overruns of the government-stipulated budget, with the other 50% being the responsibility of the regional authority, albeit only if the region has failed to comply with the ceiling overall.

Healthcare initiatives go beyond the supply of medicines. Health authorities will be able to renegotiate contracts priced at more than 20% in excess of the baseline value and will have to procure supplies through CONSIP, the central government procurement body. The decree law is also said to reduce expenditure on contracts for non-healthcare goods and services by 5% over 2011. Regional expenditure for healthcare services supplied by health service-approved private structures will be cut by 1% in 2012 and 2% from 2013, in comparison with 2011.

LOCAL AUTHORITIES — As regional governors, mayors and provincial authority chairs feared, the spending review has slashed allocations of central government funds to local administrations. Ordinary-statute regions are being asked to forgo €700 million in 2012 and €1 billion from 2013. Special-statute regions and the autonomous provinces of Trento and Bolzano will have to cough up €500 million this year and €1 billion from 2013. Municipal authorities will see €500 million trimmed this year, plus a robust €2 billion from next year, and provincial authorities, leaving aside amalgamation plans, will have to save €500 million in 2012 and €1 billion in 2013.

Local authorities will also be subject to hiring caps. Staff replacement will be permitted up to a ceiling of 20% of those leaving from this year to 2014, and up to 50% in 2015. Only from 2016 will it be possible to hire as many new workers as have retired. There is a further stipulation. In regions where the ratio of spending on personnel to current expenditure is more that 20% above the national average, the replacement rate has been reduced by a further 50%.

For municipalities with fewer than 5,000 residents (3,000 for mountain communities), there is now a duty to share basic functions with other small municipalities. At least three of the basic functions must be managed by municipality unions before the end of 2013 and all must be managed in this way by 2015. If small municipalities fail to clinch agreements, regional authorities will impose a final decision before the end of 2013.

PROCUREMENT — The first section of Enrico Bondi’s spending review focuses on much stricter rules for the procurement of goods and services by the public sector. At yesterday’s meeting with the social partners, he said this came to “€60 billion, of which 20% to 60% can be saved”. The first move is the annulment of contracts which fall outside the framework of the central government procurement body CONSIP’s agreements and fail to comply with the baseline prices those agreements put in place. There is also a requirement for public administrations to use CONSIP agreements for contracts for the supply of electricity, gas, fuel, heating fuel, landlines and mobile phones, annulling any stipulated in violation of the regulation. Public administrations will have a right of recession from contracts stipulated where subsequent CONSIP parameters “are more favourable than those in the contract stipulated and the contractor will not permit modification of the economic conditions”. A further saving on procurement comes from repeal of the 2006 regulation requiring the publication of calls for tender in the local daily press.

MINISTRIES — Inevitably, one section of the spending review concerns ministerial spending, although the government has not reached a decision on what to cut from which ministry. The draft contains no figures but belt-tightening is very much on the agenda. Meanwhile, various regulations regarding central government have been extended to all public bodies. There is a 50% cut in stationery expenses with targets for taking public records off paper, reducing landline and mobile phone bills and rationalising property portfolios. INPS, the social security institute, will have to renegotiate and enhance agreements stipulated with tax advisory centres (CAF). Public administration schools are facing rationalisation, with some to be amalgamated, and there will be a further crackdown on official cars, a further 50% of which are to go.

PUBLIC SECTOR — Cuts go beyond the 20% reduction in top staff and 10% for other employees. No accurate estimates are available but given the 3.5 million public-sector workers, between 100,000 and 300,000 workers could be laid off. The aim will be achieved with compulsory two-year redundancies or support for older workers until they reach pensionable age. This will be backed up by a three-stage ban on staff replacements. There will be freedom to hire replacements for up to 20% of workers leaving in 2012-2015, up to 50% in 2015 and for all those leaving from 2016. Public-sector workers face a raft of measures. From 1 October, the value of meal vouchers for all staff, managers included, cannot exceed €7. Public offices will close in the week of the 15 August holiday and the week from Christmas to New Year, when workers will be on compulsory holiday. It will no longer be possible to encash holidays, rest days and days off not taken. This will also hold true for workers who resign or take a pension. The “tendential elimination” of paid research assigned to managers comes into force and consultancy contracts can no longer be assigned to retirees. Salary payment contracts will be renegotiated and costs reduced by “at least 15%”.

SUPPRESSED PUBLIC BODIES — The national institute of metrological research, the Anton Dohn zoological station, the Italian institute of Germanic studies and the national institute of higher mathematics have all been suppressed. Also gone are the national institute of oceanography and experimental geophysics, the national institute of astrophysics, the museum of the history of physics and the Enrico Fermi study and research centre. Their functions have been redistributed to the national research council, the national institute for nuclear physics and the national institute of geophysics and vulcanology.

PUBLIC ASSETS — ISTAT index-linked increments on rents paid by public bodies have been blocked. Leases expiring from 1 January can only be renewed if rents are 15% lower. Standard sizes for offices have been laid down: 12-20 square metres per employee for new buildings and 20-25 for older ones…

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



Spain: Stolen Codex Calixtinus Recovered in Spain

A priceless 12th-century illustrated guide for pilgrims has been recovered by police a year after it was stolen from the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in northern Spain.

The Codex Calixtinus, an elaborate medieval manuscript and one of Spain’s most valuable cultural artefacts, was discovered hidden in the garage of a former employee of the cathedral. The presumed thief, named as Manuel Fernandez Castineiras, had worked as a caretaker and odd-job man for more than 25 years at the shrine of the apostle of St James but was sacked early last year. He had been suing cathedral authorities for unfair dismissal at the time of the theft on July, 5, 2011. Police arrested Mr Fernandez — and his wife, son and son’s girlfriend who are believed to be co-conspirators — late on Tuesday. In raids on properties owned by those arrested, police discovered at least 1.2 million euros in cash, eight copies of the Codex and other ancient books that had also disappeared from the Cathedral archive.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Al-Qaeda ‘Propaganda Expert’ Arrested in London

Computer specialist has been accused of travelling to Yemen to help provide graphic design expertise as part of a propaganda push by al-Qaeda to find western recruits.

Minh Quang Pham, 29, is said to have sworn an oath of allegiance to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsular (AQAP) after leaving Britain to join the terrorist group in December 2010.

He is said to have received military-style training and helped AQAP with their propaganda efforts before returning to Britain eight months later. Pham, who allegedly used the pseudonym “Amin,” is thought to be Vietnamese but sources say he had been living in New Cross, South London since at least 2005 where he ran his own computer company.

He was arrested on his return to Heathrow via Bahrain on July 27 last year when a live ammunition round was found in his possession. He was subsequently served with a deportation notice on national security grounds but last week he was re-arrested on a US extradition warrant. An indictment released by the US Department of Justice and seen by the Daily Telegraph, accuses Pham of providing material support to AQAP, based in Yemen, along with others “known and unknown.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Battle Begins Over Army Cuts as Five Infantry Battalions Set to be Axed

The defence secretary Philip Hammond is expected to announce today that five battalions will be axed from the infantry.

Axing the battalions and merging other units or turning them into reservists will see the regular army cut from 102,000 troops to 82,000 by 2020, its lowest level since the Napoleonic Wars. The plan, titled Army 2020, will see it split into two, with a reaction force ready to respond to any emergencies, and an adaptable force capable of carrying out a host of tasks and commitments. Mr Hammond has claimed that the changes to the army, which were drawn up by Lieutenant General Nick Carter, will provide the basis of a smaller, more flexible Army.

However, the plans have been criticised by a number of defence and armed forces experts. Earlier this week, The Daily Telegraph revealed Brigadier David Paterson from the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers has written to the head of the army expressing his disappointment at the decision. Colonel Bob Stewart, a Conservative MP and former commanding officer with the Cheshire Regiment who sits on the defence select committee, said cutting troops was putting the nation at risk, but explained that the government may not have another option.

He told BBC Breakfast: ‘If you reduce the numbers available you have less options, you have less flexibility, you have less power, that’s a fact.’

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Revellers Urinating on Mosque Wall

A crackdown has been ordered after worshippers were faced with revellers urinating up the side of their mosque. Congregation members at Rawtenstall’s Shah Jalal Jamia masjid and Islamic Centre arriving for services in the early hours have been confronted by the menace. And community worker Saful Islam said that the situation is becoming more urgent with the upcoming arrival of Ramadhan.

[…]

Sgt Mick Blackburn, of Rossendale Police, said: “It is absolutely despicable. The neighbourhood team will not be patrolling at that time but there are officers about at that time and I will raise it with those units.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Six Arrested on Terrorism Charges in London

Five men and a woman have been arrested in London on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism, Scotland Yard said today.

The operation is understood to relate to a possible plot involving Islamist extremists with potential targets in the UK. A 24-year-old man was tasered during his arrest but did not require hospital treatment, police said. The arrests, which police said are not connected to the London 2012 Olympic Games, were made early this morning by officers from the MPS Counter Terrorism Command. The threat was not thought to be imminent. Some of those arrested are understood to be British nationals.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Celebrity Photographer and an ‘Assault in Tesco on Hijab-Wearing Muslim She Called a Terrorist’

A portrait photographer to the stars shoved a pregnant Muslim woman to the floor and called her a terrorist during a row in Tesco, a court heard yesterday. Cinnamon Heathcote-Drury also branded the hijab-wearing woman’s family suicide bombers, it was alleged. The 41-year-old, who has 11 portraits hanging in the National Portrait Gallery including exhibits of London mayor Boris Johnson and Newsnight’s Jeremy Paxman, denies racially-aggravated assault. She told a jury at Isleworth Crown Court that trouble began at the Tesco store in Kensington, West London, when she offered to help the woman, Mounia Hamoumi, and her husband unload their shopping trolley. The court was told she had overheard the husband refusing to help his wife because he was too busy looking after their children. ‘I told him that is what feminism is all about, women helping women — and he told me to “get lost”,’ claimed Heathcote-Drury.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Tower Hamlets Voter Fraud — Still Nothing is Done

Cllr Peter Golds on electoral malpractice in his borough where the plot thickens and the smell grows

In April I wrote about postal voting concerns in the light of the controversial Spitalfields byelection in Tower Hamlets. As well as ongoing stories about postal votes being collected from residents, I referred to some 14% of postal votes (135 out of 956) being rejected from the counting process because of non matching signatures, incorrect dates of birth and no signatures or date of birth on the attached declaration.

The controversy created considerable media interest and, for once, a response by the police. Although Tower Hamlets council, in their infamous council run “newspaper”, East End Life, rejected all concerns. In the May GLA and Mayoral election we were promised a regular police presence at polling stations throughout the borough. In the event local interest shifted to nearby Weavers ward, where there was a further byelection caused by the resignation of a Labour councillor and where Respect, supported by Mayor Rahman and his “Independent” collea gues put in a considerable effort to try and gain the seat.

Needless to say there was trouble at the polling stations in Weavers Ward, and the Evening Standard reported an incident at which the police were asked to intervene as early as 10am on election day. Members of the electoral commission visited the polling stations in Weavers Ward and saw for themselves the mobs congregated at the entrances to the polling places.

[…]

Unless Parliament tightens the rules and the police enforce legislation, then the public sense of malaise in the electoral system will increase. And there will be a further erosion of confidence in the democratic process.

[Reader comment by William on 4 July 2012 at about 10 pm.]

What happens when ten more London Boroughs resemble the Tower Hamlets of today? What about when all of London becomes like Tower Hamlets? It’s only a matter of time. How will the rapidly retreating British part of Britain impose its will to tackle voter fraud in the ever expanding post-British areas?

[Reader comment by Jack in reply to William on 4 July 2012 at about 10 pm.]

Exactly. Already my borough looks like the Brent of 10 years ago and Brent now looks like the Tower Hamlets of 10 years ago. We’re swimming against a demographic tide. Within a few years it won’t be possible for a tory mayor to get elected — unless the tories become totally left-wing and pro-multicultural (which I suppose is what they are currently trying to do)

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Yet Another Dismal Repeat at the Top of the BBC

by Peter Oborne

The new director-general is a clone of the old one — a far cry from the values of Lord Reith

People generally accept that no BBC director-general will ever be as great as Lord Reith, the first occupant of this profoundly important post which has such an enormous bearing on our common national life. But as George Entwistle is appointed the BBC’s 15th director-general, it is worth asking what were the qualities the dour and slightly terrifying Scotsman brought to the job.

[…]

[Reader comment by albany on 5 July 2012 at 09:56 am.]

“Surprisingly often,the BBC gives the impression that it does not care for Britain.” I’m not surprised as the three main political parties despise Britain and virtually hate the English.

[Reader comment by jaykay on 5 July 2012 at about 09:30 am.]

Yet another example of the total ineptitude of this government. If Labour were in power can you imagine them allowing anyone with right wing views to hold this post?. Yet again Cameron just rolls over and says “whatever”. There again, given his record so far, he probably agrees with the left wing propaganda of the BBC and The Guardian is probably his favourite newspaper.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Military Kills ‘18 Qaeda Militants’

Algiers, 3 July (AKI) — Algeria says it has killed 18 Al-Qaeda militants over the last two weeks, the Algerian interior minister Ould Qabila said.

The military killed the insurgents amid a series of roundups in the northern Tizi Ouzou province in the region of Kabylia, local media cited Qabila as saying.

“Cabilia’s terrorism problem consists of the fact that terror cells get support from the local population,” Qabila said. “To fight these groups the people of the area have to help us hunt down the terrorists.”

The heavy vegetation of Kabylia’s mountains gives insurgents cover to form bases.

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



Egypt’s Islamist Future

by David Schenker

The election of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi as Egypt’s president temporarily puts to rest the debate about whether the nation will be secular or Islamist. Egypt is an Islamist state. Not only does a member of the Muslim Brotherhood hold the nation’s highest post, nearly 75% of the legislature’s seats are held by Brotherhood members or by their harder-line Salafi cousins — or at least they were held by the Islamists before the dissolution of the People’s Assembly by the ruling military council last month.

Competition between the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafis is not new. Indeed, according to a diplomatic cable written by the US Embassy in Cairo and published by WikiLeaks, Brotherhood leaders have been uncomfortable since at least 2009 watching its younger, more rural members “becoming increasingly Salafi-oriented.”It takes years to become a full member of the Muslim Brotherhood. To become a Salafi, one needs only to commit oneself to the cause and grow a beard. It’s little surprise the Salafis are nipping at the heels of the old-school Brotherhood.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The Next Revolution: Islamists in Tunisia Take Their Jihad to Syria

A trip to Tunis’s slums finds young Salafi Islamists who were at the vanguard of the Arab Spring, and are now set to take the fight to Syria to take down the ruling secularist regime

Domenico Quirico

Just a few blocks from the hotels, the restaurants, and the government offices, Balancine is a labyrinth filled with piles of garbage and stray dogs. Teenage boys are lying around, laughing, some of them drunk.

We came here to find the new radical Islam which has become so popular since the Arab Spring. This is the house we are looking for. Going up a dark and slippery staircase, which smells of urine, sawdust and ammonia, we arrive at the third floor. We enter a darkened room, lit by a single dim light bulb hanging from the ceiling. A curtain is barely hiding the dirty toilet. A big couch, which also serves as a bed, occupies almost all the room. A 22-year-old man, Yusef, is sitting cross-legged on the couch.

We have come to meet him before he leaves for Jihad in Syria. He is a Salafi Islamist, part of a movement that is fast becoming a major player in the region. This is not the pragmatic secularized Islam, nor the social democracy of the Muslim Brotherhood or of the moderate Ennahda movement (the Renaissance Party) whom the Western world found so reassuring after the Arab revolutions.

Yusef is set to leave for Syria to fight Bashir al-Assad’s unholy regime. Other young Tunisians have already joined the jihad, recruited in the city’s most radical mosques, and given a ticket to Turkey, along with directions on how to reach the army of rebels. “There are many other brothers: Egyptian, Libyan, Algerian,” says Yusef. Similar international Muslim brigades fought in Afghanistan, Iraq and Bosnia.

Yusef doesn’t look at us as he lays out his life story: poverty, the school, petty crimes to survive — and finally the revolution.

He is one among many other “ street thugs” from the slums who have kept the revolution alive in the streets, under the blows and tear gas. When asked if he is scared of a war which, at the end of the day is not his own, the boy suddenly comes to life: “ You don’t know anything,” he says. “Fear, courage… My strength is not in weapons. It is inside. I am an instrument. Muslims had become dependent on the things that you gave and taught us. This is our rebirth. How can we be afraid of a tyrant’s army? Don’t you see that God is helping us? God moved the Americans’ minds. The Americans are helping, arming and funding us. They are an instrument of the holy cause.”

I wonder if Yusef knows that a few days ago two other young Tunisian men were captured with explosives and weapons and paraded on Syrian television. Maybe he does, but it does not matter.

On May 20, more than 20,000 Salafi Islamists gathered in the Tunisian city of Kairouan. There are rumors about them, almost certainly false, that they are training an army. But what’s true is that Salafis in combat gear are patrolling Tunis’ “park of love,” where young couples meet up, behind a luxury hotel that Gadhafi’s son was building. The Salafis sometimes raid the park to stop acts they consider to be impure. In Jendouba and Sidi Bouzid, the Salafis attacked and burned down bars that sold alcoholic drinks.

Islam, united

Ihmed Zouhari, another young man, is one of the heads of the Hezb el Tahrir, a radical party that is run like a sect. They hate the Muslim Brotherhood and don’t believe democracy has its place in Islamic society.

“We’ve tried everything: liberalism, dictatorships, nationalism, socialism. What did we get? Poverty and corruption. The only thing that stayed pure is Islam,” believes Zouhari. “We need a radical change, a new system based on the Islamic doctrine and the Koran, and then we will unite all the Arab and Muslim countries under the same flag.”

Asked how a doctrine that was born centuries ago can work in the modern world, he has no doubts: “You don’t understand. Your democracy works for you because you live in a world where people can’t decide on a political model, where ideology serves only to seize power and changes according to what is needed. Here, we don’t have political parties, only Islam. You say that this is the Middle Ages. I ask you: have men really changed since then?”

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Leaked Foreign Office Documents Attack Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Leaked Foreign Office documents accuse Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of blaming the Palestinian Authority for inciting hatred of Israel as an excuse for him to delay peace talks. The previously redacted documents, released following a Freedom of Information Act request, appear to reveal Foreign Office officials’ views of Mr Netanyahu and the Middle East peace process. One August 2009 document analysing the Palestinian Authority’s education system claims Mr Netanyahu “has a history of using the incitement issue” to delay the process. It adds: “The history of this issue suggests that Netanyahu administrations have a tendency to charge the PA/PLO with incitement as a delaying tactic in peace talks.” The documents were passed to The Commentator website, which claimed they proved a differing stance between Prime Minister David Cameron’s support of Israel and the approach taken by Foreign Office civil servants.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


76.4% of Turks Against War With Syria

Erdogan proposed military coalition to Obama, was rejected

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA, JULY 5 — Over 76% of the population is against a possible war with Syria, according to a survey published by Star daily newspaper today.

The survey was carried out after Syrian forces shot down a Turkish fighter jet on June 22, causing a rise in tension between the two countries. Just 23.6% of those surveyed are in favor of a military response against Syria.

Turkey’s Islamic Nationalist Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, allegedly contacted US President Barack Obama to propose the creation of a Lybia-style international military coalition against Syria, but the proposal was rejected, according to the Israeli intelligence site Debka.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran ‘Ready to Attack US Bases’

Iran declared on Wednesday that it can destroy nearby US military bases and strike Israel within minutes of an attack on the Islamic Republic, reflecting tensions over Iran’s suspect nuclear programme.

The veiled threat came during a military drill that has included the firing of ballistic missiles. The elite Revolutionary Guards, conducting the war games in Iran’s central desert, said that the missiles were aimed at mock-ups of foreign military bases. Israel and the US have hinted at the possibility of military strikes against Iran if sanctions and diplomacy do not rein in Iran’s nuclear development programme. The West suspects Iran may be aiming to build nuclear weapons. Iran insists its programme is for peaceful purposes. The semiofficial Fars news agency quoted Gen. Ami Ali Hajizadeh of the Revolutionary Guards as saying US bases are in range of Iran’s missiles and could be hit in retaliatory strikes. He referred to Israel as “occupied territories.” “Measures have been taken so that we could destroy all these bases in the early minutes of an attack,” said Hajizadeh, chief of the Guards’ airspace division.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Pope to Visit Lebanon, Meet Christians, Muslims in September

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI will present a papal document addressing the church’s concerns in the Middle East, meet with representatives of local Christian and Muslim communities, and address political and cultural leaders on a three-day visit to Lebanon Sept. 14-16. Pope Benedict’s primary task on the trip will be to present a document, called an apostolic exhortation, based on the deliberations of a special synod of bishops held at the Vatican in 2009.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria: Kurdish Opposition Says SNC Wants Islamic Regime

Railroading revolution, excluding minorities, Sherko Abbas says

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA, JULY 5 — The Syrian National Council (SNC) is railroading the revolution in order to install an Islamic regime, Kurdish opposition leader Sherko Abbas denounced in an interview with Turkish daily Hurriyet.

The SNC is supported by Turkey and is considered by Westerners to be the main opposition interlocutor, but the deep divisions between it and the Kurdish opposition came to light during the recent opposition conference in Cairo.

“The SNC wants to substitute this regime with an Islamic one led by the Muslim Brotherhood, one that does not recognize the rights of Kurds, Alawites, Christians, or other minorities,” said Abbas, who is the leader of the Kurdistan National Assembly (KNA) in Syria.

“The hidden agenda of the NSC, which sees Syrians as Arabs only, is to create an Islamic, Arab, Sunnite, nationalist regime in Syria, which will exclude Kurds and other minorities,” Abbas said. “The SNC is railroading the revolution, and that’s not right.” Abbas added that “people on the ground in Syria no longer recognize the SNC as their representative,” and that, post-Assad, Kurds “will not accept anything less than federalism.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Çamlýca Mosque to Get Highest Minarets

Details about the giant mosque set to be built on Istanbul’s Çamlýca Hill have revealed that the mosque will have the highest minarets in the world, its architect said. A 15,000 square-meter mosque will be built on a tract of land in Istanbul’s Çamlýca district and will be visible from all parts of the city, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced on May 29. Hacý Mehmet Güner, the public works director of Kahramanmaraþ’ municipality became the head architect of the project upon Erdogan’s order following the announcement, daily Milliyet reported.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan’s Future Murky

by Trudy Rubin

Will Egypt’s first democratically elected president pursue democracy? The what-might-have-beens about Afghanistan are already starting, even though there are still about 90,000 U.S. troops there. U.S. forces will draw down to 68,000 by September and will shift from a combat to an advisory role in 2013; most American troops are due to return home by the end of 2014. Yet, despite the loss of almost 2,000 U.S. soldiers in an effort to stabilize the country, the Afghan future remains murky. A Taliban comeback is quite possible.

So it’s worth reading a new book, out last week, by senior Washington Post correspondent Rajiv Chandrasekaran, called “Little America: The War Within the War for Afghanistan,” to get a sobering loo k at what went wrong.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Andrew Mitchell Says Afghanistan Needs Long Term Aid Commitments

Hard-won gains made by British troops in Afghanistan risk being lost if the international donors fail to make long term aid commitments to the country, Andrew Mitchell, the Development Secretary, warned on Wednesday.

Donor countries meeting in Tokyo this weekend should “face up” to their responsibilities in the so-called “transformation decade” that will begin when the last Nato combat troops leave at the end of 2014, he said. Mr Mitchell, who returned on Wednesday from a two-day trip to Afghanistan, paid tribute to the “extraordinary valour” of British troops in Afghanistan. His visit coincided with the killing of two Welsh Guards and a warrant officer from the Royal Corps of Signals in a “dreadful green on blue” incident when an Afghan in police uniform opened fire on his Nato mentors. Five Nato troops were injured in a similar incident near Kabul on Wednesday. In a stark warning against the dangers of faltering international commitment, Mr Mitchell raised the spectre of the former Afghan communist president Mohammad Najibullah, who was castrated and killed by the Taliban in 1996 after the Soviet withdrawal.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: ‘No Mini-Skirts’: Jamiat Wants Dress Code for J&K Tourists

SRINAGAR: Just when tourism is peaking in Kashmir, the Jamiat-e-Islami on Wednesday asked the state tourism department to impose a “dress code” on those visiting the Valley, particularly from foreign countries. Jamiat spokesman Zahid Ali said the tourism department must instruct tourists not to wear clothes that are contrary to the “local ethos and culture”. “Some tourists, mostly foreigners, are seen in mini-skirts and other objectionable dresses that are against our ethos and culture, and unacceptable to civil society,” he said, adding, “Kashmiris cannot, for the sake of their economy, give up their divine (sic) values at any cost.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Road in Kolkata to be Named After Satyendra Nath Bose of Higgs Boson Fame

Kolkata: The West Bengal Assembly today accepted a proposal to name a road in Kolkata after eminent physicist Satyendra Nath Bose, one of the pioneers in the work that led to the potential discovery of the “God Particle” or the Higgs Boson that was announced by scientists on Wednesday. The term “boson” — a new sub-atomic particle, the basic building block of the universe — owes its name to Bose. The Mayor of Kolkata will now decide on the road in the city that will be named after the physicist.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: More Likely to be Implicated in Koran Scandal

Jakarta, 4 July (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Indonesian politician Zulkarnaen Djabar is unlikely to be the only individual implicated in the graft-ridden Koran procurement at Indonesia’s Religious Affairs Ministry as fellow lawmakers also accepted the holy books.

It was reported that each lawmaker accepted 504 copies of the Koran to be distributed to their constituents for free. Each copy was said to have cost taxpayers Rp 1 million (US$106).

Several lawmakers who oversee religious and social affairs admitted on Tuesday they had received 18 boxes of 28 copies of the Koran each to be given out to voters in their electoral districts to “help strengthen their faith”.

They, however, denied such a practice was part of the graft case under investigation by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).

“I received all 18 boxes yesterday, which I have yet to distribute to the mosques and other Islamic groups in my electoral district. Koran distribution is an annual program arranged by the Religious Affairs Ministry, so I think there is no problem with it because it is officially allotted for each lawmaker [at Commission VIII],” Ali Maschan Musa, who represents East Java’s fourth legislative district as a member of the National Awakening Party (PKB), said.

Inggrid Kansil of the Democratic Party has also admitted that she had received similar amount of Korans, but was unsure whether all Commission VIII members accepted it.

She admitted that she had no knowledge that each Koran cost Rp 1 million (US$106), but was informed that the Religious Affairs Ministry proposed up to Rp 50 billion last year for the procurement.

Previously, the Indonesian Forum for Budget Transparency (FITRA) announced the budget allocated for the Koran procurement last year was “unusually” large compared to the Rp 4 billion allocated in previous years.

Jazuli Juwaini of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) claimed Commission VIII had agreed to the huge increase due to the urgency of distributing free Korans as an attempt to tackle radicalism among Muslims.

“The Religious Affairs Ministry told us that the 60,000 Korans distributed in previous years was not enough for more than 2 million Muslims nationwide. According to the ministry, poor distribution of Korans was among the reasons for growing radicalism within society. This was the reason the government proposed a higher budget for the procurement last year, and we believed approving the increase would help support [the ministry’s] efforts to tackle radicalism,” Jazuli said.

The case against the Koran procurement project developed further after Zulkarnaen Djabar was recently named a suspect by the KPK for ordering the Religious Affairs Ministry’s Directorate General for Islamic Affairs to appoint certain companies, including his son’s PT KSAI, as winners of the procurement project.

On Tuesday, the KPK revealed that it would summon both for questioning next week. The KPK spokesman, Johan Budi, said the investigation into the case began two weeks ago and the KPK was still questioning witnesses related to the two suspects.

He said the KPK summoned two witnesses, Imam Faozi and Muhammad Alfian, from PT Jaya Abadi Nusantara, the ministry’s partner in procuring the Korans. The firm is believed to be the winner of the tender for the Koran procurement project worth Rp 35 billion.

“We’re still investigating the case. There’s a possibility that there was an effort to direct [state funds] to procurement projects related to computer labs for Madrasah Tsanawiyah [Islamic junior high schools] in 2010 and 2010 as well as Korans in 2011 and 2012,” Johan said.

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



Pakistan: Mob Kills Man for Insulting Koran

Thousands of people have beaten a man to death before burning his corpse after he was accused of desecrating Islam’s holy book, Pakistani police said. The man was killed after attackers stormed a police station where he had been detained for allegedly throwing pages from the Koran onto the street, police official Mohammed Azhar Gujar said yesterday. He said that police officers tried to protect the man during Tuesday’s attack, but the mob turned violent. They burned several police vehicles and wounded seven officers before grabbing the man, who has not been identified. Under Pakistani blasphemy laws, anyone guilty of insulting Islam’s Prophet or the Koran can be sentenced to death. But these laws are often misused to settle personal scores.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australian Navy Rescue Stranded Asylum Seekers

Two Australian navy patrol boats rescued 162 people from an asylum seeker boat in trouble in Indonesian waters and were taking them Thursday to an immigration detention centre on a remote Australian island territory.

Three people required medical attention, including a man who suffered a heart attack and was resuscitated by military personnel, Australian Maritime Safety Authority spokeswoman Jo Meehan said. There were no fatalities, unlike recent incidents in which would-be migrants have capsized on their way to Australia. On Tuesday, Australia and Indonesia agreed to strengthen communication during sea disasters and look into an exchange program of search and rescue specialists to combat people smuggling. Many asylum seekers travel to Indonesia first before aiming for Australian territory in rickety, crowded fishing boats.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Border Patrol Officers Told Run and Hide From Armed Illegal Aliens

In what they termed “another nauseating series of Virtual Learning Center brainwashing courses that Border Patrol agents are forced to sit behind a computer for hours and endure,” officials at the Border Patrol union reported their members are taught in an “Active Shooter” course that if agents encounter a shooter in a public place they are to “run away” and “hide.”

But on Saturday, while visiting Texas, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano had a different message, according to a government report.

“If we are cornered by such a shooter we are to (only as a last resort) become ‘aggressive’ and ‘throw things’ at him or her. We are then advised to ‘call [local] law enforcement’ and wait for their arrival, presumably, while more innocent victims are slaughtered,” states the Arizona (Local 2544) Border Patrol web site.

“These types of mandatory brainwashing courses and the idiocy that accompanies them are simply stunning when they are force-fed to law enforcement officers,” state NBPC Local 2544 officials.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: EP VP Admonishes Cameron on Immigration Comments

They create a climate of divisiveness and fear, Podimatà says

(ANSAMed) — ATHENS, JULY 4 — European Parliament Vice President Anni Podimatà did not take kindly to David Cameron’s comment yesterday that he would shut down UK borders should Greece leave the euro zone.

“Such comments only contribute to the climate of division, fear and uncertainty that has been so damaging to Europe in recent years. We expect more from the UK government,” she said in a statement issued today. “We would expect the British to support ways to overcome the crisis, for example by exerting greater control on financial markets, as the recent Barclays debacle has shown.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Border Shambles Lets 150,000 Migrants Overstay Their Visas …

A new backlog of more than 150,000 immigration cases has been uncovered by inspectors in the latest border shambles. The total — which is about the same as the population of Oxford — is increasing by nearly 100 every day. It is made up of migrants whose visas allowing them to stay in Britain have expired and who have been refused permission to stay on. But border officials have no idea if they have actually left the country or are still living here illegally.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Derby: Muslim Group Plans ‘Biggest Ever’ Pride Protest Despite Gay Hate Convictions

A ‘bigger than ever’ protest by a group of Muslim fundamentalists is being planned for Derbyshire’s upcoming Pride parade this weekend. However, several arrests and successful prosecutions have been made against attendees of the anti-gay protests in previous years, which is not said to represent the majority of Derby’s Muslim population. Organisers have vowed to continue despite the “injust arrest and imprisonment of our fellow Muslims”. The Derby Muslim Action Force said this week: “The heat always seems to bring out the worst of this society and this summer is no different with the upcoming Gay Pride march … As Muslims it is our duty to forbid this major, deplorable evil of society.” With an image of a red bar through a rainbow flag, the Force’s blog post said it would call on gays to follow “a natural way of living as detailed in Islam” and claimed to have had national support for its protest this year.

[…]

[JP note: See also here http://derbymuslimactionforce.blog.com/2012/07/05/support-for-anti-gay-pride-protest-shown-from-muslims-accross-the-uk/ ]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Can You Explain the Higgs Boson in a Tweet?

by Tom Chivers

Over on Twitter the Telegraph News account is asking for its followers to come up with an explanation of what the Higgs boson does, in 140 characters or fewer (in fact 125 or fewer, once you’ve addressed it to @telegraphnews). I’m intrigued by this, because yesterday I tried to write a brief explainer for someone on Twitter who asked what was meant by the Higgs boson “giving other particles mass”. I made a real effort to keep it as brief as possible, but it still went to a Biblical-by-Twitter-standards 256 words, or 1487 characters, and I have a strong suspicion that it’s nonsense anyway

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Exposing the Vatican-Islam Alliance

by Giulio Meotti

The Roman Catholic Church hailed UNESCO’s decision to grant the world heritage status to the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. According to the Vatican authorities, the UN decision is a “diplomatic victory” for the Palestinian Authority. Last Friday, the United Nations approved the Palestinian bid to place Jesus’ birthplace on its list of sites of World Heritage in danger. Israel called the decision “absurd” and “a sad day.” The Palestinian agenda at UNESCO is the de-Judaization of the land of Israel by Islamicizing the holy sites. Oras Hamdan Taha, the Palestinian minister who deals with antiquities and gets funds from UNESCO, made clear, “it’s writing or rewriting the history of Palestine.” Less known is that the Vatican institutions are collaborating with the Palestinian autocracy.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



God Particle: Physicists Celebrate Higgs Boson ‘Triumph’

The revelation that the long-sought particle had almost certainly been detected in the Large Hadron Collider’s 17-mile track prompts scientists to erupt with joy.

For physicists, it was a moment like landing on the moon or the discovery of DNA.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120704

Financial Crisis
» Dutch Unclear if New Bailout Terms Need Treaty Change
» ECB Staff Overworked
» Euro Crisis Fuels Debate on British EU Referendum
» German Party Leader Threatens to Axe Coalition
» Greece: Incomes Fall and Taxes Grow
» Greek 400,000 Jobless and 20,000 Homeless, EC Review
» IMF Tells Germany to Boost Internal Demand
» Merkel Faces Coalition Troubles Over Euro-Bailouts
» Poor Families Increase in Italy and Spain
» Sex Lives of Spaniards and Italians Affected by Debt
» UK Prepared to Seal Border Against Greeks
 
USA
» Battling Deportation, Imam of N.J.’s Largest Mosque Files Suit for Government Documents
» Islamophobia: A Bipartisan Project
» Islam Generates Art, Not Wars: New PBS Documentary
» On July 4, Remember: We Are Not French
» On the 4th of July: We Hold These Truths to be Self-Evident…
» Spirited Debate at Hearing for Proposed Mosque on Pines Bridge Road
 
Canada
» Mosque Update: Letter of Credit Still a Concern
 
Europe and the EU
» Celebrations as Higgs Boson is Finally Discovered
» CERN Scientists Announce Higgs Boson Breakthrough
» Commissioner ‘Seriously Concerned’ About Romanian Court
» Dark Matter Underpinnings of Cosmic Web Found
» French Arrest Man Suspected of Financing Al-Qaida
» Germany: Moroccan Religious Leaders in Europe Condemn Circumcision Ruling
» German Gunman ‘Kills Hostages in Karlsruhe Eviction’
» Ireland: Woman Drives Garda (Policeman) To Crime Scene in Her Personal Car
» Italy: Grillo Movement Popularity Up 0.8% to 20.8%
» Massive Fraud of EU Funds Rarely Reported by Member States
» Mayor of Limerick City, Ireland Wants Road Signs in Polish and “African”
» Physicists Ecstatic Over Possible Higgs Particle Discovery
» Security and the Radical Right in Flanders
» Slovakia: Resolve to Help Eurozone Partners Dwindles
» Switzerland: Mosque Struggles to Shrug Off Extremist Label
» Tracking Jihadists in Switzerland
» UK: Don’t Let PC Brigade Bury Ethnic Links to Sex Gangs, Warns Children’s Minister
» UK: Empowered or Radicalised? At the 2012 Federation of Student Islamic Societies Conference
» UK: Ian Brazier Sentenced for Pulling Niqab Veil From Muslim Woman
» UK: New Scunthorpe Mosque Rejected by North Lincolnshire Council
» UK: Petition Calls for EDL March in Bristol to be Banned
» UK: School Children Visit Rochdale Mosque
» UK: The Struggle to Deal With Foreign Terror Suspects
» UK: Tower Hamlets Mayor Lutfur Rahman Launches 14 Enforcement Officers
 
Balkans
» Croatia to Publish List of Tax Evaders
 
Mediterranean Union
» 40 Projects Selected Under Anna Lindh Foundation’s Call
» Spain: Economic Agendas of Islamic Actors IEMed Conference
» University: Brussels Launches Talk on Southern Mediterranean
 
North Africa
» Libya: In an Increasingly Unruly Country, NATO Drops Bombs to End Factional Clashes
 
Middle East
» Great Heights, Low Returns
» Iraq: Creative Pair Paint Mountain of Peace
» Jordan: Islamists Rally Against Elections Law
» Plans for Sustainable Abu Dhabi Eco-Mosque Get Approval
» Russia Accuses West of Distorting Syria Agreement
» Syria: Italian Field Hospital Sent to Jordan
» Turkey: Hackers Post Erdogan-Assad Photo on Ministry Site
» Turkey: Prosecutor Calls for Arrest of Journalist Ahmet Sik
» Turkey: Colonel Says Headscarf a ‘Symbol of Terrorism’ In New Voice Recording
» Turkey: Who Ordered the Murder of Christians?
» UAE: Ramadan May Begin on July 21
 
Russia
» Ukrainian Police Fire Tear Gas Amid Language Law Protests
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: NATO Soldiers Wounded in Another ‘Green on Blue’ Attack
» Afghanistan: ‘Honour Killing’ Of Mother, 30, Beheaded by Her Ex-Husband… Who Then Decapitated Their Two Young Children Because They’d Watched
» Five US Soldiers Injured in Central Afghanistan
» Five US Troops Wounded in Latest ‘Green on Blue’ Attack in Afghanistan
» Indonesia: Sumatran City of Medan ‘Turning Into Terror Financing Centre’
» Modern Madrasahs in India Convince Opponents
» Pakistan: ‘The Jihad Against Infidels Will Continue’
 
Far East
» Chinese Protesters Stop Copper Plant Project
 
Australia — Pacific
» Crafty Alternative to Mosque Seems Likely
» Foundation of the Largest Mosque in New Zealand
» Mosque Criticism is Ill-Informed
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» The International Criminal Court is Hurting Africa
» UNESCO Condemns Destruction of Timbuktu Shrines
 
Immigration
» Australia: Asylum Seekers Accused of Using Navy “Like the NRMA”
» Rapid Growth Hits Housing Market

Financial Crisis


Dutch Unclear if New Bailout Terms Need Treaty Change

Dutch finance minister Jan Kees de Jager Tuesday told Senate that it was unclear if the recently agreed changes to the ESM bailout fund — allowing direct bank recapitalisation — require treaty change. Having “originally” heard voices saying one would be required there are now other “options,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



ECB Staff Overworked

Workers at the European Central Bank say they are being overworked, according to an Ipso union poll, with the debt and banking crisis having greatly increased the workload.The survey claims the ECB is not sufficiently staffed to handle the daily operational tasks assigned to it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro Crisis Fuels Debate on British EU Referendum

With the euro zone apparently heading toward greater integration, many British are alarmed at the prospect of becoming marginalized within the bloc. Euroskeptics see the chance of forcing a referendum on the UK’s EU membership and are putting pressure on Prime Minister David Cameron to commit to a vote.

The British seem to have a taste for referendums at the moment. Next year, the inhabitants of the Falkland Islands will vote on their status as a British overseas territory. Then, in 2014, the Scottish government will hold a referendum on independence from the United Kingdom. Now it looks like there could be another nationwide referendum after that — on Britain’s membership of the European Union.

As the euro-zone countries push forward with greater integration as a response to the euro crisis, there are growing calls in Britain for an EU referendum. Prime Minister David Cameron is coming under increasing pressure to agree to a vote, especially from the right wing of his Conservative Party. In a letter sent to the prime minister last week, hundreds of Conservative members of parliament called on him to commit to an EU referendum after the next election in 2015.

The pressure from euroskeptics puts Cameron, who does not want to be rushed into holding a vote, in a tricky situation. In a speech to parliament on Monday on the outcome of last week’s EU summit, the prime minister said that although he is not in favor of an immediate referendum on EU membership, he does not want to rule one out for the future. He insisted that the “status quo” was unacceptable in any case. If the euro zone grows ever closer together into a political union, it will change Britain’s relationship with the EU, Cameron said.

In an op-ed for the Sunday Telegraph published the previous day, Cameron wrote that “the British people are not happy with what they have, and neither am I.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Party Leader Threatens to Axe Coalition

Chancellor Angela Merkel faces growing resistance to her European policy from within her own coalition. Horst Seehofer, the leader of the powerful CSU party, sharply criticized the outcome of last week’s EU summit, and threatened to let the coalition government collapse if Berlin makes any more concessions to ailing euro members.

Bavarian governor Horst Seehofer, the leader of the conservative Christian Social Union party (CSU) which is part of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right federal government coalition, has criticized the outcome of last week’s European Union summit and threatened to let the government collapse if Berlin makes any further financial concessions to ailing euro member states.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Incomes Fall and Taxes Grow

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 3 — Greek taxpayers’ declared incomes appear to have shrunk by 10% in 2011 compared with 2010, according to the processed income tax statements. The average annual income per statement came to 16,668 euros, while the average amount of income tax Greeks will have to pay this year amounts to a staggering 1,500 euros. Given the further decline in incomes this year — as daily Kathimerini notes -, it is likely that many taxpayers will be unable to pay their dues, resulting in a new generation of debtors. For this reason, the Finance Ministry is contemplating the payment of taxes in up to 12 installments for those with low incomes or without work and up to six installments for the rest. A greater discount than is currently the case may be given to those who pay their full tax bill in one go.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek 400,000 Jobless and 20,000 Homeless, EC Review

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JUNE 28 — European Commission Quarterly Review shows the EU labour market and social situation continues to deteriorate as GreekReporter.com writes. Greece is among the countries exhibiting the most disappointing data. The Quarterly Review indicates that although member states have continued to implement active labour market policies and measures to reduce the gap between temporary and permanent contracts, wide disparities in employment terms and conditions still remain a challenge within many countries, overall affecting the social coherence in the EU. The European Commission review, published in the Quarterly EU Employment and Social Situation Review, reveals that the gap between the South and the North is increasing. Unemployment is rising mostly in those countries that have received bailout aid, with more and more young people willing to flee their homelands and go abroad to find better job prospects: among those aged 15-35: 64% Greek, 67% Spanish and Irish and 57% Portuguese. One of the worst findings of the review is that 400,000 more people have lost their jobs in Greece resulting in a deteriorating quality of life. 660,000 jobs in Spain, 210,000 in Portugal and 180,000 in neighboring Italy vanished. The worst is that the figure of Greek homeless people has rapidly increased indicating a very ominous future for the poorest. “In 2011, the homeless were increased by 25% in comparison to 2009, when their number was 20,000 people. More than half of them (11,000 people) are located in Athens and Piraeus; 8,000 are Greeks. The social phenomenon has spread also to cities like Chania, Irakleio (Crete) and Trikala.” The review underlines also that 68% of the population in Greece lives below the poverty threshold (that is, it has an income below the 60% of the average national income) and spends more than 40% of its income for renting a home or repaying a mortgage.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF Tells Germany to Boost Internal Demand

The IMF has said Germany needs to boost internal demand and free itself from depending on the rest of world, reports FT Deutschland. Its “remarkable” economic situation relies too heavily on exports, IMF economic Subir Lall said in Washington, with the IMF having reduced its 2013 economic prognosis for Germany.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Merkel Faces Coalition Troubles Over Euro-Bailouts

Bavaria’s conservative leader Horst Seehofer has threatened to withdraw support for German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition if more concessions are made to ailing euro-countries.

Seehofer, who chairs the Christian Social Union in Bavaria and is renowned for his polarising statements, told Stern magazine on Tuesday (3 July) that Germany’s contribution to bailouts was already “borderline”.

“The time will come when the Bavarian government and the CSU can no longer say yes. And I wouldn’t then be able to support that personally either,” he said. “And the coalition has no majority without CSU’s seats,” the party chief added.

His biggest fear, he said, is that markets will soon turn to Germany and start asking if it can cope with all the rescues: “That is the point I regard as the most dangerous of all.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Poor Families Increase in Italy and Spain

In Italy financial issue rates increased from 16 to 26%

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, 27 JUNE — European families forced to draw on their own savings or make debts to face common expenses are increasing, according to the European Commission’s EU Employment and Social Situation Quarterly review. As Brussels pointed out, the number of poorest families in Italy and Spain was subject to an “especially considerable” increase; financial issues’ rates increased from 16% and 23% in April 2011 to 26% and 33% in April 2012.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sex Lives of Spaniards and Italians Affected by Debt

Pfizer survey reveals Northen countries are better off in bed

(ANSAMed) — BERLIN, JULY 3 — The debt crisis is weighing on the sex lives of Italians and Spaniards as well as their pockets.

According to a survey by pharmaceuticals giant Pfizer reported by Apa news agency today, 34% of Spanish and 21% of Italian respondents admitted that the crisis is negatively affecting their levels of sexual fulfillment and desire.

Those percentages are far lower in the economically virtuous Northern countries, with a mere 8% of Belgians and 9% of Germans saying the crisis affects them in the bedroom. Pfizer interviewed sexually active men and women aged 36-65 for this survey.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK Prepared to Seal Border Against Greeks

The UK revealed Tuesday (3 July) it is prepared to seal its borders from Greeks and other eurozone citizens caught up in the fall-out of the sovereign debt crisis in the event of “extraordinary stresses and strains”.

“You have to plan, you have to have contingencies, you have to be ready for anything — there is so much uncertainty in our world. But I hope those things don’t become necessary,” UK’s Prime Minister David Cameron told MPs at a home affairs committee.

UK ministers have been working on different scenarios. Under the worst case scenario, reports the Guardian, a Greek exit from the euro would provoke a near-total collapse in its economy and result in many thousands seeking work elsewhere in the EU.

The prime minister confirmed, after being posed the question directly by an MP, that he would be prepared to restrict the rights of Greeks to enter the UK.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Battling Deportation, Imam of N.J.’s Largest Mosque Files Suit for Government Documents

Battling a government bid to deport him, the spiritual leader of one of New Jersey’s largest and most diverse mosques is suing the FBI and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency to force the release of any records that could bear on his ability to remain in his adopted homeland. Mohammad Qatanani, who for the past 16 years has served as imam of the Islamic Center of Passaic County in Paterson, filed the suit in U.S. District Court in Newark on Friday under the Freedom of Information Act.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Islamophobia: A Bipartisan Project

by Deepar Kumar

When the New York Times ran its story on Obama’s “kill list,” showing the president poring over names of people to potentially assassinate in drone strikes, it sparked a controversy. The content of that controversy was not over this extraordinary revelation about Obama’s use of power but rather over the leaking of state secrets, which Republicans accused him of doing to bolster his re-election campaign. Some liberal commentators (at Salon, The Nation etc.) were rightfully horrified and condemned such activity. But the Democrats-and much of the liberal establishment-remained silent.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Islam Generates Art, Not Wars: New PBS Documentary

by Menachem Wecker

Unlike war, the “outpouring of creativity and intelligence” and “nuance and ingenuity” of Islamic art and architecture endures. So goes the argument of the new PBS documentary Islamic Art: Mirror of the Invisible World. “Islamic art puts a face on a lot of the uncertainties Western society has about Islamic culture, and also it sheds light on some shared histories between western culture and Islamic culture, and shows a continuity rather than a break,” says Afshan Bokhari, assistant professor of art history at Suffolk University in Boston, Mass., at the end of the 90-minute film.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



On July 4, Remember: We Are Not French

It has become fashionable to equate the French and American revolutions, but they share absolutely nothing beyond the word “revolution.” The American Revolution was a movement based on ideas, painstakingly argued by serious men in the process of creating what would become the freest, most prosperous nation in world history.

The French Revolution was a revolt of the mob. It was the primogenitor of the horrors of the Bolshevik revolution, Hitler’s Nazi Party, Mao’s cultural revolution, Pol Pot’s slaughter, and America’s periodic mob uprisings from Shays’ rebellion to today’s dirty waifs in the “Occupy Wallstreet” crowd.

The French Revolution is the godless antithesis to the founding of America.

One rather important difference is that Americans did win freedom and greater individual rights with their revolution, creating a republic. France’s revolution consisted of pointless, bestial savagery, followed by another monarchy, followed by Napoleon’s dictatorship and then finally something resembling an actual republic 80 years later.

[Return to headlines]



On the 4th of July: We Hold These Truths to be Self-Evident…

On July 4, 1776 the Continental Congress approved the final wording of the Declaration of Independence, representing the birth of the United States of America as an independent nation. The sentiments in the second paragraph of the Declaration, arguing that the rights of man are natural, unreserved and not contingent upon the benevolence of the state, may seem, in our day, morally intuitive, but represented a quite heterodox, and indeed revolutionary, idea in its day.

WE hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness

It should be our hope that the values which America represents will inspire a genuine spring in lands not yet touched by its bounty.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Spirited Debate at Hearing for Proposed Mosque on Pines Bridge Road

Supporters want place for their needs. Skeptics concerned with area’s character being hurt.

Both sides in the debate over the proposed New Castle mosque came in large numbers to the first hearing for the building’s environmental review. The Zoning Board of Appeals held the public hearing last week, which lasted nearly three hours in an overflowing town hall auditorium. During that time, there were several recurring themes on display. Members of the Upper Westchester Muslim Society, which is seeking to build the 24,690-square-foot structure in the town’s West End section at Pines Bridge Road and on the border of Yorktown, made passionate pleas for a larger space.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Canada


Mosque Update: Letter of Credit Still a Concern

The proposed mosque on Railway Avenue now awaits the approval from a newly elected leader of the Muslim Association of Canada Calgary Chapter. Once the new president is in place it is hoped that MAC Calgary will give the go ahead and sign a development agreement with the City of Brooks. Mourad Trabelsi, who sits on the planning board for the mosque, said the past president wasn’t willing to commit to the $250,000 letter of credit that the agreement calls for in case the newly elected president wasn’t supportive of the idea. “The new leader has to sign. The past leader said I can’t sign because we’re going to have a new leader what if he doesn’t like it?” Trabelsi still feels that the city is asking too much with their requirement for a letter of credit of $250,000 as security to ensure obligations in the development agreement are completed to their satisfaction. “The other developers never reach $250,000 — we are the worst-case scenario here in town. I think the city broke the line on that.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Celebrations as Higgs Boson is Finally Discovered

There’s a 5-in-10 million chance that this is a fluke. That was enough for physicists to declare that the Higgs boson — the world’s most-wanted particle — has been discovered. Rapturous applause, whistles and cheers filled the auditorium at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland.

Almost 50 years after its existence was first predicted, the breakthrough means that the standard model of particle physics, which explains all known particles and the forces that act upon them, is now complete.

A Higgs boson with a mass of around 125 to 126 gigaelectronvolts (GeV) was seen separately by the twin CMS and ATLAS detectors at the Large Hadron Collider, each with a confidence level of 5 sigma, or standard deviations, the heads of the experiments announced today at CERN.

Even by particle physicists’ strict standards, that’s statistically significant enough to count as a particle discovery.

“I think we have it,” said Rolf Heuer, director general of CERN, as he concluded a hotly-anticipated seminar, which began today at 9am local time.

Around the world the results were being watched at the International Conference on High Energy Physics in Melbourne, Australia.

Ducks in a line

Pier Oddone, director of Fermilab near Chicago, Illinois, home of the now-defunct Tevatron collider, expressed his views on the discovery in a different way. “If it looks like a duck and it walks like a duck it’s going to be a duck,” he said.

Joe Incandela of CMS and Fabiola Gianotti of ATLAS reported seeing excesses of particles that fit the profile of a Higgs with a mass of 125 and 126 GeV respectively. Both claimed 5 sigma confidence in the result — and both announcements were met by standing ovations.

That result broadly agrees with earlier, less statistically significant “hints” of the Higgs reported by the same two teams in December.

People started queuing to get into the auditorium at about 11pm last night, camping out. Many of those who started queuing this morning were turned away because there wasn’t room.

Given a flurry of rumours, leaks and hype over the past few days — and the fact that a discovery was in principle possible given the volume of data collected — the positive Higgs result is not a complete surprise, though the confidence we can have in the result is the best of the anticipated outcomes.

It’s elementary

The Higgs boson gives all elementary particles mass, allowing for the existence of matter. It is the fundamental unit, or quantum, of the Higgs field, an all pervading entity that all particles must pass through.

Some, like the photon, slip through unhindered — they are massless. Others, though, must struggle like a fly trapped in treacle. The Higgs and its field are required by the standard model, but had never been conclusively detected before today’s report.

The seminar was full of emotion and elation. An emotional Peter Higgs, who postulated the boson that is his namesake in 1964, called it “an incredible thing that happened in my lifetime”.

There was also some humour: “It is very nice of the standard model boson to be at that mass,” says Gianotti. “Because of that mass we can measure it. Thanks nature.”

The physicists were a little reticent to call the discovery a “Higgs boson”, preferring to call it the discovery of a “new boson”.

That’s because they don’t yet know its properties — and so can’t confirm how similar it is to the Higgs of the standard model. “It’s the beginning of a long journey to investigate all the properties of this particle,” says Heuer.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



CERN Scientists Announce Higgs Boson Breakthrough

Scientists at the CERN research facility in Switzerland have announced the discovery of a new subatomic particle. It could be the elusive Higgs boson, which would be a major scientific achievement.

The particle, which remains theoretical, is believed to give mass to all matter, helping explain why particles bunched together at the formation of the universe.

“This is a preliminary result, but we think it’s very strong and very solid,” said Joe Incandela, spokesman for one of the two teams carrying out experiments at the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN) at a press conference Wednesday in Geneva.

While more testing is needed to give more certainty to the discovery, CERN said in a statement that the discovered particle is “consistent with the long-sought Higgs boson.” It could, however, also be a variant of the Higgs or a completely different subatomic particle.

Additional analysis of data collected at CERN is expected, with a conclusive release expected at the end of the month. Looking at the preliminary data, however, reveals a result of five sigma on the scale used by particle physicists to describe the certainty of a discovery. According to CERN, a one-sigma result could be a random fluctuation in data. A five sigma counts as a discovery.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Commissioner ‘Seriously Concerned’ About Romanian Court

EU justice commissioner Viviane Reding tweeted she is “seriously concerned about recent attacks on the independence of the Constitutional Court of Romania.” The recently appointed Social-Liberal government led by Victor Ponta is ignoring the court’s rulings and plans to change its composition. Romania’s justice system is under EU monitoring.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dark Matter Underpinnings of Cosmic Web Found

THE skeleton of dark matter that undergirds the cosmic web of matter in the universe has been clearly detected for first time.

We know that matter in the cosmos forms a web, with galaxies and clusters linked by filaments across mostly empty space. Filaments are made of normal matter and dark matter — the unseen stuff that makes up about 85 per cent of the universe’s mass. Recent observations have seen the normal matter in such filaments.

Now Jörg Dietrich at the University Observatory in Munich, Germany, and his team have detected the dark matter component in a filament in a supercluster about 2.7 billion light years from us, called Abell 222/223.

The massive filament’s gravity focuses the light travelling towards Earth from more distant background galaxies. The team used this light to calculate the filament’s mass and shape. X-rays from the hot gas of normal matter in the vicinity showed that this matter lined up with the filament but made up only about 10 per cent of its mass. The rest must be dark matter. This shows that the filament is “part of a network of dark matter that connects galaxy clusters throughout the universe”, says Dietrich.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Arrest Man Suspected of Financing Al-Qaida

French authorities have arrested the administrator of an extremist French website who is suspected of playing a key role in financing and recruiting for al-Qaida and other terrorist groups in several countries, the Paris prosecutor’s office said Tuesday. The announcement was unusually dramatic for French authorities, but it did not spell out what evidence has been culled or how much money may have been involved. It is the first publicly announced suspected terrorist arrest since President Francois Hollande took office in May.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germany: Moroccan Religious Leaders in Europe Condemn Circumcision Ruling

Berlin, 3 July (AKI) — A leading group of Moroccan Muslim legal scholars in Europe has spoken out against a German court ruling that bans circumcision on minors for religious reasons.

The Supreme Moroccan Ulema Council in Europe “strongly condemns the decision by the Cologne court on the question of circumcision,” the statement said. “The Council believes the verdict is a violation of the freedom of religion and contributes to the demonisation of Muslims and Jews in Germany.”

The court ruled that the child’s right to physical integrity has precedence over the freedom of religion and parents’ rights.

The ruling was denounced by Muslim, Jewish, Catholic and Protestants as a violation of religious freedoms but some legal experts say its intention is to delay, not ban, circumcision.

It was denounced by the head of Germany’s Central Council of Jews, Dieter Graumann. The case regarded a doctor accused of carrying out a parent-approved circumcision on a 4-year-old that led to medical complications.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle responded to the outcry by saying a legal debate “must not lead to doubts arising internationally about religious tolerance in Germany.”

Muslims and Jews commonly circumcise their male newborns.

Circumcision is a “religious ritual, an act of faith transmitted by parents that is guaranteed by all European laws and all the conventions of human rights,” the Supreme Moroccan Ulema Council in Europe said in its statement.

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



German Gunman ‘Kills Hostages in Karlsruhe Eviction’

A gunman and four hostages have died after a siege in the German city of Karlsruhe, police say.

The man, facing eviction for not paying his rent, had barricaded himself in his flat with the hostages. After smelling smoke, police stormed the flat where they found the bodies. All five are said to have died of gunshot wounds. As well as the gunman, a bailiff and a locksmith died, along with the flat-owner and a prospective tenant. The hostage-taking began when officials arrived on Wednesday morning to evict a man from a block of flats in northern Karlsruhe.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Woman Drives Garda (Policeman) To Crime Scene in Her Personal Car

A WOMAN whose house was burgled collected a Garda from a local station to investigate the crime because he did not have a patrol car to drive himself.

The woman had arrived home at her house in Co Donegal earlier to find it ransacked and a number of items missing.

She contacted Garda at her local station in Newtowncunningham but was told the Garda on duty did not have any transport.

She then drove to the Garda station, which was about a mile from her house, and brought the Garda back to examine the scene of the break-in. The woman discovered the burglary last week when she returned to her home in the evening.

Local TD Pádraig Mac Lochlainn (Sinn Féin) has described the situation as “unacceptable” and has requested a meeting with acting Chief Supt Jim Sheridan to discuss the matter.

He said he had no issue with An Garda Siochána and said his issue was with Minister for Justice Alan Shatter.

“I am embarrassed for the Garda and I’m sure they were embarrassed for this woman when this happened. It is simply not acceptable that Garda do not have transport to answer an emergency call like this.

“It simply cannot go on that crime is being perpetrated and the Garda do not have the resources to combat it,” he said.

A spokesman for the Garda press office said they did not comment on third-party reports.

The Garda Representative Association (GRA), which represents rank and file Garda, said that while it could not comment on individual cases it was concerned at shortfalls in resources.

Association president John Parker said his organisation had always believed cuts to Garda resources would affect the level of service provided.

He said the public had a right to a “first-class policing service” and that Government policies had reduced the level of resources that were needed to “effectively police” the State.

“Nearly one in every five Garda vehicles has been withdrawn and not replaced due to budget cuts for the fleet over the past two years. It is set to get worse as more and more vehicles reach the end of their life and can no longer be maintained safely.”

He said Garda numbers were being reduced to 13,000 from a high of almost 15,000 despite the GRA’s estimate that an 18,000-strong force was needed to meet policing demands.

The Government had already closed some 40 Garda stations this year and was planning more closures.

“We fear this will impact most on rural Ireland, but will negatively impact on resources available in the urban areas too,” Mr Parker said.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Italy: Grillo Movement Popularity Up 0.8% to 20.8%

Gap on top party PD now just 2.4%, poll says

(ANSA) — Rome, June 29 — Support for the populist protest movement of activist comedian Beppe Grillo rose 0.8% to 20.8% in the last week, confirming it as Italy’s second most popular political force, according to a poll released Friday.

Grillo closed the gap on the second most popular party, the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), to just 2.4% because the PD’s support fell 1.1% to 23.2%, the SWG polling agency said.

According to SWG, the PD suffered because of its support for a contested labour-market reform passed this week.

Ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party continued to profit from its opposition to the austerity policies of Premier Mario Monti, rising another 0.4% to 17.1%, in third place.

Grillo, who has been inveighing for years against mainstream politics, scored big in local elections last month and got a mayor elected in Parma, wresting it from the PdL and beating the PD in what was seen as a big upset.

SWG’s poll indicated that 43.0% of Italians were undecided or would abstain if they had to vote, up from 42.0% last week.

Despite increasing pressure on Monti, especially from the PdL, 59% of the sample said they thought it likely he would make it to the end of the legislative term in 2013.

As for primary elections ahead of next year’s vote, the poll said PD leader Pier Luigi Bersani was favourite to become his party’s premiership candidate and Berlusconi was tipped to make another bid for the PdL, even though he has ruled this out.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Massive Fraud of EU Funds Rarely Reported by Member States

Public authorities in member states are sealing their lips when it comes to passing on allegations of fraud, corruption, and criminal activities to the EU anti-fraud office, Olaf.

“The decrease of information from public authorities is something which is worrying us,” Olaf’s director-general Giovanni Kessler told reporters in Brussels on Tuesday (July 3).

Of the 1046 reported leaks from both public and private sources in 2011, only 54 came member state authorities. More than half came from companies, lawyers, and anonymous individuals.

Kessler noted public sources are becoming more reluctant to denounce fraud because of an inherit fear of being labelled corrupt at the EU-level.

Olaf, which audits how EU funds are spent and scrutinizes ethics within the EU institutions, said unspent structural funds attracts the vast majority of fraud and usually involves criminal organisations spread across the EU and the world.

The structural funds, which make up the bulk of the EU budget, are entirely managed by member state or regional authorities without any oversight from the European Commission.

“The mechanism of control on how the money is spent is the weakest and where we see most of the problems,” said Kessler.

Olaf’s investigations led in 2011 to the recovery of €691 million — over a ten-fold increase compared to 2010. Over €520 million of the money came directly from EU structural funds alone. In comparison, the total amount recovered from structural funds in 2010 was €32 million.

Italian mob nicks €388 million

The single biggest haul came when the investigators uncovered a racketeering scheme on a EU-funded highway construction project, near Salerno, in southern Italy’s Calabria region.

Olaf, along with the Italian investigators, found evidence of transport authorities who had written off €388 million in EU funds.

The investigators uncovered conflicts of interests where Italian officials were awarding contracts to companies they also worked for.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mayor of Limerick City, Ireland Wants Road Signs in Polish and “African”

New city official wants Ireland’s non-nationals to feel more at home in Ireland

Mayor of Limerick City, Gerry McLoughlin, wants to see streets signs in Polish and “African” in his city, in order to make non-nationals feel more at home.

Currently, most road signs in Ireland feature English with an Irish translation but it seems this representative wants to go one step further.

The Limerick Leader newspaper says the move will embrace the city’s foreign national population, from Europe and Africa.

McLoughlin said, “I am passionate about bringing everyone together. I was an immigrant myself: I have family abroad still in Wales and Australia so I understand what it is like. We have thousands of Poles and other foreign nationals here.”

He continued, “I would like to see some Polish and African signs going up.”

This would be the first time signs in an urbanized area would be translated. However, previously in 2006, Laois County Council sought to have road signs translated into Polish to reduce the number of fatalities.

One local Polish woman Magdalena Kakol, who comes from near Gdansk, welcomed the idea.

She said, “One of my friends has been living here for more than one year and she still has a problem with the street signs. So I think this would be really good for us. It would also help a lot of tourists: my sister is coming here for two weeks later this summer, so I can ask her to meet me in different places, and she will understand.”

Limerick’s city manager Kieran Lehane said this change would need to come in the form of a motion to the council’s transportation and infrastructure meeting and it would then be investigated by the city council’s roads department.

Councillor Ger Fahy, chairman of the transport committee, also welcomed the idea.

He said “In principle, I think we should look at issues which promote the city from a national and European point of view. We do have a sizeable population of Polish people, and this should be taken into consideration. But before any decision is made, we have to look at the wider situation: if we agree to extend our signs to different language, we have to ensure it does not get out of hand.”

As well as the change to street signs, McLoughlin suggested a forum for non-nationals living in Ireland.

He said, “We have a lot to learn from them. They are also citizens of our city, so let’s embrace them. They came here as asylum seekers, they are now part of Limerick.”

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Physicists Ecstatic Over Possible Higgs Particle Discovery

Physicists are thrilled at today’s (July 4) announcement of the discovery of a new elementary particle that is likely the Higgs boson, an elusive particle thought to give all other matter its mass.

“To me it’s really an incredible thing that it’s happened in my lifetime,” Peter Higgs, the leader of the group that first theorized the particle in 1964 and after whom the particle is named, said during a press conference Wednesday (July 4).

Evidence for the new particle was reported today by scientists from the world’s largest atom smasher, the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland. Researchers reported they’d seen a particle weighing roughly 125 times the mass of the proton, with a level of certainty that all but seals the deal it’s the Higgs boson. The Higgs represents the last undiscovered particle predicted by the Standard Model, the reigning theory of particle physics.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Security and the Radical Right in Flanders

Security has been a major theme in the rhetoric of the Vlaams Block/Belang since the late 1980s. Their combination of strong anti-immigrant statements and simplistic proposals has been appropriated by mainstream parties in Belgium.

‘Security’ is a major theme of the rhetoric of the populist radical right in Flanders, the Dutch speaking North of Belgium and arguably played a role in its success, which by far exceeds that of the extreme right in the French-speaking South of the country. The Vlaams Blok (VB — Flemish Bloc) was founded after the split of the more radical wing of the already nationalist Volksunie (People’s Union) in the late 1970s. It was renamed Vlaams Belang (Flemish Interest) after having been found guilty of racism in 2004, and then became one of the most successful populist radical right parties in Europe, experiencing its zenith between the late 1980s and the mid 2000s.

‘Security’ has been an important signifier in the rhetoric of VB since the late 1980s. The party presented itself as the defender of the Flemish people’s security from a range of threats, including crimes against private property, drug use, and terrorism. Most crucially, the party has consistently connected ‘insecurity’ to the presence of people of foreign descent. VB’s electoral upsurge in the early 1990s was due to a large extent to the party’s emphasis on the ‘migrant problem’. This unspecified category includes ‘illegal’ immigrants (labelled ‘illegals’), refugees, migrants without the Belgian nationality as well as Belgian nationals of migrant origin and their offspring. Clearly, everyone living in the Flemish territory who does not belong to what VB considers to be ‘the Flemish people’ are thus singled out for opprobrium. In the following two decades, the party insisted that the presence of people of foreign descent was the cause of an increasing sense of ‘insecurity’.

Since people are organically tied to ‘their’ people, culture, and homeland, so the argument goes, when they migrate and settle in a country with a different culture to their own, they are ‘uprooted’. This uprootedness, according to VB, leads migrants to anomie and to sociocultural and socioeconomic disintegration, thus to crime. Slogans such as “Less foreigners, more security” and “Stop immigrants, safe city” show how VB constructs this direct causal link between the presence of foreigners and crime.

The solution offered by VB is quite simple: fewer aliens and more law and order. VB used to demand that all foreigners be sent ‘home’. The slogan ‘Hand in hand back to their own country’, usually combined with the picture of an airplane lifting off, gives an idea of the party’s viewpoints as well as of its ways of dealing with antiracist criticism — the slogan being a parody of the antiracist ‘Hand in Hand’ campaigns of the early 1990s. Later, the party took a somewhat milder approach , demanding the total ‘assimilation’ of people of foreign descent into what it considers to be Flemish culture. However, the party programme still includes a zero-immigration policy, the deportation of criminal migrants and the withdrawal of their Belgian nationality if they happen to have it. It also supports a decisively repressive stance against irregular migrants and undocumented refugees. In April 2012, VB launched an ‘Illegality Hotline’, asking people to report cases of’abuse’ of social security, of crime, of undeclared work, etc. The information gathered in this fashion is to serve as the basis for a document criticising existing immigration policies…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Slovakia: Resolve to Help Eurozone Partners Dwindles

Eurozone member Slovakia has said people in his country were losing patience in the face of some partners in the bloc not sticking to their budget consolidation promises. It said financial help for them might soon stop.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico told German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Tuesday that his country’s population was less and less willing to financially support fellow eurozone nations which cared little about meeting deficit reduction targets.

“Our people’s patience is running out,” Fico said amid a current debate about even more financial assistance particularly to debt-stricken countries in southern Europe. He stressed Slovakia was no longer willing to agree to more aid, if recipients kept falling short of implementing budget consolidation reforms.

“It’s getting increasingly difficult to explain to Slovaks why they should help eurozone nations in which pensions for instance were three times as high as in my country,” Fico told reporters in Berlin.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Mosque Struggles to Shrug Off Extremist Label

Accused of preaching a fundamentalist line of Islam, the Errhamen Mosque of Biel is once again in the firing line for having welcomed amongst its worshippers young men who have travelled abroad to fight jihad.

In an upstairs office of the mosque, an old building in the throes of renovation, Imam Khalid ben Mohamed, an affable political refugee from Algeria who has lived in Switzerland for 17 years, welcomes swissinfo.ch with a smile. In this interview, ben Mohamed discusses the reasons behind the mosque’s decision to restrict media access to prayer areas, and the rumours damaging its reputation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tracking Jihadists in Switzerland

Swiss intelligence services have observed an increase in the number of trips made out of Europe for jihadist purposes, with the internet playing a central role in radicalising young people confused by Western society.

Many unanswered questions remain, but the arrest in Kenya of a 19-year-old student from Biel has shaken the Swiss city in canton Bern and especially the Muslim community, which makes up almost ten per cent of the 50,000 inhabitants.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Don’t Let PC Brigade Bury Ethnic Links to Sex Gangs, Warns Children’s Minister

Social workers and the police must not let political correctness get in the way of investigating the grooming of vulnerable children, a minister said yesterday. Tim Loughton said ‘ethnicity’ had been a factor in the scandal of recent cases involving gangs of mostly Asian men grooming and abusing young girls. And he warned that many more cases are yet to be heard — with thousands of alleged sex abuse victims across the country.

The Children’s Minister said members of some ‘closed communities’ had been reluctant to come forward and report organised sex attacks.

As a result, these were allowed to take place ‘under the radar’ for many years, he said.

He told MPs: ‘If there is some form of political correctness around ethnicity which is getting in the way of police and other agencies investigating, tracking down and nailing these perpetrators, then that needs to be removed and we need to do something about it.’ Earlier this year a gang from Rochdale were jailed for plying teenage girls with alcohol before raping them. All but one of the gang were Pakistani.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Empowered or Radicalised? At the 2012 Federation of Student Islamic Societies Conference

by Reyhana Patel

The Federation of Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS), the umbrella organisation for student UK Islamic Societies, has been singled out on a number of occassions as an organisation which “are training the violent extremists of tomorrow.” I have previously argued that groups like FOSIS play a major role in fighting extremism through its engagement and empowerment of Muslim students. So what exactly happens at an annual FOSIS conference? Does it involve a line-up of events and activities which promote extremism and radicalise British Muslim youths? Or is it merely a platform for Muslim students to unite and discuss issues affecting them?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ian Brazier Sentenced for Pulling Niqab Veil From Muslim Woman

A man who pulled a niqab veil off a Muslim woman at a shopping centre in the West Midlands has been given a suspended prison sentence.

Ian Brazier, of Shirley, Solihull, had admitted racially aggravated assault after he tugged at Farhana Chughtai’s hair in Touchwood, Solihull, in March.

Brazier, 26, was told to pay his victim £100 compensation and was handed a six-week sentence, suspended for 18 months.

Magistrates in Solihull also ordered him to carry out 250 hours unpaid work.

He was also directed to complete a diversity course.

Ms Chughtai said the attack left her feeling “violated and very distressed”.

Brazier, of Berkeley Road, said he had been smoking cannabis and was “upset” at not being able to watch two films at a nearby cinema complex prior to the attack.

‘No place for hate’

In a statement, Ms Chughtai said the crime had had a lasting impact on her.

She said: “Today I remain self-conscious and worry that the same thing may happen to me again.

“I am aware of other similar incidents in the West Midlands which have not been reported to police. This should not be the case.

“Victims should report these crimes as soon as they happen.”

Ch Insp Kevin Doyle, from West Midlands Police, said: “Despite the shocking nature of this offence, reports of crimes like this are exceptionally rare both in Solihull and the wider West Midlands.

“When they are reported to us, I would like to assure victims that they are investigated thoroughly, professionally and victims treated with the utmost dignity and respect.

“Today’s sentence shows that there is no place for hate in Solihull.”

           — Hat tip: Derius [Return to headlines]



UK: New Scunthorpe Mosque Rejected by North Lincolnshire Council

A proposed new Scunthorpe mosque has been refused planning permission by North Lincolnshire Council. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Association sought change of use approval for a mosque with living accommodation at Concorde House, Bessemer Way — a large, detached and purpose-built office building. North Lincolnshire Council’s planning committee — meeting at the Civic Centre in Scunthorpe — rejected the scheme. The council considered the proposal would have created an “unsustainable, poorly accessible, isolated community facility with limited access by public transport, cycle, or on foot.” This, the planners said, would have been contrary to advice contained in the National Planning Policy Framework, the North Lincolnshire Core Strategy and the North Lincolnshire Local Plan. Applicants who have planning applications rejected may lodge an appeal, if they wish.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Petition Calls for EDL March in Bristol to be Banned

A petition with more than 2000 signatures calling for a ban on the English Defence League’s march next weekend, will be handed in to Bristol City Council tomorrow. It includes names from trade unionists and faith groups across the city, asking to prevent the march taking place on the 14th of July. Similar EDL marches in Telford and Luton have been banned. There will also be a lobby outside of the Council House, College Green at 5.30pm before the Cabinet meeting.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: School Children Visit Rochdale Mosque

Almost 700 children from 19 schools visited Neeli Mosque’s of Annual ‘Primary School Programme’. The primary School programme started in 2008 and this year was the 5th year it had taken place. Each School visit went through some basic fundamental beliefs of Islam in a fun and interactive way and also got a tour of the Mosque which highlights some of the key functions and features which take place within the building. Ruhel Khan, Primary School Programme Coordinator said, “The Primary School Programme 2012 was a huge success, this was our fifth year and each time it has got bigger and better. The exceptional feedback from the schools gives us encouragement to provide more services for the local community”.

The programme took almost 3 months of planning and the demand for places is getting higher each year. The Mosque has promised in future it will work out a programme where even more Schools can participate. Mosque Secretary Imran Ahmed said “A huge appreciation goes out to all the volunteers who gave up there time to help out with the programme. The mosque has a responsibility of educating the wider community on Islam and our School Programme is just one of the many initiatives we take. I would also like to thank all the School’s who took part at this year’s programme and from my observation and feedback I received all in all, it was an excellent programme with a lot of positives”.

A teacher from Beech House Primary School said “hadn’t visited a mosque previously so wasn’t sure what to expect, the visit actually exceeded all my expectations”. Another teacher from Middleton Parish Said “the programme was very informative and well organised, a variety of short activities kept the children interested throughout”. Neeli Mosque is part of UKIM. The UKIM is one of the oldest nation-wide Islamic organisations in the UK. UKIM has different stands of work which include Relief, education, running Mosques and Madrassa as well as community cohesion and interfaith activities. UKIM is a registered charity organisation as well as one of the founding members of MCB a national umbrella body for Muslim organisations in Britain.

[Reader comment by Ifti on 3 July 2012 at 11:12pm.]

Multiculturalism is not about integration but about cultural plurality. It is not about separation but about respect and the deepening awareness of Unity in Diversity. Each culture will maintain its own intrinsic value and at the same time would be expected to contribute to the benefit of the whole society. Multiculturalism can accommodate diversity of all kinds — cultural, philosophical and religious — so that we can create a world without conflict and strife. Britain can assume the role of accommodation and concern for all peoples, for our planet and indeed for our survival. […] Iftikhar Ahmad London School of Islamics Trust http://www.londonschoolofislamics.org.uk

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Struggle to Deal With Foreign Terror Suspects

by Shiraz Maher

Abu Qatada, the Islamist cleric once branded ‘Osama bin Laden’s ambassador to Europe’, has dominated headlines in recent months as the government struggles to return him to Jordan. Theresa May wanted to take a hard line against foreign clerics operating from Britain but has found her hands tied by the European Court of Human Rights. Indeed, she pledged to deport Qatada, only to be overruled by the European courts. This setback took on added significance yesterday when the United Nations confirmed that it has removed Saad al-Faqih from the al-Qaeda sanctions list which freezes the assets of persons believed to be associated with the group. None of the fifteen member states (including Britain) of the ‘1267 Committee’, the UN group which enforces these sanctions, objected to his removal. Faqih might not have courted as much attention as Qatada, but is deeply controversial. Formerly a professor of surgery in Saudi Arabia, he fled to the UK in 1993 after being arrested as part of a crackdown against Islamists who opposed Western military involvement during the First Gulf War.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Tower Hamlets Mayor Lutfur Rahman Launches 14 Enforcement Officers

A team of 14 enforcement officers will be launched by Tower Hamlets Mayor Lutfur Rahman yesterday (Wednesday).

The 14 Tower Hamlets enforcement officers, will join the existing team of 16 THEOs, as they are also nicknamed. Twelve of the new recruits are all former council market inspectors whose job title is changing. The other two are team supervisors. A council spokeswoman explained that the former market inspectors will continue to focus on the borough’s markets but that their new title reflects increased powers to tackle crime and anti-social behavior. The new recruits are all being issued with stab proof vests costing £445 each or around £5,000 for all new members. While the 14 new members will not be police accredited like the existing THEOs they will have powers to seize alcohol and tobacco, and request the name of a person acting in an anti-social manner. The THEOs were introduced by Mayor Rahman in 2009 deal with problems such as street drinking, graffiti, dog fouling and littering.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Croatia to Publish List of Tax Evaders

On the internet unpaid debts for 90 days

(ANSAmed) — ZAGREB, JULY 3 — Croatia will publish a list of tax evaders and debtors as part of a package of measures against tax evasion. Though the publication has been slammed by many as drastic, its announcement has already shown good results.

Parliament in Zagreb yesterday voted in favour of changes to the fiscal code providing for the publication on the internet of all debts towards the state that have not been paid for over ninety days.

Croatians who will not pay personal income taxes or taxes for self-employed workers will end up on the list if their debt is over 14,000 euros while the limit for companies will be 40,000 euros.

All those who have reached an agreement with fiscal authorities on payment of their debt will not have their name published on the internet.

According to data published by the Finance Ministry, in the past six to seven years Croatia has cumulated almost 7 billion euros of unpaid debt, totalling almost half of public expenses in a fiscal year.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


40 Projects Selected Under Anna Lindh Foundation’s Call

Instrument for dialogue in the Euro-Mediterranean region

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 28 — Forty projects covering themes from cultural dialogue, democracy and gender, to circus arts, dance and literature across the Mediterranean, have been selected for the first round of the Anna Lindh Foundation’s Call for Proposals programme for 2012.

The Anna Lindh Foundation’s Calls for Proposals, according to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), are one of the instruments to support the development of transnational civil society projects and to mobilise the National Networks. This mechanism contributes to the unique character of the Foundation as a meeting point for civil societies from both sides of the Mediterranean.

The Anna Lindh Foundation for Inter-Cultural Dialogue promotes knowledge, mutual respect and inter-cultural dialogue between the people of the Euro-Mediterranean region, working through a network of more than 3,000 civil society organisations in 43 countries. Its budget is co-funded by the EU (7 million euros) and the EU member states (6 million euros).

The list of the projects approved is available at the following link: http://www.euromedalex.org/sites/default/files/Selected_Projects _CFPs_2012.pdf.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Economic Agendas of Islamic Actors IEMed Conference

Seeking agenda for economic transition in Arab Spring countries

(ANSAMed) — MADRID, JULY 3 — Representatives of new Arab governments, Islamic parties, banks, public and private financial institutions, and entrepreneurs’ associations are attending a two-day conference organized by the European Institute of the Mediterranean (IEMed), a think tank specializing in Euro-Mediterranean relations.

The objective of the conference, titled Economic Agendas of Islamic Actors, is to launch policies that will promote growth, trade and investments in the so-called Arab Spring countries, whose newly installed governments now face the challenges of guaranteeing stability and providing jobs for the new generations, IEMed sources told ANSAMed.

Conference attendees will try to come up with an agenda that will ensure a smooth economic transition in these newly liberated countries, and to guarantee their economic integration with their neighbors and with the EU.

This afternoon’s keynote speaker is IEMed Director Andreu Bassols, to be followed by Abdeslam Ballaji, Moroccan MP for the Justice and Development Party, President of the Moroccan Association of Islamic Economic Studies, and deputy mayor of Rabat; Ridha Chkoundali, professor of economics at Nabeul University in Carthage; Abdalhafez Elsawy, economic advisor to Egypt’s Freedom and Justice Party, who writes about Islamic economy, regional integration and sustainable development. Tomorrow’s sessions will be dedicated to the principles behind Islamic finances and their relationship to Islamic law, and Euromediterranean cooperation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



University: Brussels Launches Talk on Southern Mediterranean

Vassiliou, institution is central in pro-democracy efforts

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JULY 3 — The European Commission has launched in Brussels a new dialogue with southern Mediterranean countries on higher education policies and programmes.

The objective of the two-day meetings which started yesterday with ministers and representatives of the southern shores of the Mediterranean is to evaluate the challenges ahead in this sector in order for the EU to boost cooperation and support these countries in the future.

‘Education is at the centre of our efforts’ said Androulla Vassiliou, the European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth. ‘We must focus on youths in order to reach our aim to create a prosperous and democratic southern Mediterranean’.

‘Young people are at the centre of social and political change and are the main economic actors of the region in the future’, also said Vassiliou.

The event is an opportunity to get acquainted with new cooperation initiatives with the EU from 2014 until 2020 and bilateral cooperation efforts funding a number of programmes, from the modernization of school systems to the increase of education institutions.

Among the initiatives approved is ‘for example a programme supporting the Algerian government with a 23.5 million euro fund’, noted Vassiliou.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Libya: In an Increasingly Unruly Country, NATO Drops Bombs to End Factional Clashes

A few days before elections, tensions and clashes continue in Libya. In Benghazi, a rebel group attacks a polling station. Sources tell AsiaNews that NATO carried out air strikes against Zintan and Mashasha, with dozens of deaths. Libyans are opposed to Islamic extremists.

Tripoli (AsiaNews) — The future of Libya is in jeopardy because of insecurity, divisions, in-fighting and armed clashes between rebels and pro-Gaddafi loyalists. Against this background, Libyans are set to go to the polls on Saturday to elect a 200-member constituent assembly tasked with drafting the country’s first democratic constitution since the fall of the old regime. However, sources tell AsiaNews that the country is in full civil war and blame NATO for clashes and violence among rival factions.

“In various parts of Libya fighting continues despite media silence,” the sources said. In fact, NATO never left the country. “Three weeks ago, NATO planes carried out air strikes in two feuding cities, Zintan and Mashasha,” the sources noted. The former was a rebel stronghold during the anti-Gaddafi war and was supported by NATO. The latter is home to nomadic people, originally from Niger, and was built by Gaddafi to settle permanently desert communities. Its residents backed the Libyan strongman when he attacked Zintan.

“After the fall of the dictator, Zintan began revenge attacks against Mashasha, which responded by shelling its nemesis,” sources said. “In order to end the violence, NATO hit both cities, killing a number of people. The alliance said that it bombed its ally, Zintan, by mistake. All the while, media stood silent.”

NATO interference in factional divisions, the large number of weapons and the total lack of leadership in the country are increasing the chances of a new civil war as factions vie for power ahead of 7 July elections. “In a country where Gaddafi concentrated power for more than 40 years, his fall has opened the floodgates. Now it is a free-for-all grab for power and support in an atmosphere of insecurity and anarchy.”

In Benghazi, more than 300 people stormed an election office, burning ballots and other election material in order to demand more polling stations.

“The National Transition Council is not in control of the country,” the sources noted. “Each city wants autonomy to control its own resources and deal with multinationals. Such is the outcome of a costly humanitarian war carried out with the blessing of the United Nations.”

The main sign of hope is the defeat of the Islamist front, main advocate of the war against Gaddafi. At present, Libyans are trying to marginalise it.

“In recent months, Muslim extremists have tried everything to gain power and earn support, presenting themselves as an alternative to the regime, especially in view of the results in Tunisia’s and Egypt’s elections.” However, they have been thwarted by a desire of the Libyan people for change and modernity. After supporting them in the early stages of the war, Libyans are now aware of their backward anti-modern views and have started fighting them. They are tired of being used and want real change in the country.” (S.C.)

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

Middle East


Great Heights, Low Returns

Skyscraper Delivers Top Amenities, But City’s Property Slump Weighs on Prices

The Burj Khalifa, more than 60% taller than any other building in the world, has firmly established itself as an international landmark—it even played a starring role in the latest “Mission Impossible” blockbuster.

But it is thus far a flop with investors.

The building, which is more than a half-mile high and bills itself as “the world’s most prestigious address,” has seen prices drop from as much as 9,000 dirhams ($2,450) a square foot at the precrisis peak to as low as 2,650 dirhams, says David Terry, sales manager at Luxhabitat, a residential real-estate broker.

“From an investor’s point of view, Burj Khalifa is one of the least attractive investments in Dubai,” Mr. Terry says. His views are echoed by Thomas Bunker, an investment-sales consultant at broker Better Homes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iraq: Creative Pair Paint Mountain of Peace

TWO directors of a Luton-based creative agency have painted a message of peace for the town on a mountain in Iraq. ATP Media artist and creative director Ben Hodson, 26, and his colleague, storyteller Ian Rowlands, 49, worked with Iraqi artists. To get to the mountain in the Kurdish region of Iraq the pair, whose business is based at the Hat Factory, in Bute Street, travelled to Turkey, then flew to Sulaymaniyah and went the rest of the journey by car. The site had been the scene of a project in 2000 that was credited with bringing together opposing factions and kicking off the peace process. With this re-enactment and performance the agency hopes to use it as a symbol for peace. Ben is a member of the International Guild of Visual Peacemakers and hoped the message would have an effect on tensions within Luton.

[…]

[JP note: Take the mountain to Mohammed.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Jordan: Islamists Rally Against Elections Law

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, JUNE 29 — Scores of Islamists and independent activists took to the street in Amman on Friday to reject a recently approved elections law and called for government resignation.

The rally comes a few days after shocking victory of Islamist Mohamed Mursi in Egypt’s presidential elections, a development that emboldened Jordan’s opposition.

On Wednesday, king Abdullah instructed the government and the parliament to revisit the recently approved elections law and amend it to satisfy demands of the opposition.

The decision by Abdullah has been seen as a major embarrassment for the palace on the day it approved the elections law.

The parliament is expected to reconvene in July to amend the law, said government officials.

Islamist leader Zaki Bani Rsheid called on the government to resign after the stunning decision by Abdullah.

“What happened concerning the review of the law proves how chaotic the scene is in Jordan. The government must resign,” he told ANSA on the sideline of the rally.

Independent activists and liftists were also present as well as a strong force from the police to prevent clashes with government loyalists.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Plans for Sustainable Abu Dhabi Eco-Mosque Get Approval

With the Muslim Holy Month of Ramadan set to start later this month, an architecture student in the UAE has has shown the ties between religion and sustainability with designs for an eco-Mosque in Abu Dhabi.

Emirati architect Suhail Mohammed Suleiman’s plans, which were his graduation project, use a number of elements to reduce resource use. They could now be turned into reality with the proposals passing the first planning hurdle in the UAE capital. The contemporary design will use a partly translucent polymer called Corian that allows light but not heat to enter, reducing the need for air conditioning in warmer months as well as reducing the need for additional lighting.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Russia Accuses West of Distorting Syria Agreement

Russia has accused the West of seeking to distort an agreement for a political transition in Syria, after international peace envoy Kofi Annan said a ceasefire was imperative.

Sergei Lavrov, Russian Foreign Minister, hailed the Geneva accord based on proposals by Annan as an “important step” but said that Western capitals had read more into the final statement than what was written on paper. “These (Geneva) agreements are not there to be interpreted. They mean exactly what is said in the communique and we need to follow the agreements that were made,” he said. His comments came soon after Ahmad Fawzi, a spokesman for Annan, told reporters a “shift” in positions by Russia and its diplomatic ally China at the Geneva talks should not be underestimated. A two-day meeting of opposition groups which has been held behind closed doors in Cairo meanwhile ended late on Tuesday with a consensus statement, according to Egypt’s official MENA news agency.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria: Italian Field Hospital Sent to Jordan

For 25,000 refugees. Terzi: support for Syrian people

(ANSAmed) — ROME — An Italian field hospital that will provide medical assistance to 25,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan left this morning from the airport of Orio al Serio in the northern city of Bergamo.

‘We are close to the Syrian people’, Italian foreign minister Giulio Terzi said. ‘We are close to them by supporting the action of the international community which is looking for a solution to the crisis and by providing help to a population struck by a humanitarian tragedy which is increasingly unbearable’.

Italy has already sent a medical kit to Syria and Lebanon before this latest initiative, Terzi said, which was carried out by the Italian Cooperation together with the Civil Protection, a national body which manages exceptional events, and the National Alpini Association, a group of the special mountain force within the Italian army.

Terzi spoke on the phone yesterday with his Jordanian counterpart Nasser Judeh about Italy’s humanitarian aid in a conversation on the regional repercussions of the Syrian crisis.

The talk, part of a constant political dialogue between the two countries, was held ahead of a meeting Friday in Paris of the Group of Friends of the Syrian People.

The Italian field hospital, said the Italian foreign ministry, can assist up to 100 people a day by guaranteeing cardiology, trauma, obstetric and paediatric medical aid.

Once in Jordan, the hospital will be transferred to Mafraq, an area close to the Syrian-Jordanian border some 80 km from Amman where personnel with the Italian Cooperation, Civil Protection and National Alpini Association will initially supervise the hospital.

The field hospital will subsequently be managed by Jordanian authorities and will continue to provide assistance to Syrian refugees and the local population.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Hackers Post Erdogan-Assad Photo on Ministry Site

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 3 — A group of left-wing Turkish hackers called RedHack this morning published on the website of the Turkish foreign ministry two photos taken a few years ago of Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyp Erdogan hugging Syrian president Bashar al Assad and late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi with the writing ‘ yesterday brothers, today enemies’.

‘If you want to wage a war, put your boots on and leave but we don’t want to die for you’, also wrote the self-proclaimed ‘Socialist hackers’, addressing the prime minister’s Justice and development Party (AKP) and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

After being one of Assad’s allies, Erdogan has now broken relations with the Syrian president. Tensions between the two countries are high and constantly worsening in a negative evolution of relations similar to the one recorded with Libya’s now defunct leader.

RedHack dedicated the hacking of the foreign ministry website to the victims of the carnage of Sivas, a city in Anatolia where on July 2, 1993, 36 people, mostly intellectuals of the Alawite minority group, were killed, many of them burnt alive, after Sunni militants set their hotel on fire. The group was attending a festival on Alevi poetry and literature.

A trial ended two years ago without a verdict after the statute of limitations expired for the suspects.

The group of hackers claims it will soon publish secret ministry documents on the case which are in its possession.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Prosecutor Calls for Arrest of Journalist Ahmet Sik

100 Turkish journalists incarcerated on subversion charges

(ANSAMed) — ANKARA, JULY 3 — An Istanbul prosecutor today asked for a warrant to arrest Turkish journalist Ahmet Sik, who was freed in March after a year of detention without trial, on grounds that he “threatened and insulted” public officials, according to Turkish news agency Dogan. Sik reportedly called for the arrest and trial of the police, judges and prosecutors who jailed him and dozens of other journalists and students on trumped-up anti-government conspiracy charges.

“Justice will only be made once they all end up here,” Sik reportedly said upon leaving prison in March. He was incarcerated for a year for alleged links to a subversive plot against the ruling nationalist Islami government of Premier Recip Hayyep Erdogan. The plot to overthrow the government was allegedly being hatched by top-ranking Army officers.

Approximately 100 journalists are currently incarcerated in Turkey on charges of conspiring with Kurdish terrorists or plotting to overthrow the government. Charges have also been brought against dozens of Army generals.

The Socialdemocratic opposition in Turkey has denounced a witch hunt is being carried out by pro-government magistrates and by Fetullah Gulen, an Islamic religious leader. Criticism has also come from some European institutions and human rights NGOs.

Italian National Press Federation President Antonio Natale has called on Prime Minister Mario Monti to pressure for top-level EU intervention. Turkish journalists are being incarcerated on “fanciful charges,” Natale said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Colonel Says Headscarf a ‘Symbol of Terrorism’ In New Voice Recording

Col. Ali Çakmakkaya, a judge, describes the headscarf as a “symbol of terrorism” in a voice recording, in which he also uses profanity while referring to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his wife, Emine Erdogan.

The voice recording was released on Twitter on Tuesday, although the date of the recording remains unknown. A caption provided with the recording says Çakmakkaya made the statements in an official military setting.

Criticizing Erdogan for not wearing a tie during his meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Çakmakkaya says Erdogan had put an end to state culture in Turkey. He talks about the wives of Erdogan and Assad: “You look at the wife of the other [Assad]; she is pretty modern and [looks] European.” He adds that Erdogan’s wife is not like this, using expletives in his description of Emine Erdogan.

Çakmakkaya also compares Emine Erdogan with the wife of Qatar’s Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. “Even the wife of Qatar [Emir] looks neater than his [Erdogan’s]. Her head is covered but not with a headscarf. These [headscarves] are entirely militant symbols,” he says, adding, “This is not about faith. This is a symbol of terrorism.”

The colonel also claims that Erdogan and President Abdullah Gül live in palaces. “Did you know the prime minister has three palaces now? Dolmabahçe, Çiragan and another one,” he states. He further claims that President Gül has been given two palaces, one in Yildiz and another in Tarabya, both Istanbul neighborhoods. “Europe says that. I read it in a newspaper. They [Erdogan and Gül] are chasing the former Ottomans. They are not for the people at all. Who owned these palaces? The people. We used to visit them as museums. Now these men use them,” he says, going on to say that if people tried to enter the palaces, police officers would stop them. “They are taking over all the palaces.”

Çakmakkaya also states that the police are attacking every place like “dogs” to find evidence against Ergenekon, a clandestine organization nested within the state plotting to manipulate or overthrow the democratically elected government.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Who Ordered the Murder of Christians?

Orhan Kemal Cengiz

I was telling you the story of Ilker Çinar who was employed by the National Strategies and Operations Department of Turkey (TUSHAD), which is an undercover unit of the military, like JITEM, which also has strong connections with TUSHAD.

Çinar penetrated the Christian community and gathered a lot of information, while he was pretending to be a missionary. He became a church leader, and upon receiving another order, he became “Muslim” again and launched a campaign against missionaries across the country.

From the second indictment of the Malatya massacre we also learnt that he was also ordered to work with the Malatya gendarmerie against missionaries. From the statements of Çinar, who is now a confessor trying to receive immunity in exchange for the information he gave, we understand that Malatya was one of the centers from which psychological warfare against missionaries and Christians was being lead.

Çinar gave quite a detailed account of how both the Malatya gendarmerie conducted this psychological warfare and how they paved the way for the Malatya massacre. Çinar told us that he traveled to Malatya many times to join these “workshops.” In these workshops they produced many documents to be used for disinformation against missionaries. For example, some of these documents “prove” that missionaries are connected to the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), whereas some “show” some links between them and the CIA. In fact, from 2005-2007 there were a lot of these kinds of rumors circulating in Turkey.

What is also amazing to see is how much the Malatya gendarmerie spent on this “job.” Çinar said that he was given TL 100,000 (approximately equivalent to $55,000). Whenever he came to Malatya he stayed at the most luxurious hotel, and all his daily expenses were paid. Apparently, the Malatya gendarmerie spent a lot of money to monitor missionaries and to prepare black propaganda about them. Çinar was only one of the persons they worked with.

While he was visiting Malatya for these workshops, he also witnessed preparations for another “operation.” Çinar was not directly a part of this so-called operation, but through his frequent contacts with the gendarmerie, he became familiar with some details. In one of the meetings he saw that the gendarmerie commander took out large photos of Necati Aydin, Tilman Geske and Uður Yücel, who were killed on April 18, 2007. The gendarmerie commander had allegedly stated that a strong “message” was going to be sent to all missionaries across the country through the ones in Malatya.

Çinar once witnessed Mehmet Ülger, gendarmerie commander, leave their meeting to talk to Varol Bülent Aral, who is now being tried in the Malatya massacre case for his role as an instigator. Çinar once witnessed Ülger praising Emre Günaydin, prime suspect in the massacre, for his bravery and said that he was ready for his “task.” Çinar found out that one of the workers at the Zirve Publishing House, in which the massacre was carried out, Hüseyin Yelki, was actually working for the gendarmerie as an informant. Immediately after the murders, theology professor Ruhi Abat, who was receiving a salary from the gendarmerie for his anti-missionary work, told Çinar on the phone, “We asked them to strike, but they went and killed them.” Abat is a close friend of Emre Günaydin’s father.

There are so many other details that basically show that the Malatya massacre was directly planned by the Malatya gendarmerie, apparently under direct orders by TUSHAD.

Where are we now, five years after this murder? I believe we are now at the beginning of the road, which will lead us to “truth.” For the first time I am hopeful that we can solve the puzzle of the Malatya massacre. And I also believe that if we can fully uncover the truth in this case, we will also make serious progress in the solving of the Hrant Dink and Father Santoro murders and probably others as well.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



UAE: Ramadan May Begin on July 21

Islamic Crescent Observation Project: moon will be observed on July 19 in some regions

Abu Dhabi: The Islamic Crescent Observation Project (ICOP) has announced that most Islamic countries may begin the Holy Month of Ramadan on Saturday, July 21st after moon sighting. Engineer Mohammad Showkat Awda, chairman of the project said most Islamic countries have started the month of Sha’ban on the same day in a rare phenomena. Therefore, these nations would start monitoring the Ramadan Crescent on Thursday, July 19 which is Sha’ban 29. However, the moon day would not be possible in all northern and some middle regions of the world.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Russia


Ukrainian Police Fire Tear Gas Amid Language Law Protests

Police in Ukraine have used tear gas on protesters angry about a boost in status for the Russian language. The demonstration follows scuffles in parliament about the speedy adoption of a bill to make the proposal law.

Police fired tear gas as they tried to remove protesters from the building where President Viktor Yanukovych was scheduled to brief journalists about the country’s hosting of the Euro 2012 football championship.

Some 1,000 people were reported to have taken part in the demonstrations in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv.

Instead of giving his press conference, the president summoned leading figures in the parliament, known as the Verkhovna Rada, to discuss the situation.

Earlier, main speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn — a moderate who has said he opposes the bill — tendered his resignation. His signature would be needed, along with that of the president, for it to be passed into law.

Parliament had approved the contentious proposal only minutes after it was put forward by Yanukovych’s Regions Party, which has a majority in the assembly.

Scuffles broke out as members of the opposition protested that they had too little time to oppose it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: NATO Soldiers Wounded in Another ‘Green on Blue’ Attack

A man in Afghan army uniform has wounded five Nato soldiers at a military base near Kabul, the latest so-called “green on blue” attack that comes just days after three British troops were killed.

Attacks by Afghan security forces on their allies from the US-led alliance have claimed 26 lives so far this year, with the latest incident taking the total number of such attacks this year to 19. “An individual wearing Afghan army uniform turned his weapon on coalition soldiers yesterday (Tuesday), wounding five,” Colonel Jimmie Cummings, a spokesman for the 130,000-strong US-led Nato coalition force said. “The wounded coalition soldiers were evacuated to a medical facility.” Dawlat Waziri, an Afghan defence ministry spokesman, confirmed the incident in Maidan Wardak province, a troubled region south of Kabul and said the attack took place inside a military base shared by Afghan and Nato troops. “A man wearing our army uniform opened fire on the coalition soldiers, wounding five soldiers. The attacker fled the area and we’re investigating the incident,” Waziri said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: ‘Honour Killing’ Of Mother, 30, Beheaded by Her Ex-Husband… Who Then Decapitated Their Two Young Children Because They’d Watched

A 30-year-old woman and two of her children were beheaded overnight in Afghanistan’s east, police said, in what appeared to be the latest in a rapidly growing trend of so-called honour killings.

Police said they suspected the woman Serata’s divorced husband of barging into her house in the capital of Ghazni province and murdering her, alongside their eight-year-old son and nine-year-old daughter.

‘The children saw the killer take their mother’s head off, so he killed them too,’ a local policeman said, adding that the attacker had spared Sereta’s two-year-old daughter.

Activists say there has been a sharp rise in violent attacks on women in Afghanistan over the past year.

They blame President Hamid Karzai’s waning attention to women’s rights as his government prepares for the exit of most foreign troops in 2014 and seeks to negotiate with the Taliban, Afghanistan’s former Islamist rulers.

Excluding Serata’s beheading, there have been 16 cases of ‘honour killings’ recorded across the country over March and April, the first two months of the Afghan new year, according to Afghanistan’s Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC).

This compares to the 20 cases recorded for all of last year, said commissioner Suraya Subhrang, blaming increased insecurity and weak rule of law for the sharp rise. Since AIHRC started recording such killings in 2001, there have never been more than 20 cases a year.

‘And there are many that go unreported. Men make a quick decision in their own courts to kill a girl and hold a prayer for her the next day,’ Subhrang said.

There have also been other instances of horrific acts of violence, such as a 12-year-old girl and a 15-year-old boy who were killed in an acid attack because they were friends in wasteland in the Ghazni province in southern Afghanistan at the end of March.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Five US Soldiers Injured in Central Afghanistan

An Afghan soldier has opened fire on US forces stationed in the central province of Wardak, injuring five of them, Press TV reports. According to Afghan officials, the incident took place in a US military base in Sayed Abad city, located in eastern Wardak province, on Tuesday evening. The Afghan soldier has reportedly managed to escape. The incident is considered as the 19th such attack to target foreign forces in Afghanistan in 2012.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Five US Troops Wounded in Latest ‘Green on Blue’ Attack in Afghanistan

KABUL — Five U.S. troops were wounded Tuesday in the second apparent incident of Afghan soldiers turning their weapons on their coalition counterparts in three days. A man wearing an Afghan Army uniform shot the U.S. troops in the early evening in Wardak province, according to officials with the International Security Assistance Force. The five troops were medically evacuated and are being treated at an ISAF hospital, though officials have not disclosed what happened to the shooter. On Sunday, an Afghan policeman shot and killed three British soldiers at a checkpoint in Helmand province. The shooter was arrested. Lt. Cmdr. Brian Badura, an ISAF spokesman, said the number of green on blue incidents is low relative to the number of Afghan troops and police working with ISAF forces, but said the coalition was continuing to work with their Afghan counterparts on safety measures when recruiting troops.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Sumatran City of Medan ‘Turning Into Terror Financing Centre’

Jakarta, 25 June (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Indonesian officials said Medan, in North Sumatra, is turning into a centre for terrorism financing, following the arrest of five suspects with assets worth nearly Rp 8 billion (US$848,000), allegedly used to fund paramilitary training and terrorism operations.

On Thursday morning, a suspect who was already in custody led police and armed anti-terrorism personnel to seize four houses, one shop, three cars and seven motorcycles in three locations that were purchased using funds the arrested suspects got from hacking a multi-level marketing website.

The group, which had information-technology experts as members, was part of a terrorist cell in Medan.

The members bought the account numbers of bank clients in and outside the country. Some terrorist suspects posed as multi-level marketing members and sought more customers.

The country’s National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT) chief, Ansyaad Mbai, told reporters: “The hackers transferred the credit points to their accounts, and then sold them to brokers, who transferred the money equivalent to their bank accounts.”

Rizki Gunarwan, the suspect who led police to the raids, has a background in accountancy and IT. He hacked into the website for Investasi Online, said National Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli.

Rizki was one of five terrorism suspects caught last month for a church bombing in Solo on Sept. 25 last year in which the suicide bomber died and nearly 30 people were injured.

“Preliminary investigations showed that the group’s activities were in supporting terrorist operations, including paramilitary training in Poso [Central Sulawesi],” said Boy Rafli.

He said Rizki had trained there, and channeled Rp 667 million to the training. He added that the suspect is skilledin making bombs and firearms.

The raids occurred on the same day that one of the last and most prominent Bali bombers, Umar Patek, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for his role in the 2002 blasts.

Since the last major attack in 2009 against two luxury hotels here, several terrorists have been arrested, and Indonesia’s counter-terrorism efforts have earned global praise.

However, the BNPT chief warned that Medan seemed to be the terrorists’ financial hub, even as their operations spread across the country.

In March this year, police shot dead five suspected terrorists in Bali who were involved in a spate of armed robberies to fund their operations.

They were part of the group that masterminded a bank heist in Medan in 2010. The money funded an Aceh paramilitary camp, which Jemaah Islamiah (JI) spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir was convicted of helping to finance.

In 2010 alone, terrorism analysts noted, there were three bank heists in Medan, all suspected of being terrorism-related.

Banks in Medan have been targeted for nearly a decade. In 2003, Toni Togar, believed to be part of JI, robbed a Medan bank of Rp 100 million

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



Modern Madrasahs in India Convince Opponents

In the Indian state of West Bengal, many state-run madrasahs teach a modern curriculum, attracting ever more non-Muslims. Though they seem to break down long-held social divisions, they still have opponents.

After 9/11, many in the non-Islamic world began to think of South Asia’s thousands of madrasahs, the traditional name for schools where Muslim children study theology to become Islamic religious teachers, as a potential breeding ground for militant Islamists.

But in the Indian state of West Bengal, many of the more than 500 state-run madrasahs teach a modern curriculum, with about 20 percent non-Muslim pupils.

In these modernised madrasahs, young Indians are being groomed to become future engineers, doctors, scientists, bureaucrats and other professionals — rather than mullahs.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: ‘The Jihad Against Infidels Will Continue’

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan has vowed to fight alongside the Haqqani Network if the Pakistan Army launches an offensive against it in North Waziristan Agency. Rediff.com‘s Tahir Ali has received an exclusive video interview of TTP’s spokesperson Ihsanullah Ihsan, who vows to continue jihad against ‘secular forces’.

What would be the reaction of the TTP if an operation was launched against the Haqqani Network?

The TTP will fight side by side with the Haqqani Network against Pakistan’s security forces. Our first target would be Pakistani security forces posted there.

How are the drone strikes affecting the movement of the Taliban?

We have lost a large number of our companions in drone strikes but the mujahideen are neither afraid of them nor can they discourage the jihad. The jihad against the infidel forces will continue.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


Chinese Protesters Stop Copper Plant Project

Local officials in China have cancelled plans for a copper alloy plant after three days of street protests against the project. Thousands of local residents had taken to the streets over health concerns.

The government of Shifang announced on Tuesday that it had cancelled plans to build a copper alloy plant in the city in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan.

“The molybdenum-copper alloy factory will no longer be built in Shifang city,” a statement posted on the muncipality’s official website said.

The change in plans followed an earlier statement in which the municipal government had threatened demonstrators with “severe” punishment if they failed to end three days of protests against the construction plans. The government later declared the building project suspended, in an effort to placate the protesters.

However this failed to satisfy the demonstrators, some of whom told reporters that they wouldn’t stop because they were convinced that the plant would harm their health.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Crafty Alternative to Mosque Seems Likely

A MUSLIM group may soon have approval to build a “craft site” in Minto — but not a mosque. Last Tuesday night, Campbelltown Council’s planning and environment committee suggested the council approve the Australian Muslim Welfare Centre’s plan to build a craft studio at 13-17 Eagleview Road, but specified that the building could not be used as a religious centre. The group bought the environmentally protected site to build a mosque. However, they then discovered it was not zoned for a religious building and submitted a craft studio application. Group spokesman Anisul Afsar has previously told the Advertiser that he hopes the site will be rezoned soon to allow for a mosque. The council was expected to decide on the craft studio application last night.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Foundation of the Largest Mosque in New Zealand

Ahmadiyya Muslim Community to lay foundation of the largest Mosque in New Zealand

Ahmadiyya Muslim Community of New Zealand will lay the foundation stone of a new magnificent landmark in Manukau, Auckland on Friday 06th July 2012 after their Friday prayers. This will be the largest purpose built Mosque in New Zealand which will accommodate over 600 worshipers. Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the Supreme Head of Worldwide Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, approved the project which is being funded totally by the Ahmadiyya Community of New Zealand.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Mosque Criticism is Ill-Informed

Objections to new developments are a fact of life in Canberra. Indeed, for a development application to escape scrutiny in this savviest of cities would be unusual. And it’s only fair that a proposal with the potential to affect the amenity (and real estate values) of neighbours and nearby residents receives close inspection and searching inquiry by authorities and the public. A development application lodged by the Canberra Muslim community for construction of a mosque in Gungahlin is, not surprisingly, the subject of heated public discussion, helped in large part by a flyer distributed to residents last week by a group calling itself “Concerned Citizens of Canberra”. In the flyer, the group alleges that the scale and height of the mosque “will dominate the viewscape”, that it will create traffic and noise problems, and that it will have a “social impact” on all of Gungahlin’s residents.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


The International Criminal Court is Hurting Africa

Britain’s support for the International Criminal Court is wrong and undermines its credibility in African countries, writes Courtenay Griffiths.

Imagine the British Government appointed as minister for Africa a man close friends with a mercenary who attempted to overthrow an African President. Imagine this same minister was fully supportive of an international court that, during its nine-year history, had only prosecuted black Africans. Imagine that this court’s most high-profile case, against the deputy prime minister of Kenya, had been based solely on evidence from a single witness chosen by associates of his political opponent, the favourite of the British Government.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UNESCO Condemns Destruction of Timbuktu Shrines

UNESCO has vowed to mobilize different international organizations to halt the destruction of shrines in Timbuktu by Islamist group Ansar Dine.The rebels say the shrines are idolatrous.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australia: Asylum Seekers Accused of Using Navy “Like the NRMA”

PEOPLE-SMUGGLERS are treating the Australian navy “like the NRMA”, officials fear, as an asylum boat makes its way towards Christmas Island under escort after a mayday call made closer to Indonesia than the Australian outpost.

Immigration authorities say smugglers are becoming increasingly audacious, telling asylum boat captains to phone for help hours after leaving Indonesian ports.

The latest boat was just 50 nautical miles south of Java — still more than 150 nautical miles from Christmas Island — when a satellite call was made from the vessel directly to the Australian Maritime Safety Authority.

The two vessels that capsized last month, with the loss of at least 94 lives, phoned for help about 100 nautical miles from Christmas Island.

“It’s scandalous. It’s like calling the NRMA,” said one senior official, referring to the NSW roadside assistance service.

“They may as well have called us from the marina.”

Asylum boats are routinely sabotaged, but the growing number of distress calls so far from Australian territorial waters is a disturbing new development.

Overnight, 162 passengers from the latest boat were transferred to HMAS Leeuwin and HMAS Wollongong and were being taken to Christmas island. Three of the asylum-seekers were receiving medical treatment aboard HMAS Leeuwin.

Independent MP Rob Oakeshott, whose compromise bill to revive Labor’s Malaysia Solution and enable the reopening of a processing centre on Nauru was blocked in the Senate last week, lashed out at the boldness of people-smugglers.

“With a mobile phone and a few dollars, it’s never been easier or cheaper to move across borders in the Asia-Pacific region,” he told The Australian.

“Combine this with a policy deadlock in the Australian Senate, and we are going to continue to see trafficking, smuggling and loss of life at sea. This issue is not going away and will only get worse while ever the Senate fails to find a compromise.”

Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare conceded that people-smugglers were telling their clients to “ring Australia” if they ran into problems on the seas between Indonesia and Australia.

“I think people-smugglers put people to sea after they take their money and they tell people to ring Australia and expect that vessels will come to meet them,” he said.

“Sometimes it is a false alarm, sometimes it is the real thing. We treat every single phone call seriously, because if you don’t, people die.”

But Mr Clare’s spokeswoman said last night the advice from Border Protection Command was that there was no evidence to suggest sabotage had played a role in the capsize of either of the boats that foundered last month. “Any allegations relating to those incidents are a matter for the investigation by the (Australian Federal Police) and WA Coroner,” the spokeswoman said.

The third search and rescue mission in as many weeks comes a day after Julia Gillard and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono met in Darwin to discuss ways to enhance the co-operation of Indonesian and Australian rescue agencies.

A spokesman for the Indonesian search and rescue agency BASARNAS said the asylum-seeker vessel had defied calls to turn around and was being escorted to Christmas Island.

“They said that they don’t want to go back to Indonesian waters and, as for now, they’re on their way to Christmas Island guarded by HMAS Wollongong,” he said.

“It’s not easy to help them. The weather and the waves are not friendly at all at the moment. The wave height at times is about 3m.”

After the parliament failed last week to reach a compromise and pass legislation that would have revived offshore processing, the Prime Minister appointed former defence chief Angus Houston to head an expert panel to advise the government on the best way through the political impasse. Air Chief Marshal Houston is expected to report to Ms Gillard before parliament returns from a six-week winter recess on August 14.

Tony Abbott yesterday called on Ms Gillard to “get the processing centre started” in both Nauru and Papua New Guinea and pass any legislation that was needed as soon as parliament resumed.

Refugee advocate Marion Le said she feared people-smugglers were deliberately overcrowding boats and making early distress calls in anticipation of a change in government policy.

“For the smugglers themselves, this is about money,” she said. “It gets to me that these people know exactly who to call in Australia.”

The refugee lawyer said she believed people-smugglers should be held financially responsible for tying up Australia’s strategic defence resources.

Senior Defence sources have expressed concern about the psychological toll that the recent rescues have taken on the young men and women crewing the navy ships that have led the rescue efforts, including HMAS Wollongong — which has gone to the rescue of two asylum-seeker vessels in the past month.

In the past three weeks, 12 merchant ships have also assisted with the rescue efforts, including the seven vessels that pulled survivors and bodies from the water during last month’s mass drowning of about 90 people.

Darwin-based master mariners yesterday warned of dangers posed by asylum-seeker vessels raising false distress calls, saying the issue was being discussed among Top End seafarers. “We hope this is not going to be their modus operandi — boats get within range and then they (asylum-seekers) put the call out,” one said.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Rapid Growth Hits Housing Market

It took Norway a few thousand years to reach a population of just 5 million. Another million, though, is expected just 17 years from now and cities like Oslo are struggling to keep up with demand for housing, as real estate prices soar.

Norwegian children marching in this year’s 17th of May parade will be young adults when the population hits 6 million, and likely will contribute towards more growth.

Figures released recently by state statistics bureau SSB suggest that Norway’s population will grow by 20 percent, to 6 million, by 2029. SSB described the country’s population growth as “rapid” and sees signs that the growth will continue at the same tempo for several decades before finally slowing down.

The growth is linked to Norway’s strong economy, its expanding oil industry, social welfare programs that make it easier to combine careers with having children, and immigration. Only when or if oil and gas resources begin to decline will the pace of growth slow down, predicts Helge Brunborg, a senior researcher at SSB.

Norway’s population officially hit the 5 million-mark in mid-March, with much of the growth fueled by immigration as Norway attracts job seekers from countries where unemployment rates are high, like Spain and Greece. The pace of immigration is difficult to predict, according to SSB, but its researchers think 20 percent of Norway’s population will have immigrant background by 2050.

Making room for more

The influx of more people is prompting local governments to reform zoning laws and allow more housing density to meet demand in a market where prices have soared in recent years. Despite local protests, more neighbourhoods with mostly single-family homes on large lots will see more construction of new multi-family dwellings replacing the classic Norwegian villa, to make room for more households.

Norway’s national real estate organization reported high, stable real estate prices this week based on sales in June. A large seasonal surge of supply resulted in a relatively small average price rise from May of 0.9 percent in June, after strong growth in April, but average prices in June are up 7.7 percent since June 2011…

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120703

Financial Crisis
» EU Summit: Monti’s Impetus Helps the Euro
» Greece to Present Debt Inspectors ‘Alarming’ Data
» Italy: New Northern League Leader Maroni Talks of Euro Exit
» Record Youth Unemployment in Greece and Spain
» The Hayek Effect: The Political Consequences of Planned Austerity
» Troika: Cyprus May Sign a Memorandum by End of July
» Value of Euro Drops
 
USA
» Black Mobs Now Beating Jews in New York
» Carbondale Muslim Center Outgrows Space, Completes Project
» Ex-Norton Police Officer Files Religious Discrimination Lawsuit Against City
» Far Side of the Moon Offers Quiet Place for Telescopes
» Muslims to Host Events During DNC; Up to 20,000 Could Attend
» Physicists Get Closer Than Ever to God Particle
» Sheriff Joe Set to Release More Obama ‘Shockers’
» Video: See Muslim Mob Stone Christians — In U.S.!
 
Europe and the EU
» Austria Celebrates ‘Model’ Law on Islam
» Common Parasite Found in Cat Litter May Increase Suicide Risk
» Crisis-Hit Cyprus Takes Europe’s Helm
» French Breathalyzer Law Takes Effect
» Germany: 500-Year-Old ‘Birth Certificate of America’ Discovered
» Ireland: Man Tells Jury He Had Consensual Sex With His Mother
» Milky Way’s Giant Black Hole to Eat Space Cloud in 2013
» UK Uncovers Al Qaeda Plot to Bomb US Plane Ahead of Olympics
» UK: 200 People Regularly Cram Into This Bungalow…Used as Illegal Mosque
» UK: Blitz on Child Sex Grooming Gangs to be Announced After No 10 Shocked by ‘Heartbreaking’ Stories of Abuse
» UK: Care Home Reforms Aim to Halt Child Sex Abuse
» UK: Child Sex Grooming ‘Not a Race Problem’, Yorkshire Police Chief Tells Muslims
» UK: Ethnic Minorities in UK Feel Most British, Research Finds
» UK: Muslims Are Well-Integrated in Britain — But No One Seems to Believe it
» UK: Neighbours’ Fury as Council Allowed Tiny Bungalow to be Used as an ‘Illegal’ Mosque for 200 Worshippers
» UK: Opening Ceremony for Broadfield Mosque
» UK: Police Investigate ‘Shooting’ Outside Jewish School on Upper Park Road, Salford
» UK: Sex Grooming Cases Spark Racial Tensions in UK
» UK: Views Aired at Islam Meeting
» Youths in Germany Turning to Jihad
 
Balkans
» International Supervisors to Leave Kosovo in September
 
North Africa
» Obama Phones to Congratulate Muslim B’hood on Victory in Egypt’s ‘Milestone’ Election
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» UNESCO: Bethlehem Heritage Site, Palestinians Celebrate
 
Middle East
» Syria: Terrorists Kill Professor and His Family, SANA
» Syria: Italian SMEs Sink, While Tehran Muscles in
 
Russia
» From Farms to Factories, Russians Wary of WTO
 
South Asia
» Afghan Policeman Kills 3 British Troops in Checkpoint Clash
» Afghanistan: Kandahar Suicide Bomber Kills Seven People
» Afghanistan Accuses Pakistan of Rocket Attacks
» American Strategy in Afghanistan Flunks Sun Tzu
» Australian Soldier Killed in Afghanistan Firefight
» ‘Cocked and Locked’ Policy Considered for British Troops Working With Afghans
» Sikh Man Deported to Afghanistan Returned to UK
» Three British Soldiers Killed by Afghan Policeman After Argument
» Why Muslims and Chinese Hate Pakistan
 
Far East
» After Elections, Who Will Profit From Mongolia’s Boom?
» History Looms Behind Delay of South Korea-Japan Military Deal
» Japan: Record High Radiation Levels Detected at Fukushima Reactor
 
Australia — Pacific
» Burch Defends Mosque Consultation
» ‘Racist’ Mosque Pamphlet Probed
» UK: Julian Mann: Jesus and the GCSE Generation
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» 9 Workers Butchered at Nigeria Mosque
» ‘Iran Agents Planned to Hit US and British Targets in Kenya’
» Islamist Rebels Smash ‘Pearl of the Desert’
» Kenyan Muslims, Christians Vow to Prevent Violence
» Kenya: Muslim Terrorists Kill 17 in Church Massacre
» Uganda: Muslims Evicted From Mosque
 
Immigration
» Croatia Rescues 65 Migrants at Sea
 
Culture Wars
» BRAVE Attacks Marriage Hastening Demographic Winter
» Down With Secularism!
» Gay Cruise Ship Turned Away by Morocco Docks in Spain
» Secularism Versus Democracy
 
General
» The Global Boom in Wind Energy
» UN Plans to Control the Arms Trade
» Why Smart People Are Stupid

Financial Crisis


EU Summit: Monti’s Impetus Helps the Euro

Europe’s responses to the crisis: growth, banks, anti-spread

(ANSAmed) — ROME — It would be an over-simplification to say that the Italian team beat the Germans in Brussels as well, after having knocked them out of the soccer championship so convincingly. But looking beyond the undoubtedly incisive role played by Mario Monti and the somewhat overcast expression of Angela Merkel — the real winner to emerge from the Justus Lipsius arena, that austere headquarters where the Euro summit was held, was the euro currency itself. It was a demonstration of what a few tugs at the bridle can do when one is directed headlong towards the edge of a precipice. The single currency will live on and survive the controversy of recent months and the Hamlet-like crises of doubt expressed by so many European leaders, with Angela Merkel at their head. The German Chancellor continued her attempts to curb and direct the natural evolution of this unfinished European project right to the bitter end. But the strongest political signal to emerge from Europe today is that of a willingness to press ahead, with ranks more or less united, along the road that will eventually lead to a true political union. Today, this path leads through the anti-spread shield so strongly desired by both Mario Monti and Mariano Rajoy, and over the bridge of a 120-billion-euro growth pact.

Tomorrow will see a European tax on gains from financial speculation, the so-called Tobin tax, and a banking union comprising shared vigilance and a sharing of the guarantees for the zone’s citizens.

If Europe had been called upon to provide a loud and clear reply to the markets and to International speculation, this reply has indeed been delivered: it may have come with the Byzantine meanderings so typical of Brussels negotiations, but delivered it was. Following months of debate over austerity and financial discipline, an initial growth pact has been launched: this may well prove insufficient, but it nonetheless marks a decisive turnaround in European strategy. The Tobin tax is to go ahead through strengthened cooperation — a key concept for the construction of a Europe of the future. Important steps have also been take towards a banking union: a fundamental pillar for a real common governance of the European economy. But above all, an important signal has gone out to the markets: virtuous countries that come under attack from international speculation will now be able to use a powerful instrument, with an ECB bail-out fund — even though controversy over the submission of sovereignty involved may return over the coming days. But the building blocks of a common European house have been brought on site and if Europe really wants to play a leading role in meeting the challenges of the coming years and wants to be a protagonist in this era of globalization, these are the ingredients it will need to have in place. In the rounding of this important strategic promontory in European policy, a leading role has been played by Italy in the person of its prime minister Mario Monti.

Italy has gotten what it wanted through taking a determined stance that is almost unprecedented among previous Roman ministers. The European match still has a long way to run, and many pages are yet to be written, with the role to be played by the ECB in debt sharing and the concession of important aspects of national sovereignty to Brussels being important ones. While the European Football Championships come to an end, Sunday’s final will feature the countries of the two winners in Brussels last night: Mario Monti and Mariano Rajoy. From their positions in the Kiev stadium, where they will be able to see another Mario who did so much to eliminate Germany from the competition, the two leaders will certainly be feeling a lot more relaxed at the prospect of the opening of the stock markets on Monday morning.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece to Present Debt Inspectors ‘Alarming’ Data

Greece’s new government will present “alarming” data on its recession and unemployment to international debt inspectors this week, in a bid to renegotiate the terms of its bailout agreements.

Government spokesman Simos Kedikoglou said in a television interview Tuesday that the data would demonstrate that the current austerity program was counterproductive.

Greece is relying on rescue loans from its partners in the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund to avoid bankruptcy. In exchange, it has made painful austerity cuts, such as tax hikes and cuts to public sector jobs, pensions and salaries.

Along with uncertainty over the country’s finances, those austerity measures have hit the economy hard — it is in a fifth year of recession, with unemployment topping 22 percent, roughly double the eurozone average.

The Greek government will argue that it cannot withstand the current pace of austerity terms. Debt inspectors from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF are due in Athens Wednesday.

“We will present information that is astounding. It is alarming in terms of the recession and unemployment, and it shows beyond any doubt that the current policy does not bring results. It brings the opposite results,” Kedikoglou told private Antenna television.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: New Northern League Leader Maroni Talks of Euro Exit

Former interior minister replaces Bossi at scandal-hit party

(ANSA) — Rome, July 2 — Roberto Maroni said that the Northern League is ready to pull out from positions of power in Rome and that it might be better for Italy to leave the euro after taking command of the scandal-hit regionalist party.

The former interior minister was elected the party’s secretary by its congress on Sunday to end the era of Umberto Bossi.

Bossi, who in the 1980s spearheaded the movement that eventually became the Northern League, is being probed for alleged corruption and stepped down from the helm in April. The right-wing party, which until November was a government coalition partner with Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, has seen its support levels slashed since the scandal broke out.

“I will work to unite,” said Maroni. “We are ready to leave Rome and the Roman seats (of power). Bossi is a brother to me, but now it’s time for a new phase”.

Maroni, whose party is staunchly opposed to Premier Mario Monti’s emergency government of non-political technocrats, said that the European Union should change its handling of the economic crisis or it would be “better to leave the euro”.

Bossi was in tears when Maroni was elected as his successor.

“Now the baby is yours,” he said to Maroni.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Record Youth Unemployment in Greece and Spain

52.1% of under-25 Greeks are jobless

(ANSAMed) — BRUSSELS, JULY 2 — Unemployment figures for Greeks under 25 years of age reached 52.1% in March, up from 42.9% the previous year, according to figures released by Eurostat.

This is the same unemployment figure reached in Spain in May, up from 45.4% the previous year.

Also in May, the EU numbered 5.517 million unemployed youths under 25, or 22.7%, of which 3.412 million, or 22.6%, are within the euro zone. This is an increase of 282,000 people in the EU-27 and of 245,000 people in the euro-zone over May of last year, where the unemployment rates were 21% and 20.5% respectively.

Overall unemployment numbers were also up, with 24.868 million unemployed, or 10.3%, in the EU-27, and 17.561 million unemployed, or 11.1%, in the 17 euro-zone countries, up from 9.5% and 10% respectively in May of last year.

Spain and Greece still lead the pack in terms of overall unemployment as well as rate of job losses (24.5%, up from 20.9% and 21.9%, up from 15.7%, respectively). They are followed by Cyprus (10.8% against 7.5%).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Hayek Effect: The Political Consequences of Planned Austerity

by Lee Harris

My reading of Hayek, however, convinced me that this was a misleading, naive misinterpretation of the Soviet collapse. The lesson I drew applied not only to Soviet Communism, but to any form of centralized economic planning, including the kind favored under the European model. The problem with centralized planning is not that it makes bad decisions. The problem is that, even if it makes good decisions, these decisions will be made by a group of centralized planners and not by anonymous market forces. When these decisions demand austerity, loss of wages, higher prices, and cuts in social benefits, the people will resist them. And if the people get angry enough, they can bring down the government that has tried to impose an austerity regime on them, leading to both increased economic distress and political instability.

Even if the European austerity programs are right on the economics, they are politically disastrous. An oppressive totalitarian regime might try to impose them on its people against their will, through terror and intimidation, but no democracy can hope to do this. The political revolt in Greece, therefore, is not a fluke, but a harbinger of more revolts to come, along with more economic crises and more political paralysis. It would be absurd to compare the EU with the USSR in terms of their relative respect for freedom and democracy, but it is precisely the EU’s tradition of democratic principles that may well doom it to the same fate that befell the Soviet Union—a sudden and shocking collapse, followed by years of economic decline and political turmoil.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Troika: Cyprus May Sign a Memorandum by End of July

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JULY 3 — A senior official with the Finance Ministry has not ruled out the possibility of Cyprus signing a Memorandum of Understanding by the end of the month with Troika (EU Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund) as Famagusta Gazette reports today.

Finance Director of the Ministry of Finance Andreas Trokkos said Monday that a Troika delegation, already on the island, is here on a fact-finding mission to discuss the terms of a bailout.

“The mission is clearly exploratory at this stage. At the technocratic level, we attribute special importance to giving a complete picture to the delegation members in all areas, whether it concerns the financial sector or more widely budgetary issues and macroeconomics”, he said. This, he noted, would be the best way to develop a common approach with the Troika, on how to address the challenges facing the island’s economy. He explained that the Troika wishes to evaluate the situation of the banking system in Cyprus, which is highly exposed to Greece, either by holding large amounts of Greek government bonds or a large loan portfolio in Greece. On June 25 Cyprus became the fifth eurozone member-state to request financial aid from EFSF/ESM, after suffering big loses as a result of its large exposure to the Greek economy. Cypriot banks have been severely hit by a 76% write down of their Greek bond holdings as a result of the Greek sovereign debt haircut and have announced capital raising plans in March 2012 and November 2011 respectively, with a liability management exercise and a rights issue as their main components.

The government has decided to act as an underwriter of a 1.8 billion euro capital issue by CPB.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Value of Euro Drops

The euro dropped 0.7% to $1.2573 on Monday after it had gained 1.75% on Friday. Despite the initial positive gains following the EU summit on Friday, traders remain uncertain about future EU developments. “Everybody is sceptical,” a senior currency trader in New York told the Wall Street Journal.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Black Mobs Now Beating Jews in New York

Gruesome attacks leave broken bones, life-threatening injuries in their wake

If Chaim Amalek had his way, no one would know that mobs of black people are attacking and beating and robbing Jews in the New York area.

Or that they shout anti-Semitic epithets.

Or that they target Jews because “they don’t fight back.”

“Such information can only serve to heighten racial tensions between these two groups,” said Amalek, an alias for New York video blogger Luke Ford. “Let us all look beyond the issue of race (in any event a mere social construct) and instead celebrate our diversity.”

In this case, the New York Post saw a pattern that most other media outlets never see. To some, it was jarring.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Carbondale Muslim Center Outgrows Space, Completes Project

Carbondale’s Muslim Center recently completed an ambitious expansion project, nearly tripling the size of the community’s mosque located on North Wall Street, giving the faith community additional space for prayer and special events. The spiritual leader of the congregation said the additions were greatly needed. “We simply outgrew our space,” Imam Abdul Haqq said, adding hundreds of practitioners of Islam attend the regular prayer meetings at the center. He said during the observance of Ramadan, up to 1,000 people will pray at the mosque. The original mosque was constructed in 2000 and included a prayer hall and a multipurpose room. The new addition is almost 13,000 square feet and includes a banquet room to be used for weddings, dinners and other activities, as well as a warming kitchen and an additional space the congregation hopes to further develop into a school and learning facility.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Ex-Norton Police Officer Files Religious Discrimination Lawsuit Against City

Fired Norton police officer Nicholas Matheny has filed a federal lawsuit, contending city officials discriminated against him and violated his civil rights by terminating him because of his Muslim faith. The suit, seeking job reinstatement, a court injunction to end the alleged discrimination and damages for lost pay, was filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Cleveland.

Matheny, 30, adopted the Muslim faith in early 2010 and initially kept the conversion quiet, according to the suit, because of anti-Islamic sentiment in the police department, including emails he said he received from his direct supervising officer. But in September 2010, when Matheny handed out wedding invitations to two colleagues, with the heading “May Allah Bless This Marriage,” the alleged discrimination came to a head, the suit said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Far Side of the Moon Offers Quiet Place for Telescopes

To peer back to the universe’s earliest years will need sensitive telescopes in a place where Earth’s ionosphere and radio chatter cannot interfere

FORTY years after NASA ditched the idea of landing Apollo 17 on the far side of the moon, the forbidden fruit is being sought once again. Not by astronauts this time, but by astronomers seeking a quiet spot from which to observe the universe’s “dark ages”.

This was an epoch in the development of the cosmos, which lasted for a few hundred million years after the big bang, before stars and galaxies began to form. The only way to observe the dark ages is to look for faint radio signals from neutral hydrogen — single protons orbited by single electrons — which filled the early universe.

Telescopes on Earth, such as the Murchison Widefield Array in Western Australia, are searching for such signals, at frequencies above 100 megahertz. This can probe the universe back to 400 million years after the big bang.

To explore even earlier times, telescopes need to receive radio waves at frequencies below 100 megahertz. Interference from radio sources on Earth such as FM radio and the planet’s ionosphere can mess up these signals. “You get to the point where the ionosphere is just a hopeless barrier,” says Dayton Jones of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. “You have got to go to space, and the most promising location by far is the far side of the moon.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Muslims to Host Events During DNC; Up to 20,000 Could Attend

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A national Muslim American organization plans a series of events to coincide with the Democratic National Convention in September. The kick-off for its three days of events begins with a jummah prayer, the weekly mid-afternoon Friday prayer, at Marshall Park in uptown. Other events include an Islamic issues conference and banquet, and a cultural festival held in different parts of the city, including at the Park Expo and Conference Center off Independence Boulevard. At a news conference Monday at Marshall Park, Jibril Hough, a local Muslim activist and spokesman for the nonprofit Bureau of Indigenous Muslim Affairs, said the events will be open to anyone. Hough, who expects up to 20,000 Muslims to attend the events, said he spoke to Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Rodney Monroe about the public prayer in particular and was told to go ahead with it.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Physicists Get Closer Than Ever to God Particle

American scientists have found strong hints that the rumored Higgs boson particle exists, and has been created inside an atom smasher in Illinois.

The news comes just days before big news on the search for the Higgs is expected to be delivered by physicists from the world’s largest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).

“This is a very exciting week — it may be the most exciting week in physics since I became a physicist,” Joe Lykken, a theoretical physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Ill., said during a news conference today (July 2).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sheriff Joe Set to Release More Obama ‘Shockers’

Arpaio schedules another news conference on eligibility

Sheriff Joe Arpaio and his Cold Case Posse investigating Barack Obama’s presidential eligibility have been promising more major revelations since their March 1 press conference, and now another event has been scheduled to unveil new information.

Arpaio told WND a press conference will be held July 17 at 2:30 p.m. local time at the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in Phoenix, Ariz.

WND will once again provide live Web streaming of the event.

The evidence will include information gathered in the posse’s recent investigative trip to Hawaii as well as an update on the ongoing investigation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Video: See Muslim Mob Stone Christians — In U.S.!

Hundreds chant, ‘Allahu Akbar!’ while hurling urine, eggs, bottles, concrete

It happened in an American city: Hundreds of angry Muslim children and adults rioted against Christians, throwing chunks of concrete and eggs at their heads, spraying them with urine and cursing at them — while police stood by and threatened the victims with “disorderly conduct.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Austria Celebrates ‘Model’ Law on Islam

By Bethany Bell BBC News, Vienna

Austria has had a checkered history when it comes to relations with Muslims, but its 100-year-old Law on Islam is seen as a symbol of tolerance.

The law gives Muslims the same rights as other officially recognised religions in Austria, such as Catholicism, Lutheranism, Judaism and Buddhism. At the weekend senior members of the Austrian government and the country’s Islamic Community attended ceremonies to mark the centenary. So Islam has been an officially recognised religion in Austria for 100 years.

Yet another historical event is probably more familiar to most people — the 1683 Siege of Vienna, when the Muslim Ottoman army’s advance on Christian-controlled Europe was halted. And in recent years, the anti-Islamic rhetoric of some Austrian far-right politicians has made the headlines.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Common Parasite Found in Cat Litter May Increase Suicide Risk

Women infected with a common parasite called toxoplasma gondii may be more likely to attempt suicide, a new study suggests.

Researchers looked at the health records of more than 45,000 Danish women and concluded that over a 14-year period, women with toxoplasmosis, as infections with the parasite are called, were 53 percent more likely to attempt suicide than their uninfected counterparts. The likelihood of making a suicide attempt increased with the levels of parasite-fighting antibodies, suggesting that the stronger the infection, the larger the risk, the researchers said.

The link between the parasite and suicide attempts held when the researchers took into account other factors that may have affected the results, such as the women’s mental health and socioeconomic class.

The study showed an association, but does not prove that toxoplasmosis infections might cause women to attempt suicide, the researchers said.

But if a causal relationship was found, researchers might be able to predict who is at an increased risk for attempting suicide, and find ways to intervene, study author Dr. Teodor Postolache, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Further research on the topic could lead to a new vaccination against the parasite, avenues for treating people with toxoplasmosis, or increased efforts to teach people how to reduce transmission, Postolache told MyHealthNewsDaily.

Toxoplasma parasites affect a third of people worldwide, and healthy people may develop no symptoms. The parasite is spread through undercooked meat, unwashed vegetables or contact with fecal matter from cats, as the feline family is the only animal host that allows the parasite to reproduce.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Crisis-Hit Cyprus Takes Europe’s Helm

The island republic of Cyprus has taken over the EU’s rotating presidency at a particularly inauspicious moment. Not only does it have an ongoing dispute with Turkey, but the euro-zone member has just requested a bailout. But the small country is determined to show that it can perform its EU duties with aplomb.

A steel-and-glass palace stands at the gateway to the Cypriot capital Nicosia. The headquarters of Laiki Trapeza, or People’s Bank, is directly next to the expressway. It’s a futuristic building, but bankruptcy lurks behind the façade.

Laiki Bank, which made unwise investments in Greece, urgently needs €1.8 billion ($2.25 billion). Because the bank was unable to raise the money itself, despite weeks of efforts, Cyprus has had to ask for help from its international partners. Last week, the country applied for aid from the EU bailout fund and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The call for help could hardly come at a worse moment. As of July 1, the Republic of Cyprus has assumed the rotating European Council presidency for six months.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Breathalyzer Law Takes Effect

All vehicles travelling on French roads must carry a chemical or electronic breathalyzer test from Sunday, under new rules aimed at reducing alcohol-driven accidents.

“Alcohol has been the main cause of mortality on roads since 2006,” according to road security authorities.

The rules, well publicized in France, take place just ahead of the summer holiday season, and look certain to catch out many of the hundreds of thousands of foreign drivers taking to the French roads in the coming months.

About a third of fatalities on French roads is due to drink driving, a rate that far surpasses the 17 percent recorded in Britain or 10 percent in Germany.

According to a survey published Sunday, just over half of respondents — 57 percent — said they have yet to equip their vehicles with breathalyzer tests.

Those who fail to do so risk a fine of 11 Euros ($14) from November 1, 2012, when the penalty comes into force.

Drivers are split over the measure.

“I find it absurd to be booked for that. But it’s the law, so I’ll be subject to it,” said Hamou Louachiche, 38, who still does not have a test in his car.

He believes that such tests would be more useful in bars or nightclubs.

Others however welcome the measure, saying it would reduce drink driving.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Germany: 500-Year-Old ‘Birth Certificate of America’ Discovered

A version of a 500-year-old world map that was the first to mention the name “America” has been discovered in a German university library.

Experts did not even know about the existence of a fifth copy of the map by German cartographer Martin Waldseemueller until it showed up a few days ago, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich said. The discovery is much smaller and thought to have been made after the 1507 original version, which Germany officially handed over to the United States in 2007 and now lies in the Library of Congress in Washington. The newly unearthed map, one of the so-called globe segments, is believed to have been produced by Waldseemueller himself, who died in 1522. These were “at least as important for the dissemination of geographical knowledge in his own time” as the world wall map, which is UNESCO-registered and often dubbed “America’s birth certificate”, the university said. The new find shows the world divided into 12 segments which taper to a point at each end and are printed on a single sheet, which, when folded out, form a small globe, with the three rightmost segments depicting a boomerang-shaped territory named America.

Only four copies of the segmental maps were previously known about, the university said in a written statement. One of the four was sold at auction for $1 million in 2005.

The fifth was found by a bibliographer, who was revising the catalogue, “in an otherwise unremarkable volume that had been rebound in the 19th century”, it said. It was nestled between two printed works on geometry from the early 16th century. “Even in our digital age the originals have lost none of their significance and unique fascination,” Klaus-Rainer Brintzinger, the head of the library, said in the statement. “We intend to make the map accessible to the public in digital form in time for the Fourth of July, Independence Day in the USA,” he added.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Man Tells Jury He Had Consensual Sex With His Mother

A man accused of raping his 65-year-old mother says he had consensual sex with her and denies taking advantage.

The 45-year-old Dublin man has pleaded not guilty at the Central Criminal Court to raping the woman at her home between March 2 and 3, 2008.

The man told Giollaiosa O Lideadha SC, defending, that he and his mother had been drinking for a number of hours on the evening of Mother’s Day when his mother began dancing with him.

He said his mother began saying she loves him before putting her hands on the sides of his face and kissing him.

He said: “It got more intense. We were dancing and holding each other and touching each other. I was touching her body, on her sides and on her breasts.

“The kissing became more intense and serious and we got down on the floor and sexual intercourse occurred.”

He said he believed his mother wanted sex and said that she never said “leave me alone” during the sex.

He said: “She was as much a part of it as I was.”

He said his mother, who had already had a knee replacement and was waiting on a hip replacement, couldn’t get up off the floor afterwards. He said they both laughed about this.

He said he put cushions under her head and she told him to leave her there. He said she was falling asleep there.

He told defense counsel that his mother did not show affection for him when he was a child and that she would sometimes beat him with a leather belt to discipline him.

He told Gerard Clarke SC, prosecuting, under cross-examination, that he didn’t think it was strange at the time when he and his mother began kissing and continued on to have sex.

He said: “We got lost in it. I didn’t think about it at all. It was two people together.”

The man’s brother gave evidence that he had noticed the accused and their mother acting in an intimate way before at a social event.

He told defense counsel: “They were looking into the eyes. There was a touching of hands. It didn’t seem right”.

Evidence has finished in the case. The jury of four men and eight women will begin their deliberations tomorrow after Mr Justice Barry White has charged them.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Milky Way’s Giant Black Hole to Eat Space Cloud in 2013

The colossal black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy will soon to get a big, tasty meal, astronomers say. A humongous gas cloud is on a collision course for the Milky Way’s core — the home of Sagittarius A* (pronounced “Sagittarius A-star”), which scientists suspect is a supermassive black hole with the mass of 4 million suns.

When the huge gas cloud arrives in the vicinity, which it will appear to us to do in mid-2013, it will surely be swallowed up by the hungry black hole, scientists say.

Astrophysicist Stefan Gillessen of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Munich, Germany, has been observing the Milky Way’s center for about 20 years. So far, he’s seen only two stars come as close to Sagittarius A* as the cloud will.

“They passed unharmed, but this time will be different: the gas cloud will be completely ripped apart by the tidal forces of the black hole,” Gillessen said in a statement.

The cloud is due to pass within about 36 light-hours (about 25 billion miles, or 40 billion kilometers) of the black hole. Its speed, which is now more than 5 million mph (8 million km per hour), has nearly doubled in the last seven years as it approaches its doom. It has already started to shred, and is likely to break up completely before it hits the black hole.

While black holes themselves are impossible to see — they are objects whose gravitational pull is so strong, even light cannot escape — astronomers can watch what happens when matter falls into one. The areas around some active supermassive black holes are so bright, in fact, that they are visible across the universe.

Scientists are looking forward to the rare chance to see something fall into our own galaxy’s black hole. As it falls nearer and nearer, the cloud is expected to heat up and release bright X-ray radiation that should be visible from Earth.

The collision-bound cloud was discovered by a team of astronomers led by Reinhard Genzel at the European Southern Observatory.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK Uncovers Al Qaeda Plot to Bomb US Plane Ahead of Olympics

British intelligence officials have discovered a new Al Qaeda plot to bomb a US plane, the Sunday Times of London reports.

The officials said the attack was scheduled to happen before the London Olympics and was planned by Al Qaeda in Yemen. The terror group recruited Abu Abdurrahman, a Norwegian convert with no criminal record, to play a role in the plot, the New York Post reports, citing the Sunday Times of London.

The plot has no ties to the Olympics other than the timing, a British intelligence official said. Al Qaeda in Yemen has tried unsuccessfully to bomb three US planes since 2009.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: 200 People Regularly Cram Into This Bungalow…Used as Illegal Mosque

AN Islamic group has been told to clear out of an illegal mosque in a small bungalow after residents complained it is regularly crammed with as many as 200 people. Southend Council has received 150 complaints from angry residents in Fairfax Drive, Westcliff, since September 2010. The Jaafriya Islamic Welfare Centre did not apply for change of use when it took over the two-bedroom chalet bungalow and began holding regular meetings. In December 2010 the owner of the site also built an extension without planning consent.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Blitz on Child Sex Grooming Gangs to be Announced After No 10 Shocked by ‘Heartbreaking’ Stories of Abuse

Action to tackle child sexual exploitation will be announced this week after No 10 was shocked by ‘heartbreaking’ stories of abuse. The move follows the conviction of nine Asian men for systematically raping and abusing underage girls in Rochdale, Greater Manchester, and claims by a Government expert that abuse was taking place ‘all over the country’. On Tuesday, Ministers will launch an urgent review of the quality of care provided in children’s homes — which were at the heart of the Rochdale scandal — and publish a progress report on an ‘action plan’ designed to tackle child exploitation.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Care Home Reforms Aim to Halt Child Sex Abuse

By Judith Burns Family reporter, BBC News

The government has published plans to combat the sexual exploitation of children in care homes in England by gangs.

The move acts on recommendations made by the deputy children’s commissioner in a report on sexual exploitation. The conviction this year of nine men in a child sex ring sparked concerns about the safety of children’s homes. Children’s Minister Tim Loughton said: “These are big changes to a system, which has been letting down too many.” In May nine men were jailed for being part of a child sex ring in Rochdale — one of the girls was in care at the time and all were said to have been known to social services at some point.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Child Sex Grooming ‘Not a Race Problem’, Yorkshire Police Chief Tells Muslims

GROOMING children for sex is a growing scourge that cuts across all communities, West Yorkshire’s chief constable warned yesterday as he met Muslim community leaders at a summit to tackle the problem. Sir Norman Bettison insisted the crime was not a racial or cultural issue. The type of exploitation seen in cases such as the recent Rochdale scandal, in which a gang of Asian men preyed on vulnerable young white girls, was just one of its many faces, he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ethnic Minorities in UK Feel Most British, Research Finds

Muslims were most likely to say being British was important

Ethnic minorities living in the UK feel more British than their white counterparts, research has revealed. Muslims are the most likely of all groups to identify with the concept of “Britishness”, the Institute for Social and Economic Research found. The report’s authors say the results rubbish suggestions that ethnic groups are unwilling or unable to integrate into British society and show that fears over the negative impacts of immigration on cultural identity are overstated.

[…]

[JP note: See also https://www.iser.essex.ac.uk/2012/06/30/ethnic-minorities-living-in-the-uk-feel-more-british-than-white-britons and http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/RMF2012/programme.php?id=M3 for details of presentation by Dr Alita Nadi — How diverse is Britain?]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslims Are Well-Integrated in Britain — But No One Seems to Believe it

by Leon Moosavi

British Muslims often express a stronger sense of belonging than other citizens, so why are they still seen as outsiders?

In Britain today there is a mismatch between how non-Muslims often perceive Muslims and how Muslims typically perceive themselves. This disconnect is down to a tendency by non-Muslims to assume that Muslims struggle with their British identity and divided loyalties. These concerns were challenged a few days ago,in a report by the University of Essex that found Muslims actually identify with Britishness more than any other Britons. This study is just one of several recent studies that have consistently found that Muslims in Britain express a stronger sense of belonging in Britain than their compatriots. Consider the following examples:

  • 83% of Muslims are proud to be a British citizen, compared to 79% of the general public.
  • 77% of Muslims strongly identify with Britain while only 50% of the wider population do.
  • 86.4% of Muslims feel they belong in Britain, slightly more than the 85.9% of Christians.
  • 82% of Muslims want to live in diverse and mixed neighbourhoods compared to 63% of non-Muslim Britons.
  • 90% of Pakistanis feel a strong sense of belonging in Britain compared to 84% of white people.

[…]

[Reader comment by CongestionCharge on 3 July 2012 at 1:22 PM.]

No wonder people look askance at Muslims; all this enthusiasm for being British — its just not British! The rest of the article is a bit tendentious; he mentions a racist murder but neglects to point out that it happened in Germany, and my understanding is that Anders Breivik slaughtered young white students, who were highly unlikely to have been Muslims.

The history of his country shows that the British are tolerant of anybody who accepts their values and way of life; as DisaffectedYouth shows above, thats not always been the case where young Muslims in particular are concerned.

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



UK: Neighbours’ Fury as Council Allowed Tiny Bungalow to be Used as an ‘Illegal’ Mosque for 200 Worshippers

  • Islamic group insisted two-bedroom property was a home ‘used for the occasional meeting’
  • Now they say it is being used as a community centre — and apply for taxpayer funding to put on classes
  • Property was extended without planning permission
  • Neighbours have complained about noise, rubbish and extra traffic

A council has come under fire after an Islamic group extended a tiny two-bedroom bungalow to turn it into an ‘illegal’ mosque for 200 worshippers. Residents are furious after being forced to endure noise at all hours of the day, congestion and bin bags strewn across the front garden. The group started using the property in Westcliff, Essex, as a mosque after moving in almost two years ago.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Opening Ceremony for Broadfield Mosque

AFTER three years of construction work costing more than £1million, the Broadfield Mosque will be officially opened. The work, which included five new classrooms, a library, two halls, the Imam’s flat and a new kicthen, was paid for with private donations and costs £1.2million. The formal opening ceremony will be held on Saturday July 7 starting at around 2pm with speeches in Urdu and Arabic. People of all faiths are invited to attend the event at the Mosque in Broadwood Rise, Broadfield.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Investigate ‘Shooting’ Outside Jewish School on Upper Park Road, Salford

Police are investigating a possible shooting outside a Jewish college in Salford in the early hours of this morning. Officers were called to Upper Park Road in Broughton at 2.35am to reports a shot had been fired. No-one has been injured but police were unable to confirm if any ammunition or bullet holes had been found at the scene. A GMP spokesman said: “At around 2.35am on Sunday, police were called to an incident on Upper Park Road, Broughton. It would appear at this stage there may have been a firearms discharge. No-one was injured. Inquiries are ongoing. This is a very early stage of the investigation and a team of officers is working to establish what happened.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Sex Grooming Cases Spark Racial Tensions in UK

ROCHDALE, ENGLAND: She was lonely in the way only an adolescent girl can be: No friends, no boyfriend, not much of a relationship with her parents. So she felt special when a man decades older paid attention to her, bought her trinkets, gave her free booze. Then he took her to a dingy room above a kebab shop and said she had to give something back in return. His demands grew: Not just sex with him, but with his friends. It went on for years, until police charged nine men with running a sex ring with underage girls.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Views Aired at Islam Meeting

MEMBERS of Luton’s Muslim community packed into the Crescent Hall in Bury Park on Saturday night for a meeting aimed at tackling Islamophobia. Guest speakers included journalist Yvonne Ridley, and Cherie Booth’s sister Lauren Booth, both converts to Islam. Also speaking was political commentator Mohammed Ansar, and Luton Borough Council leader Hazel Simmons. Lauren Booth, who spoke on the topic of Women and Islam, told the audience: “I’m not sure we can call the reaction we get in Luton ‘Islamophobia’. People here base their reactions on a lot of reading, they will be sure they have a full and rounded definition of what Islam is. People might be wishing to rescue you from something they genuinely believe is bad. As women we are like celebrities, we are the front page of Islam. We can see ourselves as ‘Brand Islam’. We need to be bastions of the community and share the good values of Islam.”

Mohammed Ansar warned that Luton, as in the days of football hooliganism, was being threatened by “dark shadows of intolerance and hatred”. He said anti-Muslim discourse was increasingly being seen as legitimate, and said the country was in the middle of “a Muslim civil rights crisis”. But accused Muslims of being their “own worst enemies”, saying: “We have the best product but the worst salesmen.” He continued: “It is not right to abuse troops, it is not right to deny children a proper education, it is not right to threaten homosexuals or others.” English Defence League leader Stephen Lennon was denied entry to the meeting by security staff. He said on Monday: “It was supposed to be a public meeting but it wasn’t. All we hear is that we need to sit down and talk but no-one wants to talk to us.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Youths in Germany Turning to Jihad

From Wuppertal to Waziristan: Ever more young men living in Germany are traveling to conflict zones to become jihadi fighters. Though numbers remain small, security services are taking the problem very seriously.

Based on the recollection of Friedrich Bleckmann, the two “lads,” as he called them, were as different as only brothers can be. Bünyamin E. was described as “polite, studious and humble,” his older brother “highly aggressive and unreliable.” Their father worked at Bleckmann Farm, close to the small western German city of Velbert. His sons helped out there on weekends and during school vacations.

The farmer could never have envisaged the path the two Turkish-German Wuppertal brothers took. In 2012, both brothers went to join Islamist fighters in the mountainous Pakistani region of Waziristan on the Afghani border. Bünyamin was killed by a U.S. drone attack shortly after his arrival. Emrah continued to fight until June 2012.

Cases of young Muslim men living in Germany becoming jihadi combatants are rare, but increasing in number. German security services believe that since the beginning of the 1990s, around 235 “people with German connections and Islamic terrorist backgrounds” have at least attempted to obtain paramilitary training. There is concrete evidence that around 100 were actually trained or engaged in military operations. More than half of those are said to be back in Germany, and around 10 have been imprisoned.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


International Supervisors to Leave Kosovo in September

The international administration overseeing Kosovo’s internal affairs announced on Monday it would leave in September. An International Steering Group had been supervising Kosovo since it broke away from Serbia some five years ago. Kosovo prime minister Hashim Thaci called it an “historic day” and a “new step for Kosovo”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Obama Phones to Congratulate Muslim B’hood on Victory in Egypt’s ‘Milestone’ Election

President Obama phoned the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohammed Morsi on Sunday evening to congratulate him on becoming Egypt’s new president, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo said in a Twitter message around 7 PM eastern time.

Earlier, White House press secretary Jay Carney in a statement called the Islamist’s election a “milestone” in Egyptians’ transition to democracy.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


UNESCO: Bethlehem Heritage Site, Palestinians Celebrate

First site in occupied territories; US: ‘deeply disappointed’

An exterior view of the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM — Following a secret ballot with 13 votes cast in favour, 6 against and 2 abstentions the twenty-one member Unesco heritage committee has accepted the urgent proposal by the Palestinian National Authority that the Church of the Nativity and the Pilgrim Way in Bethlehem should be listed as World Heritage sites. This is a first time ever for a monument situated on the West Bank and the decision opens fresh political controversy following Palestine’s entry into the UN organisation for science, education and culture in October of last year. The accession itself triggered strong opposition from both the USA and Israel. The Bethlehem proposal was presented by the Palestinians to the Unesco committee, which is currently meeting in St Petersburg — grounding an urgent process with the site’s state of “ dilapidation and degradation”. One of the reasons given for this was the impositions of the Israeli “occupation forces”. Although it has no objection to the listing of the site, Israel objected to the proposal as an urgent measure, with its overtones that they had not afforded the church sufficient protection. Today’s decision has been greeted by the Palestinians, who expressed their pride, while the USA said it was “deeply disappointed”.

Speaking in the name of the PLO, Hanan Ashrawi said “the Palestinian people welcome this decision with joy as a moment of national pride and a confirmation of their identity and of their heritage”. Speaking in Paris, US Unesco Ambassador David Killion noted that this site “is sacred to all Christians and it should not be politicised”. Ambassador Killion went on to note that the urgent procedure adopted in this case should be reserved for sites threatened with destruction. Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad — cited on the Ynet website — noted that Unesco’s decision underlines Palestinian determination to create an independent state within its 1967 borders. No reaction has come today from the Israeli government, as it is observing the pre-Sabbath repose. Today’s listing includes the Church of the Nativity, which dates back to Roman Emperor Constantine in the 4th century and which was renovated in the 6th century under Justinian, as well as three nearby monasteries and the Pilgrim’s Way. Around two million tourists visited Bethlehem in 2011.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Syria: Terrorists Kill Professor and His Family, SANA

Shelling resumes, activists

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, JUNE 29 — A “group of armed terrorists” including two from other Arab countries have killed a university professor, his parents and the three children of his sister in an attack on his house in the Syrian province of Homs, according to reports from the state-run news agency SANA. According to a source from the local prefect’s office quoted by the agency, afterwards security forces managed to intercept the terrorists and kill ten of them, including the two foreigners.

SANA claims that the action is part of the terrorists’ strategy of “hitting the experts and intellectuals” in the country. The attack was carried out in Al Hossn on the house of Ahlam Imad, a professor of petrochemical engineering at the Baath university of Homs. Meanwhile the Local Coordinating Committees of the opposition have this morning reported a resumption of government forces’ shelling on a number of locations, in particular Deir Az Zor and Homs. The same source said that security forces had opened fire on a funeral procession in Dumeir, a Damascus suburb.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: Italian SMEs Sink, While Tehran Muscles in

Italian energy and manufacturing. Berlin to help more, sources

(ANSAmed) — DAMASCUS/AMMAN, JUNE 28 — Italian small and medium-sized businesses in Syria have “sunk”. Over the last year, losses have hit double figures, while Iran defies the measures wanted by the international community by pocketing billions worth of contracts.

The phenomenon has been reported to ANSA by well-placed sources.

Italian affairs in Syria are centred around electricity and the manufacturing industry, but Italy is also well represented in market shares connected to olive oil or marble cutting, while industrial equipment in the oil sector is also important. Syria is the world’s 34th largest oil producer, with more than 400,000 barrels per day, half of which are exported.

The resources of the so-called “black gold” are concentrated in the region of Homs, which has been the setting in recent weeks for furious clashes, and in the region of Deir ez-Zor, which has reserves that it is estimated could see Syria enter the list of top 10 oil producers.

Around five kilometres outside the city’s built-up areas, Ansaldo is currently building an electric power stations with gas turbines, a partnership with the Greek group Metkal. But with the complete embargo on oil and the partial embargo on electricity, “it has become impossible to operate in Syria,” sources say.

“Contracts can be signed, but there is no support from the banks, who effectively no longer want to operate in the country,” where credit cards are also blocked and only cash can be used, and where “contracts cannot be made operational”. “The problem is not only in Europe,” the sources add, “there are also problems in Lebanon and in Gulf states, as banks have taken up a position that is even more inflexible than that demanded by the sanctions”.

“There is a risk of reaching a situation such as that in Iran, where no bank is willing to operate”. Tehran, meanwhile, “continues to purchase new orders, in the electronic sector, for example, with new plants that are banned by the latest sanctions”. The Iranians are therefore “free”, purchasing without competition.

Then there are unilateral acts, such as that by the US Treasury, which has decided to penalise some of the private banks operating in Syria, a measure that will “further freeze” the situation.

Overall, at least 50 registered companies were operating in Syria up until 2 years ago, on top of major groups like Ansaldo, Fiat, Benetton, Stefanel and Diadora.

“The Italian government has left us on our own”, where as the German government has helped companies that were able to sign new contracts “just in time”, before the new sanctions were approved at the end of 2011.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


From Farms to Factories, Russians Wary of WTO

Migrant workers, some stripped to their underwear in the sweltering heat, pick fragrant strawberries from the sprawling fields of Lenin State Farm, a former collective that has become one of the most successful farms around Moscow.

Director Pavel Grudinin says his strawberries are better than anything else in the Russian capital because they go from field to shelf in under 24 hours.

But with Russia joining the World Trade Organization next week, Grudinin worries that rules designed to ensure fair trade will put him at a disadvantage. He says it will be hard for him to compete with U.S. and European producers who can offer lower prices — because they don’t have to deal with corruption and bureaucracy.

Thousands of businesses across Russia are fearful as the country — after 18 years of negotiations — is set to join the WTO, which restricts import duties and subsidies in an effort to even the playing field for international trade. Parliament needs to approve the ascension by July 10, something almost sure to happen as Russian President Vladimir Putin — whose party controls parliament — says WTO membership will bring increased foreign investment and make Russian companies more competitive.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghan Policeman Kills 3 British Troops in Checkpoint Clash

THREE British soldiers were shot dead by a rogue Afghan policeman in a “cowardly act”, Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said yesterday.

The soldiers, two from 1st Battalion Welsh Guards and one from the Royal Corps of Signals, were killed on Sunday evening at a checkpoint in central Helmand province. The men, who were serving as advisers to Afghan police, were gunned down as they left a meeting of local elders. A fourth British soldier was wounded. The soldiers’ families have been informed. The gunman almost certainly used an AK47 from a sentry post overlooking the checkpoint. Other Afghan police returned fire and wounded him. He is being given treatment under guard at Camp Bastion. The attack, which came on the day Afghan forces took the security lead in southern Afghanistan, is said to have followed a noisy argument at the checkpoint. Mr Hammond described the attack as a “cowardly act by a man wearing an Afghan uniform” but said it “will not derail the mission”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Kandahar Suicide Bomber Kills Seven People

At least seven people have been killed and many more wounded in a suicide car bomb attack in the Afghan city of Kandahar, police have said.

The bomber rammed an car packed with explosives into a vehicle carrying workers from a nearby US base, a local official said. The attack happened in front of Kandahar university.

On Sunday, a policeman shot dead three UK soldiers serving with Nato forces in neighbouring Helmand province. The base near the attack on Monday is now used by US special forces, provincial police chief General Abdul Razaq told AFP news agency.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan Accuses Pakistan of Rocket Attacks

Afghanistan and Pakistan have traded diplomatic barbs, accusing each other of cross-border raids. Kabul has threatened to refer Islamabad to the UN Security Council if bilateral talks do not defuse the situation.

Afghanistan accused Pakistan on Monday of shelling its territory, threatening to report Islamabad to the United Nations Security Council if bilateral talks between the uneasy neighbors do not show progress.

Kabul has accused Islamabad in the past of supporting Taliban militants who oppose the US-backed government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai. But it was the first time that Afghanistan blamed Pakistan for hundreds of rocket attacks on a heavily forested area in Kunar province. Four civilians have died in the attacks since March.

Pakistan has accused Afghanistan of not doing enough to eliminate militants in Kunar province.

“We now have enough evidence that proves the rockets used in these attacks belong to the Pakistani army,” the spokesman for Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security, Shafiqullah Taheri, told the Reuters news agency.

“Pakistan has never had such brazen courage in its history,” Taheri said. “They know that Afghan security forces can’t react so they outrageously and indecently attack us.”

Afghanistan’s foreign minister threatened Islamabad with a referral to the UN Security Council if bilateral talks did not resolve the issue.

“If diplomatic discussions bring no positive results we will refer the issue to the U.N. Security Council,” Faramarz Tamana said.

Unnamed Pakistani intelligence sources, meanwhile, told the AFP and Reuters news agencies that Afghan soldiers crossed in Pakistani territory on Sunday, killing two tribesmen.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



American Strategy in Afghanistan Flunks Sun Tzu

by Gian Gentile

Proof of counterinsurgency’s failures is the current state of affairs in Iraq and Afghanistan.

American-style counterinsurgency does not work. It has failed in Iraq and it is currently failing in Afghanistan. In war, strategy should look to policy — which gives war its direction — and then apply the tools of war, like military tactics, to achieve policy aims in the most cost effective way in blood and treasure. Proof of counterinsurgency’s failures is the current state of affairs in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In Iraq, the United States spent 8.8 years nation-building, resulting in 4,773 Americans killed, thousands and thousands more with life-changing wounds, not to mention the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis killed, close to a million more Iraqis displaced from their original homes with only a handful being able to return to them. Of course there is the billions and billions of American funds spent as well. And from all of that expenditure what appreciable strategic and policy gains has the US achieved? Not much. The country is still mired in low grade war and one dictator has been replaced with another — the latest one allied closely with America’s strategic enemy in the region Iran.

In Afghanistan, and like Iraq, the US has invested heavily since the beginning in a hefty nation-building endeavor. Yet after 11 years of nation-building, the country is still in tatters (if it ever wasn’t), its nascent political institutions are corrupt, the Taliban enemy is still as strong as ever and, despite rosy proclamations by NATO officials, objective reports show a steadily rising level of overall violence in the country despite increased American troop numbers and a so-called new counterinsurgency strategy.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Australian Soldier Killed in Afghanistan Firefight

EMILY BOURKE: A Special Forces soldier on his 7th tour of duty to Afghanistan has been killed during a mission to track down an insurgent leader in the Chora Valley, in Uruzgan province. The 40-year-old was shot in the chest during a firefight. The soldier had been part of a joint Australian-Afghan National Security forces operation in the valley. The Prime Minister says she knows the death will prompt many to ask why Australians are still fighting and dying in Afghanistan.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



‘Cocked and Locked’ Policy Considered for British Troops Working With Afghans

Three British soldiers have been shot dead by an Afghan policeman at a checkpoint, sparking calls from senior officers for a reappraisal of how troops work alongside local forces.

The murders, which took place on Sunday, mean that this year a quarter of all British troops killed in Afghanistan have died at the hands of their Afghan allies. The policeman opened fire after a heated argument with the British forces according to witnesses, before he was himself shot and captured. Two of the soldiers were from the Welsh Guards and the other was from the Royal Corps of Signals, the Ministry of Defence said. A fourth British soldier was wounded but is thought to be stable. It is unclear if they were wearing body armour at check point Kamparack Pul, in Nahr-e-Saraj in Helmand. Senior officers told The Daily Telegraph that a new “cocked and locked” policy — already adopted by US forces — should be implemented. “We should be looking at adopting the American policy of having a soldier permanently on overwatch during any meeting with Afghan security forces with his weapon cocked and locked,” one officer said.

[…]

[JP note: Cocked and locked — this should be the West’s policy to Islam in general.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Sikh Man Deported to Afghanistan Returned to UK

Baljit Singh was jailed in Kabul, accused of falsely claiming to be Afghan, and says he was tricked into converting to Islam

A Sikh man who was jailed in Kabul for “falsely claiming” to be an Afghan when he was deported from the UK, and says he was bullied and tricked into making a televised conversion to Islam, has been flown back to Birmingham by the British government. The case of 23 year-old Baljit Singh highlights concerns about the justice system and the status of religious minorities in Afghanistan as the withdrawal of western troops gathers pace. Singh was deported from the UK nearly two years ago and was spotted by Afghan government officials as soon as he stepped off the chartered aeroplane that carried the failed asylum seekers, marked out by his distinctive Sikh turban. He was taken aside for questioning and then was put in prison for 18 months during which he never received a charge sheet, let alone a conviction. Prosecutors told him informally that his crime was falsely claiming to be Afghan.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Three British Soldiers Killed by Afghan Policeman After Argument

Three British soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan by a local policeman following an argument, the Ministry of Defence has said.

As relations with local forces continue to deteriorate the deaths mean that a quarter of all British fatalities this year have been caused by Afghans soldiers with seven murdered at the hands of allies. The soldiers, two from the Welsh Guards and one from the Royal Corps of Signals, are understood to have become involved in an argument with one of the Afghan policemen. The officer opened fire, probably with an AK47 machine gun, and hit three of the soldiers. It is unclear if they were wearing body armour at check point Kamparack Pul in Nahr-e-Saraj in Helmand. A fourth British soldier was wounded but is thought to be stable. The Afghan policeman was then shot and wounded. He is now in custody. In a statement the MoD said: “The soldiers were serving in an Afghan Police Advisory Team and had been to the check point to conduct a shura (meeting). On leaving, they were engaged by small arms fire by a man wearing an Afghan Police uniform. During this exchange of fire the three soldiers were wounded and despite receiving first aid at the scene, they died of their injuries.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why Muslims and Chinese Hate Pakistan

Rakesh Krishnan Simha

Pakistanis evoke highly negative emotions worldwide, including in Muslim majority countries, says a US survey. Not just the elites but the common Pakistani too is culpable in the country’s spectacular failure.

It has never been easy being a Pakistani. Pick a terrorist act committed anywhere in the world and chances are it has Pakistani fingerprints all over it. In many places, the word ‘Pakistani’ is a four-letter word. So it must be a nasty kick in the guts for the Pakistanis to learn that their only allies, the Chinese, as well as the majority populations of several Muslim countries, including Egypt, Tunisia, Jordan and Lebanon, see them as a bunch of baddies. A survey of 21 countries released on June 27, 2012 by the United States-based Pew Research Center suggests that Pakistan is not only a universally disliked country but the Pakistanis themselves have learnt nothing from their history, continuing to support the very actors who are responsible for their country’s negative image.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


After Elections, Who Will Profit From Mongolia’s Boom?

Only 65 percent of Mongolian voters turned out to the country’s most recent parliamentary election. Mongolians are disappointed in the politics of their country, where the vast resources only benefit few.

The newest political curve is representative of the fast-paced development the country — with its small population of around three million people — has been experiencing since it was reformed 22 years ago.

Visitors experience Mongolia as a country of great change and extremes. Thanks to the export of natural resources, the country’s economy is booming with two-figure growth rates. The skyline of capital Ulan Bator is changing just as rapidly. As soon as one newly built district is up, the next one is already being constructed. The apartment buildings with rent prices comparable to other international metropolises are just as symbolic of the country’s progress as are its five-star hotels and its high-end shopping paradises.

“You don’t even see as many luxury ‘Hummers’ in Munich as you do in Ulan Bator,” a German businessman remarks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



History Looms Behind Delay of South Korea-Japan Military Deal

South Korea has put off signing a military deal with Japan that would have seen the countries sharing more information. Despite important mutual interests, the shadow cast by history makes for a troubled relationship.

South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Byung-jae said that the government had been asked to delay the signing of the agreement only hours before it was due to take place in Tokyo.

The request came from South Korea’s ruling Saenuri Party. The deal, known as the South Korea-Japan General Security of Military Information Agreement, allows for the sharing of military intelligence on North Korea.

“It seems that the big thing they wanted to share was satellite imagery of North Korea and its nuclear sites,” said Jason Strother, DW correspondent in South Korea.

The presidential cabinet had approved the signing of the agreement on Tuesday, with the assembly still in recess. Japan’s government sanctioned it on Friday. But in a country where memories of a decades-long Japanese occupation still run deep, the policy soon attracted criticism.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Japan: Record High Radiation Levels Detected at Fukushima Reactor

TEPCO engineers reportedly gathered samples from the basement after inserting a camera and consulting measuring instruments through a drain hole located in the ceiling of the basement.

The company said radiation levels above radiation-contaminated water in the basement measured as high as 10,300 millisievert per hour — a dose plenty high enough to kill human beings in short order after making them sick within minutes.

Radiation levels even higher than anticipated

Put another way, the annual allowable dose for plant workers at the site is reached in just 20 seconds. One report said the dose was enough to kill humans in less than an hour.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Burch Defends Mosque Consultation

ACT Multicultural Affairs Minister Joy Burch has defended the public consultation process surrounding a mosque in Canberra’s north, and urged opponents to have their say through official channels. Thirty people attended a closed door meeting in Gungahlin on Sunday after a flyer was distributed by a group calling itself the Concerned Citizens of Canberra. Labor backbencher John Hargreaves has described the flyer as a KKK attack on the Muslim community.

Ms Burch says no one from the Government was invited to attend the meeting. “The tone of this flyer is most unfortunate,” she said.

“I certainly wouldn’t go as far as Mr Hargreaves but the tone of the flyer where it makes an inference that they’re not going to be good neighbours because they haven’t spoken to people and they have, and then they carry on their communication behind closed doors, is of concern to me. If you’ve got legitimate concerns then stand up and have the conversation.”

Ms Burch has asked the Human Rights Commission to investigate the flyer. “I am more than happy to stand up and say this government is behind the development of a mosque in Gungahlin and that’s why I’ve indicated I’ll refer it to the Human Rights Commission,” she said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



‘Racist’ Mosque Pamphlet Probed

The ACT government will refer a pamphlet opposing the construction of a mosque in Gungahlin to the Human Rights Commission for investigation amid concerns that the flyer was racially motivated. The flyer was distributed to Gungahlin residents this week, urging them to oppose the development on The Valley Avenue because of its “social impact” and raising concerns about traffic and noise, “public interest” and size. In a multi-party post-budget estimates hearing yesterday, Labor backbencher John Hargreaves said the pamphlet should be “condemned by the entire community of Canberra as a KKK attack on the Muslim community”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Julian Mann: Jesus and the GCSE Generation

Julian Mann has been vicar of the Parish Church of the Ascension, Oughtibridge, South Yorkshire since 2000. Before getting ordained he was a reporter for Retail Week. He is married to Lisa and they have four teenage sons.

A survey of Christian knowledge in a local community has exposed disturbing ignorance of the basics in teenagers of the GCSE generation. The ‘Jesus Survey’ is an idea that originates in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney as an unthreatening form of evangelism. It involves asking respondents a series of factual questions about Jesus with the offer of a copy of a canonical Gospel at the end of the interview.

I have adapted the survey for use in the South Yorkshire parish where I serve as an Anglican vicar and have been asking non church-going parishioners who they thought Jesus was historically, what his message was, whether it differed from that of other religious teachers such as Muhammed or Buddha and finally why they thought Jesus got killed.

Because pupils from the local comprehensive are currently off school having recently finished their GCSEs, most of the day-time interviewees were teenagers. Whilst most had a very vague idea of what Jesus’ message was and no idea why he was crucified, they were agreed on this: his message did not substantially differ from that of Buddha or Muhammed. This would lend grass-roots support to the view that religious education under the GCSE regime since the late 1980s has been greatly more successful in inculcating the idea that the world religions are spiritually and morally homogeneous than in teaching the actual content of their various beliefs.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


9 Workers Butchered at Nigeria Mosque

Unknown assailants have slit the throats of nine construction workers at a mosque in the northeastern Nigeria city of Maiduguri, the Army says. The men, who were working on the Shehu of Borno Central Mosque in the city, were butchered at about 01:45 a.m. local time (0045 GMT) on Monday, said a statement from the Nigerian military’s Joint Task Force (JTF), AFP reported. “JTF troops rushed to the area/compound and saw the dead bodies and they were deposited at the mortuary Borno State Specialist Hospital,” the statement added. No further details have surfaced regarding the victims, and no one has yet claimed responsibility for the bloodshed. The Army has blamed the attack on “terrorists,” without naming any party in particular.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



‘Iran Agents Planned to Hit US and British Targets in Kenya’

Two Iranian agents arrested with explosives planned to attack US, British, Israeli or Saudi Arabian targets in Kenya, officials have claimed.

Officials told the Associated Press news agency that the plot appears to fit into a global pattern of attacks or attempted attacks by Iranian agents, mostly against Israeli interests.

Ahmad Abolfathi Mohammad and Sayed Mansour Mousavi were arrested last week with 33 pounds of RDX, a powerful explosive, in the coastal city of Mombasa. Several hotels on the coast are Israeli-owned. One official said the Iranians are members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Quds Force, an elite and secretive unit. Mohammad last week said the two were interrogated by Israeli agents, a claim that, if true, would suggest security officials believe the Iranians might have been targeting an Israeli-owned property. Iranian agents are suspected in several attacks or thwarted attacks around the globe over the last year, including in Azerbaijan, Thailand and India. Most of the plots had connections to Israeli targets. Several resorts on Kenya’s coast are Israeli-owned. Militants in 2002 bombed an Israeli-owned luxury hotel near Mombasa, killing 13 people. The militants also tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner at the same time. An al-Qaeda operative was linked to those attacks.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Islamist Rebels Smash ‘Pearl of the Desert’

Despite international condemnation, Islamic militants in Mali continue to destroy historic sites in the city of Timbuktu. The International Criminal Court has described the destruction as a war crime.

It was supposed to be business as usual when representatives of the UN cultural organization UNESCO met in the Russian city of St. Petersburg on Saturday. They were to decide which places around the globe should be recognized as World Heritage Sites.

Then the news broke that Islamic rebels had started destroying ancient religious sites in the West African city of Timbuktu, which had been declared a World Heritage Site in 1988.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kenyan Muslims, Christians Vow to Prevent Violence

Kenyan clerics across the religious divide vowed Tuesday to not allow sectarian violence to erupt following attacks on churches over the weekend that killed at least 15 people.

The Inter-Religious Council of Kenya said Muslims will form vigilante groups alongside Christians to guard churches in Kenya’s North Eastern Province, where the latest attacks occurred.

Adan Wachu, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims and the chairman of Inter-Religious Council, said the weekend attacks, which are being blamed on an al-Qaida-linked militant group from Somalia, are meant to trigger sectarian violence between Christians and Muslims.

Wachu said clerics will actively preach against retaliation to prevent violence from spreading in Kenya like it has in Nigeria, where attacks on churches by a Muslim sect has ignited a spiral of violence

“This is not a religious war and it has to be addressed from a different paradigm shift,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kenya: Muslim Terrorists Kill 17 in Church Massacre

by Michael Carl

‘The Islamic radicals are growing bolder in their anti-Christian attacks’

Reports say the group killed the two soldiers guarding the Africa Inland Church, then entered the church and opened fire on the congregation. Church pastor Ibrahim Magunyi was quoted in a press statement saying others may succumb to injuries. “Many people were injured and rushed to Garissa Provincial hospital. More people might die as the undergo treatment,” Magunyi said in the statement. International Christian Concern’s Africa specialist Jonathan Racho says that al-Shabaab is targeting Kenya.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Uganda: Muslims Evicted From Mosque

Business in Soroti town came to standstill yesterday morning as the Police battled the Muslim community who were resisting eviction from Taqwa Mosque. Court bailiffs went to evict Muslims from the mosque for failure to pay rent. The row that started at around 7:00am, lasted for about four hours. The mid-eastern regional Police spokesperson, Juma Hassan Nyene, said the building that housed the mosque belongs to the Aga Khan. The rowdy Muslims poured fuel believed to be avigas (fuel for aircraft) around the mosque, threatening to set it ablaze. The protestors, armed with hammers, stones, bricks, bows and arrows, chanted “Allah Akbar, Allah Akbar, Allah Akbar (God is great)!” while trying to take their property back into the mosque after the bailiffs had thrown it out.

Police fired teargas to disperse the protesting Muslims who wanted to burn the mosque. By press time, three Muslims whose identities could not be readily established had been whisked away in a Police patrol vehicle.”These people had intentions to burn the town, so we intervened,” said the Soroti district Police commander, Richard Aruk Maruk. “The eviction was lawful but the Muslims resisted, it and turned rowdy. “This prompted the Police to intervene to quell the situation,” Nyene added. He said the Aga Khan was demanding over sh30m in rent arrears since 2005. Efforts to get comments from the Muslim leadership in the area were futile as they took off after the Police fired teargas.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Croatia Rescues 65 Migrants at Sea

Croatia’s coast guard Monday rescued 65 immigrants in the south Adriatic. The immigrants, from Somalia, Egypt, Syria and Afghanistan, were heading to Italy but got in trouble when their boat broke down. The coast guard have yet to decide whether or not to haul the boat from international waters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


BRAVE Attacks Marriage Hastening Demographic Winter

The movie BRAVE tells the story of a young princess in Scotland who will do anything not to get married, including go to a witch to cast a heinous spell on her own mother who is the Queen. This self-defeating and unnatural message is being pushed by Pixar and the Walt Disney Company at a time when Europe is facing demographic winter. This is very irresponsible.

Several of us have just returned from speaking and teaching in Europe. In many countries, marriage is dismissed and demeaned. As a result, the very survival of these people groups is in question.

An article in the Christian Telegraph sets forth the extent of the problem.

According to a report recently released by Eurostat, the European Union’s statistical service, the number of deaths will exceed the number of births by 2015, only three years from now! Also, by 2060, the ratio of working age people to people over 65 will be two to one.

The Christian Telegraph continues:…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Down With Secularism!

We all think it’s a good idea to keep religion away from politics, don’t we? Richard Smyth begs to differ

It compromises democracy, it promotes and rewards hypocrisy and doublethink, it reflects a crippling failure of imagination on the part of its proponents and it’s founded on principles that are cynical, unempathetic and deeply un-humanist. It’s called secularism, and I think it stinks. You may disagree. In which case, you may wish to say so. And this is where we run up face-first against the tenets of common-or-garden modern liberalism. The liberal lawyer David Allen Green recently articulated this position perfectly in 140 characters or less: “If you don’t want to have abortion, don’t have one; not want gay marriage, don’t have one; but you have no right imposing views on others.” Which is exactly what I mean by a failure of imagination.

Every citizen has every right to impose his or her views on others — and every other citizen has an equal right to tell him or her to take a running jump.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Gay Cruise Ship Turned Away by Morocco Docks in Spain

The cruise ship Nieuw Amsterdam, on its present voyage catering to a gay clientele, docked Sunday in the southern Spanish port of Malaga after Moroccan authorities prohibited it from making its scheduled port of call in Casablanca.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Secularism Versus Democracy

Can you guess which publication the following came from?

“It compromises democracy, it promotes and rewards hypocrisy and doublethink, it reflects a crippling failure of imagination on the part of its proponents and it’s founded on principles that are cynical, unempathetic and deeply un-humanist. It’s called secularism, and I think it stinks.”

Was it, perhaps, the Catholic Herald, the Baptist Times or even the Al-Qa’eda Gazette? Nope, none of those. It was an opinion piece by Richard Smyth for the New Humanist, an organ of the Rationalist Association. So, why would an outspoken atheist be so opposed to secularism? It’s not because he’s one of those high church unbelievers with a penchant for the Common Book of Prayer, rather it’s because he’s a democrat:

“The basic premise of secularism is that religion should be kept out of politics… My premise is that people who get things wrong should be kept out of politics.

“How is that to be done? Why, by not voting for them, of course. Not by erecting self-serving and undemocratic Chinese walls between ‘church’ and ‘state’, ‘religion’ and ‘politics’.”

This is a really important point. Like it or not, we live in a plural society — in which different groups and individuals hold different, often conflicting, values. Not so long ago, the response of the liberal left to this state of affairs was to make us celebrate diversity for its own sake. But in more recent years (and especially since 9/11) we’ve seen a different, more intolerant attitude. Instead of allowing culture clashes to be settled at the ballot box (or through other public choice mechanisms ) aggressive secularists would like to exclude certain worldviews from the public square altogether — the democratic equivalent of pre-match fixing.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


The Global Boom in Wind Energy

Wind energy provides 3 percent of the global demand for electricity and will soon be delivering more electricity than nuclear power plants. Investment last year amounted to 50 million euros.

Wind energy is booming around the world. In Spain and Denmark, wind energy provides 20 percent of the electricity supply and in Germany 10 percent. Experts predict that the figure will rise to between 20 and 25 percent in Germany by 2020.

According to statistics released by the World Wind Energy Association (WWEA), wind turbines with a total output capacity of around 40 gigawatts were newly deployed last year. By the end of 2011, global output was around 237 gigawatts. This equates to the energy output of around 280 nuclear power plants. To compare: there are currently some 380 nuclear power plants around the world — but that’s a figure which will diminish as nuclear power plants are decommissioned over the next few years.

The increase in capacity is proceeding quickly: every year there are 20 percent more turbines and the WWEA forecasts that output will quadruple to over 1,000 gigawatts by 2020.

Chinais taking a leading role in this process: in 2011, almost half of the new capacity was created there and it’s now ahead of both the US and Germany as the leading wind-energy nation in absolute terms. But EU countries like Denmark, Spain and Germany beat China on wind energy per head.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UN Plans to Control the Arms Trade

The United Nations are negotiating a treaty to control the global arms trade for conventional weapons. Germany wants the regulations to cover the trade in small arms and ammunition.

The arms trade is, by its very nature, crisis-proof. Weapons manufacturers make more than six billion dollars a year from the sale of tanks and guns, ammunition and fighter jets. Dictators and conflict parties turn to the international market to supply the tools they need to wage wars, or oppress their people. Syria is one current example. The Assad regime is able to maintain its tyrannical rule thanks primarily to weapons imports from Russia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Why Smart People Are Stupid

by Jonah Lehrer

Here’s a simple arithmetic question: A bat and ball cost a dollar and ten cents. The bat costs a dollar more than the ball. How much does the ball cost? The vast majority of people respond quickly and confidently, insisting the ball costs ten cents. This answer is both obvious and wrong. (The correct answer is five cents for the ball and a dollar and five cents for the bat.)

For more than five decades, Daniel Kahneman, a Nobel Laureate and professor of psychology at Princeton, has been asking questions like this and analyzing our answers. His disarmingly simple experiments have profoundly changed the way we think about thinking. While philosophers, economists, and social scientists had assumed for centuries that human beings are rational agents-reason was our Promethean gift-Kahneman, the late Amos Tversky, and others, including Shane Frederick (who developed the bat-and-ball question), demonstrated that we’re not nearly as rational as we like to believe.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120702

Financial Crisis
» Crisis Damage Like a War, Say Italy’s Employers
» ECB Banksters Introduce New Concept: Negative Interest Rates
» Eugenics, Stimulus and Chaos
» Greece: Young Engineers Look for Work Abroad
» Greek Cypriot President Puts Blame on Greece
» Monti Wins Fight for EU Help With Borrowing Costs
» Spain Headed for Heavy Cuts to Medicines
» The Way Banking Used to be
» UK: We Were Betrayed by Our ‘Trusted Adviser’: 28,000 Small Firms Fell Victim to Another Cynical Bank Fiddle
 
USA
» American Muslims Stone Christians in Dearborn, Michigan
» American Christians Cursed and Violently Assaulted by American Muslims
» Audio: Chrislam — Do Christians and Muslims Really Worship the Same God?
» CPUSA Says Re-Electing Obama is “Absolutely Essential”
» DeMint: ‘Obamacare’ Still Unconstitutional — States Should Refuse to Implement it
» Elderly to be Euthanized Under Obamacare?
» Merck Vaccine Fraud Exposed by Two Merck Virologists; Company Faked Mumps Vaccine Efficacy Results for Over a Decade, Says Lawsuit
» Pedestrian Thrown in Jail for 12 Hours for Holding Up Sign Warning Drivers of Speed Trap
» Police: Teaneck Man Pulled Gun on Neighbor for Farting
» Report of Investigation Fast & Furious: The Path to the White House
» The Pelican Brief With a Twist
» TSA Deliberately Recruiting, Hiring Sociopaths and Pedophiles, Says Whistleblower
» Turn in Your Guns at Your Local Church
» U.S. Army Develops Tesla-Style Lightning Bolt to Destroy Enemy Vehicle
» Voter Fraud, What Voter Fraud? Attorney General Holder and Libdems Deny Existence
 
Canada
» Happy Canada Day as Canadian Government Subsidizes Anti-Troop Video
 
Europe and the EU
» Brussels to Prevent Discrimination Non Spanish Films
» Gunman Shoots Two in France Nightclub After He is Kicked Out
» Half of German Teenagers Unable to Distinguish Between Democracy and Dictatorship
» Islam is Being Integrated More Fully in Germany
» Renewable Energy: Cyprus Not in Line With EU Rules
» Romania: What Communism Wrought
» Sharia-Islam is Islamofascism
» Stakelbeck in Europe: Inside the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafis
» UK: Bomber Command: Dambusters Survivor at Memorial Unveiling
» UK: Baroness Warsi is Cleared of Serious Ministerial Code Breach
» UK: Bee Stings Killed as Many in UK as Terrorists, Says Watchdog
» UK: Calls to Ban English Defence League March in Bristol
» UK: Community Leaders Axed From Birmingham Eid Mela Festival Committee
» UK: Dewsbury Unites to Oppose Racist EDL
» UK: Exhibition on Islamic Culture
» UK: Former City Worker Described as ‘Narcissistic Psychopath’ Jailed for Six Years After Leading Campaign of Harassment Against Ex-Girlfriend
» UK: Hackney Mosque Opens Doors to Offer Meals to Those in Need
» UK: Leicestershire Councillor Graham Partner’s Leaflet Was Breach of Conduct Code
» UK: Student Promotion of Hizb ut-Tahrir Highlights the Group’s Influence on Campus
» UK: Soldier Pallbearers Refused a Cup of Tea Before Comrade’s Funeral Because They Were in Uniform
» UK: The Far-Right Leader in a Sikh Headscarf and a Very Disturbing Anti-Muslim Alliance: EDL Joins Protesters Angry at ‘Grooming of Girls’
» UK: World’s First GM Babies Born
» UK: Whistleblower Reveals Plan to Evacuate London During Olympics
 
North Africa
» Egypt: How Women Are Targeted by Gangs in Egypt’s Tahrir Square
» Food: Algeria Imports 60% of Requirements
» Frank Gaffney: Who ‘Lost’ Egypt?
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» 20 Years on: ‘The Legendary Moto Guzzi’ Is Back
» Arab Rage: Putin Recognized Jerusalem’s Jewish Past
» Chazan: Democracy is Not Majority Rule
 
Middle East
» Bombs Kill 13 in Iraq, Wound More Than 50
» Caroline Glick: About Those Jews…
» Hegemons Seeking to Undermine Iran to Contain Islamic Awakening — Leader
» Syria: Downed Jet Was Flying With Another Plane: CHP Deputy
» The Al-Qaeda-Muslim Brotherhood Coalition
» Tony Blair: We Can’t Ignore the Middle East’s Hunger for Change
» Troops Are Piling Up on Both Sides of the Syria-Turkey Border as Tensions Escalate
» Turkey Increases Its Military Presence at Syrian Border
» Turkish Cypriot “Subservient” To Ankara, Talat Says
 
South Asia
» Canadian Military Police Cleared in Afghanistan Abuse Report
» Carabiniere Killed in Afghanistan
» India: Kareena Won’t Convert to Islam to Marry Saif
» Maldives Sees Islamist Resurgence
» Rape Case in Afghanistan Turns Focus on Local Police
 
Far East
» China’s Cops Get Gatling Guns
» China Seeks to be OIC Observer
» Uighurs Attempt Hijacking With Broken Crutch, Bid Foiled
 
Australia — Pacific
» Australia: Facebook Page Aims to Inflame Muslim Tensions
» Gina Rinehart Saves the World
» Hostel in Australia Refuses to Take Irish
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Mali: Tuareg, Islamist Rebels Clash in Northern Mali
» Nigeria: Why Churches Are Target of Bombings — Police
 
Latin America
» Luis Fleischmann: The Lugo Case and Its Discontents: A Symptom of Regional Pathology
» Luis Fleischmann and Nancy Menges: The Next Mexican President and the ‘War on Drugs’
» Paraguay “Coup” Averted Marxist Takeover
 
Immigration
» Australia Debates Bill to Allow Asylum Seekers to be Processed Offshore
» Diane Sawyer’s Bias in Favor of Illegal Migration
 
Culture Wars
» Should Playboy Playmate Have Received ‘Genius’ Visa? Controversy After Former Girlfriend of Hugh Hefner Granted Status for ‘Extraordinary Ability’
 
General
» Mutated Pests Are Quickly Adapting to Biotech Crops in Unpredicted and Disturbing Ways
» The Eco-Mosque Checklist — 7 Steps to a Greener Mosque

Financial Crisis


Crisis Damage Like a War, Say Italy’s Employers

Recession is hitting ‘vital parts’, prosperity down 10%

(ANSA) — Rome, June 28 — The economic damage being caused by the ongoing financial crisis is comparable with that provoked by a war, Italy’s industrial employers’ confederation Confindustria said on Thursday.

“Even though we are not at war, the economic damage caused up to now by the crisis is equivalent to a conflict and the most vital, precious parts of Italy’s economic system are being hit,” said a report by Confindustria’s study centre.

It said Italians will have lost a tenth of their prosperity by the end of next year because of the economic crisis.

“In 2013 Italy will find itself with a level of prosperity, measured in per capita gross domestic product, that is on average 10% lower than in 2007 (before the start of the crisis),” read the report. The report added that this loss would be “difficult to recover without incisive reforms that put the country back on track for growth of over 2%”.

It also said that 1.276 million jobs had been lost between the start of the crisis in 2008 and the beginning of this year and added that this figure is set to rise to 1.482 million by the end of 2013. Unemployment will climb to 10.9% by the end of this year, Confindustria forecast.

And while stressing that Italy’s public finances have improved “markedly” following Premier Mario Monti’s austerity package of tax hikes and spending cuts, it said the country is not on course to meet the government’s target of balancing the budget next year. The report said that the public deficit will be 1.6% of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2013. It said the deficit will be 2.6% of GDP this year because the recession will have a negative impact on the public finances. The government said the 2013 deficit would be 0.1% of GDP when it presented the austerity package in December but subsequently revised the forecast to 0.5% while stressing that this would still technically be a balanced budget as it falls within EU limits. Confindustria added that the tax hikes will take Italy’s tax burden up to 54.2% in 2012 and 54.6% in 2013.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



ECB Banksters Introduce New Concept: Negative Interest Rates

It’s a sure sign fractional reserve banking is on the rocks. It looks like European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will cut ECB interest rates below zero.

In other words, instead of realizing a return by holding money in a bank — albeit at a miniscule 0.25% as the Fed currently does — the ECB will charge institutional customers to use their money.

Go figure.

But here’s the logic, according to Bloomberg:

If the deposit rate was cut to zero or lower, it would discourage banks from parking excess liquidity with the ECB overnight, potentially prompting them to lend the cash instead. Almost 800 billion euros ($1 trillion) is being deposited with the ECB each day.

On the other hand, a deposit rate cut could hurt banks’ profitability by lowering money-market rates, potentially hampering credit supply to companies and households and reducing banks’ incentive to lend to other financial institutions.

In fact, the blood sucking vampire squid — otherwise known as Goldman Sachs — admits this scheme is nothing more than smoke and mirrors designed to boost short term confidence. “By demonstrating its willingness to play a part in sustaining the euro, the ECB may hope to boost confidence in the current fragile environment,” Goldman explains.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Eugenics, Stimulus and Chaos

More tax payers were created, wages were suppressed, marriage was deferred or destroyed and babies were not born. Those born were damaged by divorce and the public school industry of management and conditioning. As children dwindled in number content disappeared from schools and public discourse, other forms of hunger and deficit. The media culture, harbinger of the ‘information age’ (garbage in, garbage out) immersed life in a storm of imagery, illusion and delusion: lifestyles replaced life. Art became a ‘pack rat’s’ tower of junk, mockingly thrust in the face of everyone and awarded ‘genius grants.’

[…]

The over-stimulated society is a culture of sterility and death. It is hollow: it gives the lie to the “sustainability” about which sensitive types are endlessly twittering, cued though few of them know it by the Directorate which delights to see its puppets traipsing like zombies toward Donkey Island. Faces are displaced by Facebook, true knowledge by information technology, and the ‘Constitutional right to privacy’ has by logic brought forth a culture of total transparency as identity fails before identity theft. The West ends as it began, in identity theft and false values. The flag is waved ever more frenziedly in highly scripted ceremonies by those who once spit on it and the term ‘freedom’ barely disguises an authoritarian cult sliding toward the total coverage of a global petrifact. Soon whatever is not forbidden will be mandatory. The financial corollary of hate crimes, speech crimes, ‘racial profiling’ and ‘harassment’ are currency controls and government mandates to purchase ‘insurance’ and ration coupons.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Young Engineers Look for Work Abroad

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JUNE 21 — Four in 10 graduates from the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) are looking for work abroad, according to a survey conducted for a conference on job prospects for civil engineers, which is due to take place in the capital Thursday as daily Kathimerini reports. Some 600 NTUA graduates were questioned as part of the survey. The results show that 42% of respondents said they were already looking for work abroad, a development that experts attribute to the collapse of the construction industry in Greece. “They are asking for Greek engineers in large numbers in France and Germany,” the NTUA’s vice rector of academic affairs, Tonia Moropoulou, told Kathimeriniri. “They have an advantage in that they study for five years. There is more demand for graduates who have studied for five years; they earn a higher salary too.” Moropoulou underlined that employment opportunities for engineers in Greece had become severely limited over the last few years as a result of the sharp decline in building activity.

Almost 160,000 jobs have been lost in the construction sector during the crisis. About 400,000 people were involved in the sector in 2008, but this has dropped to 242,000, which is lower than the number of Greeks working in the construction industry in 1998. About 6,500 jobs are being lost in the sector each month.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek Cypriot President Puts Blame on Greece

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JUNE 25 — Greek Cyprus President Demetris Christofias on blamed yesterday the island’s economic troubles on Greece’s woes and insisted that reforms by his government would check a growing public deficit. “The economy of (Greek) Cyprus continues to have healthy foundations despite the problems, distortions and inequalities accumulated over the years,” the Communist politician told Greek To Vima weekly in an interview. Greek Cyprus takes over the European Union’s rotating presidency on July 1. Estimates are that it needs around 4.0 billion euros to prop up its banks and help narrow the budget deficit, which widened last year to double the EU ceiling of three percent of gross domestic product (GDP). “Cyprus is not facing the prospect of entering (a rescue) mechanism because of the fiscal state of the economy but because of the need to recapitalise Cypriot banks which have important exposure to the Greek economy,” Christofias said. “In every downgrade of the Cypriot economy the exposure of our banks to Greece is portrayed as the main cause,” he said. Christofias said reforms already undertaken would bring the deficit to “around 3%” from 6.5% in 2011, with the aim of trimming it further to “as close to 2.5% as possible.” Cyprus will ask Russia for a loan of up to 5.0 billion euros this week and then request aid from eurozone partners for its ailing banks, an EU diplomat said Wednesday.

The crisis-hit Greek Cyprus will “first try to get a bilateral loan from Russia,” said the diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. Cyprus would then probably request eurozone aid for its banks next week along the lines of an offer made to Spain, he said. The government is already committed to underwriting a 1.8 billion euro capital issue for the island’s worst exposed institution — Marfin Popular Bank — to recapitalize against the Greek debt crisis.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Monti Wins Fight for EU Help With Borrowing Costs

Italy and Spain can get rescue funds to support bonds

(ANSA) — Brussels, June 29 — Italian Premier Mario Monti and his Spanish counterpart Mariano Rajoy won their battle to have European Union rescue funds used to reduce their borrowing costs when necessary at a crunch summit on the eurozone crisis on Friday.

Italy has seen its borrowing costs rise in recent months, even though it has introduced structural economic reforms and taken measures to restore health to its public finances, because of fears it is vulnerable to contagion from other countries in the middle of the crisis.

Monti and Rajoy had threatened not to back an agreement for a 120-billion-euro package to stoke growth in Europe unless German Chancellor Angela Merkel dropped her opposition to the proposal. Under the deal, which was clinched in the early hours of Friday following lengthy talks that started on Thursday afternoon, it will be possible for countries that respect EU budget rules to request that rescue funds be used to buy their bonds, thus easing pressure on them.

A country requesting bond support would have to sign an agreement outlining their policy commitments, but they would not be obliged to undertake extra austerity measures or economic reforms.

The summit also agreed to create a single supervisory body for eurozone banks, which is seen as the first step towards a European banking union.

Earlier this month the EU agreed to lend Spain up to 100 billion euros to support its struggling banks.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain Headed for Heavy Cuts to Medicines

Healthcare reform calls for contribution even for retirees

(ANSAmed) — MADRID — Spain’s healthcare system is tightening its belt. Beginning on July 1, Spaniards will have to pay the full price of 456 widely-used medicines which had up until now been covered by public funds. This was reported by Spanish media today, with El Pais carrying the news on its front page. Healthcare Minister Ana Mato said that the aim was to save the 440 million euros necessary to keep public funding for therapies required for serious illnesses. Among the medicines struck off the publicly-funded list are ones such as antibiotics for coughing, hemorrhoid treatment, anti-herpes creams, and laxatives. The reform also calls for most retirees with free access to medicine to have to pay an average of 10% of the medicine for the first time

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Way Banking Used to be

In the “good old days,” commercial banks made loans from the deposits customers placed in checking and savings accounts (and certificates of deposit, etc.). The general consensus was that if you loaned only 70 percent of deposits, you would always have enough cash on hand to deal with the daily needs of people who needed cash. That consensus proved to be true. Other transactions — like clearing checks so people could pay their bills — was a computer transaction that could be cleared at the end of the month. Daily cash wasn’t absolutely necessary for that function.

Regulations were strict and they were enforced… those last three words are key to understanding one of the major reasons for our current financial mess. Today, regulations are not enforced. That is especially true during times the government wants to implement new regulatory controls. They ignore the regulations that are on the books and when things fall apart they demand new regulations be created. Why do they do this? In my opinion, they use this ruse when they need to cover something up… need to pass new regulations that will prevent the public from finding an error or an unlawful action taken — I believe that the Dodd Frank Bill was passed to cover up unlawful foreclosures and all of the actions taken that made foreclosures possible in the first place. Or, like the time the Federal Reserve gave its permission for investment banks to join with commercial banks on Wall Street when the Fed had absolutely no authority over the investment banking community and legally could not take such an action. When they passed legislation to allow the Fed to do what it had done six months earlier, they grandfathered the law to the date of the occurrence.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: We Were Betrayed by Our ‘Trusted Adviser’: 28,000 Small Firms Fell Victim to Another Cynical Bank Fiddle

Britain’s banking giants were yesterday found guilty of a systematic exploitation of up to 28,000 small businesses which has left many facing bankruptcy.

On another day of shame for the banks, the Financial Services Authority accused the big four — Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland, HSBC and Lloyds — of ‘serious failings’.

Since 2001, the banks have ruthlessly mis-sold complex loan deals to entrepreneurs who did not understand what they were doing, the City regulator said.

Many small businesses who wanted to take out a loan were told they could only get one if they also took out an ‘interest rate swap agreement’.

They were told it would protect them against interest rate fluctuations. If the rate rose, the bank would compensate them. But, when the base rate fell to an historic low of 0.5 per cent, they had to pay compensation to the bank. This landed the firms with crippling costs they could never have budgeted for.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


American Muslims Stone Christians in Dearborn, Michigan

This extremely disturbing video shows what happened when a group of Christians tried merely to hold up signs about Christianity at the 2012 Dearborn, Michigan Arab Festival. The Christians were viciously attacked, verbally and physically, and ultimately stoned (see 9:30 minutes into the video).

Despite the U.S. Constitution that guarantees freedom of religion, the police, who studiously ignored the mob violence, asked the sign-holders to leave saying they were “endangering the public.” No police action was taken against the mob.

Despite losing two similar Freedom of Speech lawsuits in the past (one of which cost the City of Dearborn $100,000), the city refused to protect the sign-holders’ constitutional rights, claiming lack of manpower. According to the police chief, two police officiers would have been needed to protect the Christians. The chief said this would be impossible, since there was a big crowd to watch. Ironically, there was no violence or threat of violence (hence no need for police presence or protection) at any other location at the festival except where the Christians were holding their signs.

At the end of the video, you will see the police threaten to arrest the Christians (who, incidentally, never retaliated at the mob). After the Christians leave with a police convoy as an escort, their car is stopped and 12 officers appear to question and possibly arrest them.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



American Christians Cursed and Violently Assaulted by American Muslims

In a disturbing video that the Paulding County Republican Examiner received this morning via the United West organization revealed Christians holding signs all the while being physically attacked at the 2012 Dearborn, Michigan Arab Festival. They were assaulted with bottles, eggs, crates, stones, and other objects while police stood by and made no arrests or intervened.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Audio: Chrislam — Do Christians and Muslims Really Worship the Same God?

Bill Salus and Eric Barger met for the first time recently while sharing a platform together at the Midnight Cry Prophecy Conference hosted by Dean Myers at the Harbor of Hope Church in Clairsville Ohio. This meeting took place on April 20, 2012. Bill was fascinated by Eric’s teaching on the Emergent Church, and its offshoot sick-twisted-sister called Chrislam, which is an attempt by some Christian leaders to join Christianity and Islam at the hip. In this two part installment of Prophecy Update Radio, Bill and Eric analyze Chrislam and alert the listeners to its hidden dangers.

Some of the questions addressed are:

  • WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN GOD OF THE BIBLE, JEHOVAH / AND THE GOD OF THE KORAN (ALLAH)?
  • ISN’T THE KORAN RIDDLED WITH NUMEROUS MISREPRENTATIONS?
  • HOW DOES ISLAM VIEW CHRIST?
  • WHO IS INVOLVED IN THE CHRISLAM MOVEMENT?
  • WHAT IS THE UNDERLYING MOTIVES FOR ATTEMPTING TO MERGE CHRISTIANITY WITH ISLAM?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



CPUSA Says Re-Electing Obama is “Absolutely Essential”

A writer for the Communist Party USA says that “…re-electing Obama is absolutely essential,” and warns that “divisions among Democrats and a potential wave of bad economic news can combine to threaten President Obama’s reelection.”

Marxist John Case, who writes for various CPUSA publications, has written a piece, “The danger of a Romney election [1],” for the party publication People’s World, which warns that “Re-electing Obama is not sufficient to bring economic recovery or even relief to our people. Only a different class configuration in political power can do necessary minimum reforms to give us a chance. But re-electing Obama is absolutely essential. Now is not the time for hand washing the complexities and tactics away—or failing to triage the most critical questions from those that are less critical. We cannot win everything at once!”

In reality, the CPUSA’s endorsement of Obama for a second term is not surprising. Various CPUSA officials, including Jarvis Tyner and Joelle Fishman, have openly expressed support for the U.S. President and his agenda.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



DeMint: ‘Obamacare’ Still Unconstitutional — States Should Refuse to Implement it

Today, U.S. Senator DeMint (R-South Carolina) made the following statement:

“The Supreme Court may have failed to stop this government takeover of health care, but the American people will not. Since the day this law was rammed through Congress, the American people have demanded repeal, and today’s ruling doesn’t make Obamacare any less dangerous to our nation’s health. Freedom-loving Americans are disappointed, but we cannot be discouraged.

“The President’s health care law must be fully repealed as all of its promises have proven false. We were told it was not a tax hike, but this ruling confirms it is an unprecedented and enormous tax on the poor and middle class Americans. President Obama needs to explain why he is enacting this middle class tax hike over the objections of the American people during the worst economic recovery since the Great Depression.

“We were told it would lower health costs, but health care premiums are exploding. We were told that Americans could keep their personal health plans, but millions will now lose it. We were told it would improve our economy, but it is now the largest obstacle to employers hiring new workers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Elderly to be Euthanized Under Obamacare?

If Britain’s socialist healthcare system is a benchmark for what we can expect from Obamacare, hundreds of thousands of elderly patients face being euthanized through “assisted death” techniques designed to cut costs.

The idea that “death panels” would be introduced through Obamacare as a means of rationing healthcare was discussed during an Aspen Institute conference in 2010 when Bill Gates argued that money should not be spent on treating the elderly.

During a question and answer session, Gates implied that elderly patients undergoing expensive health care treatments should be killed and the money spent elsewhere.

Gates said there was a “lack of willingness” to consider the question of choosing between “spending a million dollars on that last three months of life for that patient” or laying off ten teachers.

“But that’s called the death panel and you’re not supposed to have that discussion,” added Gates.

However, Britain’s socialist healthcare system under the NHS has gone light years beyond death panels and actually introduced a method of “care” that actually has the intended effect of euthanizing patients.

In a recent exposé, Patrick Pullicino, a consultant neurologist for East Kent Hospitals and professor of clinical neurosciences at the University of Kent, revealed that of the 450,000 patients who die annually under the care of the NHS, 130,000 of them were on the Liverpool Care Pathway [aka starvation death.]

Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP) is a process whereby a doctor identifies a patient who is likely to die and that patient is then heavily sedated while treatment is withdrawn, “including the provision of water and nourishment by tube.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Merck Vaccine Fraud Exposed by Two Merck Virologists; Company Faked Mumps Vaccine Efficacy Results for Over a Decade, Says Lawsuit

(NaturalNews) Breaking news: According to two Merck scientists who filed a False Claims Act complaint in 2010 — a complaint which has just now been unsealed — vaccine manufacturer Merck knowingly falsified its mumps vaccine test data, spiked blood samples with animal antibodies, sold a vaccine that actually promoted mumps and measles outbreaks, and ripped off governments and consumers who bought the vaccine thinking it was “95% effective.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pedestrian Thrown in Jail for 12 Hours for Holding Up Sign Warning Drivers of Speed Trap

A woman in Houston, Texas, was arrested and jailed for 12 hours after she held up a make-shift sign to warn drivers about a speed trap.

Natalie Plummer was officially charged with walking in the roadway — jaywalking, essentially — though she says the police officers who arrested her were just angry that she had tipped off speeders.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Police: Teaneck Man Pulled Gun on Neighbor for Farting

Teaneck, NJ .An elderly man was arrested Monday night after a neighbor’s fart allegedly drove him to threaten him with a gun, police said.

Daniel Collins, 72, had been involved in an ongoing dispute with the unidentified neighbor for some time, Det. Lt. Andrew McGurr told NJ.com. The neighbor told officers that Collins pointed a revolver at him in the vestibule of their apartment building at 694 Cedar Lane at around 9:25 p.m.

Collins said he confronted the man after hearing him pass gas in front of his apartment door, but denied threatening him with a gun. He consented to a search, and officers recovered a .32 caliber revolver from his vehicle.

He was arrested and charged with aggravated assault, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, unlawful possession of a firearm and making terroristic threats.

He was released after being processed, McGurr said.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Report of Investigation Fast & Furious: The Path to the White House

April 2009 CLAIM: Barack Obama, Eric Holder & Hillary Clinton publicly claim 90% of guns in Mexico come from U.S. Obama orders Holder to assess U.S. gun sales. The objective of Operation Fast & Furious was to substantiate these false claims, to enact stronger GUN CONTROL and attack Second Amendment rights.

See Full Report (PDF)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Pelican Brief With a Twist

It is the stated goal of both the communists and the Islamic terrorists to destroy the free, representative republic known as the United States of America. Perhaps more appropriate, to turn the nation into a communist country or see the flag of Islam flying over the White House and all of America, a step toward the oppression of global governance. Read the Communist goals that were read into the Congressional Record in 1963, and look how many of those objectives have already been accomplished and implemented. Is that a conspiracy theory? I contend that anyone with reasonable sensibilities would agree that the objectives and their implementation is based in fact.

With regard to Islam, look at the charter of the Muslim Brotherhood, and note that the Muslim Brotherhood has infiltrated the U.S. State Department much like the Communists in the McCarthy era. Ten years after 9/11, we now have Islamic representatives influencing and dictating security to the Department of Homeland Security. Could this be purely oversight? I don’t think so.

Note that the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) is fully backing a second term of Barack Obama, further calling it “imperative” that he is reelected. During Obama’s first term, we’ve seen some of the most overt Marxist and Communist leaning initiatives launched by Obama, with nary a peep from our elected officials on either side of the aisle. How is that possible?

[…]

I contend that our country is filled with enemies of the rule of law, the U.S. Constitution, who are working against the principles on which our once proud country stood. If you cannot see the changes, you can certainly feel them. If you cannot feel them, then it is my contention that your moral compass needs to be recalibrated.

The Republican-Democrat, right-left paradigm touted by so many television and radio mouthpieces is essentially dead. It has been replaced with an Oligarchy, a nation of powerbrokers, “kleptocrats,” and “banksters.” Most leaders of America have succumbed to greed and power.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



TSA Deliberately Recruiting, Hiring Sociopaths and Pedophiles, Says Whistleblower

According to “Rob,” a TSA supervisor-turned-whistleblower, in an interview with the Alex Jones Show, the agency’s brass is directing staff to hire degenerates — people with criminal records who have exhibited violent tendencies and psychopathic behavior.

How do you like air travel now?

During the interview, Rob talked about his job, which entailed filing reports on TSA screeners who did not follow agency procedures. He said he was alarmed by the fact that the agency was hiring a number of criminals who he said exhibited the behavior of “psychopaths.”

“We have a program in the state of Rhode Island where we take prisoners who are out for non-violent drug offenses and everything else — basically sociopaths — and we’re sending them to a ten-day course and getting them in uniform checking out people,” the whistleblower said.

He noted that people who presented themselves very professionally were often passed over in favor of applicants who had spent time in jail and who had megalomaniacal, power-trip tendencies.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turn in Your Guns at Your Local Church

Last weekend, the Chicago Police Department collaborated with over 20 local churches in a giant effort to encourage Chicagoans “to get guns out of their homes.” WBBM News Radio has the story. “Using the lure of $100 gift cards, the Chicago Police Department is encouraging people to get guns out of their homes and turn them in this Saturday, during the annual gun turn-in program.”

The news report goes on to say, “[T]he Police Department is partnering with 20 churches.

First Deputy Supt. Alfonza Wysinger says anyone who turns in a real gun will get a $100 gift card. Replicas and BB guns are worth $10.

[…]

But I particularly enjoyed a few of the comments that readers posted to the online report:

One guy wrote, “Gun thieves will be lined up for blocks.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S. Army Develops Tesla-Style Lightning Bolt to Destroy Enemy Vehicle

The United States Army’s team of scientists are busy at work developing a device that will shoot lightning bolts down laser beams to destroy its target.

And they are doing it with gusto — announcing their work with a hearty: ‘Soldiers and science fiction fans, you’re welcome.’

The Laser-Induced Plasma Channel, or LIPC, is designed to take out targets that conduct electricity better than the air or ground that surrounds them.

And the research is a lot of work, but as George Fischer, lead scientist on the project, said: ‘We never got tired of the lightning bolts zapping our (simulated) targets.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Voter Fraud, What Voter Fraud? Attorney General Holder and Libdems Deny Existence

In a January 26, 2012 column, “Ballot Box Zombies”, Deroy Murdock, National Review Online contributing editor and nationally syndicated columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service states in that online publication, “Liberals love to laugh off voter fraud.

Murdock continued, ‘But the recent news is not so funny’, explaining how easily anybody can vote for dead American citizens; and it was found that in some cases, the total ballots cast exceeded the winning margins confirming the need for voters to prove their identity by means of photo ID, just as they are required to do on many occasions any other day by other seemingly less critical situations, I have experienced, as simple as cashing a check at the local bank.

And he was right, because a young investigative journalist named James O’Keefe sent his organization, Project Veritas, to rock-solid and normally scandal-free New Hampshire during its primary voting season earlier this year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Happy Canada Day as Canadian Government Subsidizes Anti-Troop Video

The best gift the Canadian government can give Canadians is to defund and defang treasonous groups sucking on the public teat.

It’s Canada Day here in the liberty-loving Land of the Maple Leaf and Canada Day 2012 has been stained by the release of a video celebrating the slaughter of Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan while portraying the Taliban as heroes.

Thanks to National Post investigative journalist Stuart Bell, news of Montreal rapper Manu Militari’s video release came before Canada Day’s fireworks displays in thousands of cities and towns.

That’s the video, but ‘Manu ‘Militari’ staged the release of the allbum song “L’Attente” the video celebrates for the 11th anniversary of September 11, 2001.

“While some are understandably offended, the song would likely have been ignored were Manu Militari not a subsidized rapper who had received more than $100,000 from a group funded by the Canadian Heritage department.“ (Stuart Bell, June 29, 2012). “A spokesman for James Moore, the Minister of Canadian Heritage, said Friday the money had been handed out by the federally-funded non-profit MusicAction and officials were “looking at options” to ensure it did not happen again.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Brussels to Prevent Discrimination Non Spanish Films

Catalan Law requires additional costs to european works

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 21 — The European Commission has asked Spain to put an end to the discriminatory rules which prevent the distribution of non-Spanish films. The Commission considers that the legislation in question, the Catalan Law on cinema, is incompatible with the EU rules on the free movement of services.

This law requires 50 % of films to be distributed in Catalonia in Catalan (including original, dubbed and sub-titled versions), except for films in Spanish which are exempt from that obligation, which has the effect of making the circulation in Spain of non-Spanish European works more expensive, and therefore more difficult. For the European films concerned, the law entails an additional cost of between 25,000 euros and 77,000 euros for dubbing, or between 2,000 euros and 5,730 euros for sub-titling, which increases the cost and therefore renders access to the Spanish market more difficult for non-Spanish European films. The Commission’s request to Spain takes the form of a reasoned opinion. The national authorities must notify the Commission within two months that they have put an end to the discriminatory rules. If they fail to do so, the Commission may refer the case to the Court of Justice of the European Union.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gunman Shoots Two in France Nightclub After He is Kicked Out

LILLE, France: A gunman shot dead two people at a nightclub in northern France Sunday in an apparent revenge attack after he was kicked out of the disco, police and local officials said. The man, who was “known to police,” had been thrown out of the Theatro club in the heart of Lille but returned about 3 a.m. and opened fire with a Kalashnikov-style weapon, a local official said.

Police were searching for him and an accomplice, who drove him away from the disco.

A cloakroom attendant, aged 26, and a 27-year-old customer were killed and another six people including the club bouncer were injured.

Police said the attacker, who appeared to have acted alone, had fled in a car after the shooting, and that a manhunt had been launched.

An AFP journalist at the scene said police had barred access to the club. Several empty cartridges lay littered nearby and the walls were pockmarked by bullets.

“We were on the dance floor when we heard a big bang and there was a great stampede,” said one nightclub attendee who gave his name as Jeremy.

“At first I thought it was a firecracker. I went to the entrance to see what was happening and I saw a person lying on the floor in a pool of blood,” he said, adding that about 200 to 300 people were in the club at the time.

“We are disgusted, this is not the Bronx here,” said another patron, who gave his name as Mohammad.

He said the shooter was “crazy, a client who came back with a weapon” just because he “couldn’t bear being chucked out by the bouncer.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Half of German Teenagers Unable to Distinguish Between Democracy and Dictatorship

About half of young Germans are unsure whether the Nazi state was a dictatorship — and even more are not sure whether the socialist East German regime was one, a new study shows.

The widespread ignorance is described in a study called, “Late Victory of the Dictatorships?” conducted by researchers at Berlin’s Free University.

“This is shocking,” said study author Klaus Schroeder. More than 7,500 school pupils aged around 15 were asked how they viewed the various governments that have ruled Germany.

Only around half were definite that the Nazi government was a dictatorship. Just over a third were certain that the former East German government was also a dictatorship.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Islam is Being Integrated More Fully in Germany

by Lewis Gropp

Two years ago, then-German President Christian Wulff stated that Islam was part of Germany, creating an uproar among more conservative followers of his Christian Democratic Union. Then, defying reason, Joachim Gauck, Germany’s new president, stated earlier this year that Muslims are part of Germany, but that he would not say Islam was. But with more than 4 million Muslims in Germany, and the principle of religious freedom enshrined in the country’s constitution, how could Islam possibly not be part of Germany? Behind the scenes, decisive steps are being taken institutionally to make Islam a more integrated part of Germany. Two years ago, the German Council for Science and Humanities recommended that Islamic theology be taught at German universities, along with training for imams and religious teachers. This was a decisive step toward the creation of an authentic German Islam — demonstrating that German culture and Muslim identity need not be in conflict.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Renewable Energy: Cyprus Not in Line With EU Rules

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JUNE 22 — Cyprus is among the member states that have not yet informed the European Commission of all the measures necessary to fully transpose the renewable energy Directive into their national legislation. According to the Commission, as Famagusta Gazette reports, increasing the share of renewable energy to 20% in the EU energy consumption by 2020 relies on the commitment of Member States to fully implement the requirements of EU legislation. The Renewable Energy Directive had to be transposed by Member States by 5 December 2010. The timely transposition of this Directive is a priority for the Commission, especially since unnecessary delays in implementing it may jeopardize the achievement of the EU renewable energy objective. However, Cyprus, Ireland, Malta and Slovenia have not informed the Commission of all the measures necessary to fully transpose the Directive into their national legislation.

Therefore, the Commission has decided yesterday to send Reasoned Opinions to these Member States. If the Member States do not comply with their legal obligation within two months, the Commission may decide to refer them to the Court of Justice.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Romania: What Communism Wrought

Today my Dad would have been 84 years old. I still mourn his tragic and premature death at the hands of communist goons who took over the country of my birth and terrorized people for 41 years. Dad was barely 61 and healthy.

The benevolent dictator Ceausescu ruled Romania with an iron fist, lording over the frightened and defenseless population. His portrait was everywhere next to his hideous wife, “the Mother of the Country.” She had given herself that title along with a Ph.D. in chemistry. A fifth grade dropout, she had grandiose ideas of her faux accomplishments.

Dad hated Nicolae Ceausescu and his co-dictator wife, Elena, with a passion. He never hid his utter disdain for the arrogant, narcissistic, and uneducated couple who rose from the poverty of community organizing with empty promises of paternal and maternal care for the weak, the poor, and the downtrodden, to a life-style of the rich and famous.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sharia-Islam is Islamofascism

[Translated by JP]

The Rostock historian, Egon Flaig, characterises Islam as “presently the most dangerous rightwing radicalism of the world,” as that which follows Sharia. An Islam of this sort does not belong to Europe, he writes in a ‘clarification’ for the news magazine “Focus.”

Sharia law created a ‘religious system of apartheid’, in that it designated Muslims as masters while classifying people of other faiths as subordinate. The latter had fewer rights, their witness statements before the Court did not count against Muslims. They were not allowed to practice self-defence should they be attacked by Muslims. They had to wear identification marks on their clothes, a later development was the Jewish star.

Flaig compares these handicaps with the ideology of the Nationalsocialists, who made a racial distinction between a master race and subhumans. To this must be added the command in the Sharia to disseminate this system throughout the world, also with the help of jihad. “This Islam has never belonged to Europe.” On the contrary European culture resulted from the successful defence against Muslim invasions.

The historian identifies three characteristics of European culture and its sources:

  • From Greek antiquity came republicanism and scientific inquiry;

    The concept of universal human rights developed in the ‘context of Christian evangelism’;

Flaig goes on: “Talk of ‘our Judeo-Christian culture’ is just as ignorant as is the statement … Europe also stands on the legs of the Islamic Orient.”

Egon Flaig is a Professor of Ancient History since 1998, after which he taught at the University Greifswald and since 2008 at the University Rostock. He created excitement on 15 September 2006 when his article about the relationship between Islam and violence was published in the “Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung.” Here he wrote that talk of a tolerant Islam stymied the efforts of serious reformers who wished to depoliticize Islam.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck in Europe: Inside the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafis

I just returned from eight whirlwind days in Europe, including stops in London, Brussels and Germany (Cologne, Bonn and Munich, to be specific).

My goal with the trip was twofold: 1) Continue to cover the rise of Islamism/Salafism in Europe and how it will affect America’s security. 2) Glean insight into the inner workings of the Muslim Brotherhood, indisputably the world’s most influential Islamist organization.

I’m happy to report that the Stakelbeck on Terror team was able to do that and then some, to the tune of some 11 on-the-ground reports that you’ll be seeing on CBN over the next several weeks.

Click the above link for more details.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



UK: Bomber Command: Dambusters Survivor at Memorial Unveiling

One of the three remaining survivors of the Dambusters raid will be among the veterans paying homage to their 55,573 fallen comrades when the Bomber Command Memorial is unveiled by the Queen today.

George “Johnnie” Johnson is making the trip to London from his home in Bristol to join 6,500 veterans, widows and relatives remembering those who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. Mr Johnson, 90, was a bomb-aimer in a Lancaster that damaged the Sorpe dam during the legendary mission in 1943, and made his pilot Joe McCarthy to repeat his bombing run 10 times before he was satisfied enough to release his “bouncing bomb”. He will not, however, be reunited with the two other surviving airmen who flew on the raid, as they live in Canada and New Zealand and are too frail to make the trip. Mr Johnson’s son Morgan said: “He is very, very keen that people who died serving with Bomber Command should be commemorated. “He is also angry and frustrated that Bomber Command veterans seem to have been ignored by successive governments.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Baroness Warsi is Cleared of Serious Ministerial Code Breach

Conservative Party co-chairman Baroness Warsi has been cleared of any serious breach of the ministerial code over an official trip to Pakistan.

The prime minister’s adviser found she was guilty of only a “minor” breach for failing to declare she had been accompanied by her business partner. Lady Warsi, who has apologised to David Cameron, said it was time to “move on”. She is still facing a separate probe by a parliamentary watchdog over her claim for an accommodation allowance.

[…]

[JP note: It is her links with Islamic extremists which should be under scrutiny. See www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/conservative/9321540/Baroness-Warsi-and-the-extremist.html ]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Bee Stings Killed as Many in UK as Terrorists, Says Watchdog

Bee stings kill as many people in Britain as terrorist attacks do, according to a report by a Government watchdog who claims the risk from extremists has fallen “markedly” in recent years.

David Anderson said that no one has even been injured by an Islamist in this country for more than two years, while the number of convictions has dropped to a “handful”. As a result he suggested that ministers could relax some anti-terror laws without endangering public safety, such as by allowing terror suspects to apply for bail or making it harder to ban certain groups. Mr Anderson, a barrister who serves as the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, also congratulated the Coalition for scrapping tough stop and search powers and halving the maximum detention time for suspects to 14 days. But he added that the “almost incessant” creation of new legislation since 9/11 has left counter-terrorism laws “bitty, messy” and hard to understand. His optimistic view of the domestic security situation contrasts with that described by the head of MI5 earlier this week. Jonathan Evans, the Director General of the Security Service, warned that the Arab Spring has spawned a new generation of British terrorists while cyber attacks are damaging companies in the “real world”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Calls to Ban English Defence League March in Bristol

AN MP has called for a march through Bristol by the English Defence League to be banned. The controversial protest group will congregate in Castle Park on July 14, the same day as Bristol Pride’s We Are: Proud lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender event takes place on College Green. A heavy police presence is guaranteed on the day, with up to 700 officers expected to be on duty to police the events, in an operation costing as much as £1 million. But Bristol East Labour MP Kerry McCarthy has called for the EDL to be barred from marching that day, saying she fears for public safety.

She has written to the city council and Avon and Somerset police saying she is “not satisfied” public order will be maintained after the march. Ms McCarthy told the Post: “For me, this is not an issue about the freedom to protest but a matter of public safety. The clash of these two quite contradictory events on the same weekend will put our city under enormous pressure and could put public safety at risk. For this reason, I have written to the police and Bristol City Council to express my profound concern and to request that they reconsider their decision to allow the EDL to march on July 14.” The MP has attacked the organisation on her website, saying: “The EDL’s reputation for Islamophobia, intolerance and public disorder runs contrary to what Pride and vast majority of decent Bristolians stand for. “We know from their previous demonstrations in towns like Luton that EDL marches place a huge burden on the police and can lead to violence and intimidation.” Meanwhile, the activist group the Bristol Anti-Fascist network has called for people to protest against the EDL and has printed leaflets and stickers which have started to appear on lampposts and walls across the city. They claim: “The EDL is a right-wing, racist organisation intent on stirring up racial hatred, religious tensions and divisions in the UK.”

However, the EDL denies the allegations. A statement on its website says: “Our motto ‘Black and White Unite’ certainly identifies the fact that we believe in a multi-racial Britain. We have never declared support for any racist agenda, such as repatriation or exclusion from Britain based on race or skin colour, and we certainly have no plans to do so. We object to, and reject completely, the totalitarian politics of both the far Right and the far Left.” The EDL describes itself as a peaceful protest group standing up for patriotic people “fed up with Islamic Extremism, Islamism and our government’s spineless inability to address the issues”. It says it is marching in the city to raise awareness of perceived cultural problems and at previous marches this year there have been relatively few arrests.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Community Leaders Axed From Birmingham Eid Mela Festival Committee

A group of Muslim community leaders are furious that they have been dumped from the committee organising Birmingham’s annual Eid Mela celebrations. Commuity members, who have been organising the event for more than a decade, were told by the new committee chairman, Coun Majid Mahmood (Lab, Hodge Hill) that they were no longer needed and would be replaced by a committee of seven city councillors. The family event, which receives £20,000 in council sponsorship, is being held in Cannon Hill Park on September 2 featuring live music, food, art and entertainment.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Dewsbury Unites to Oppose Racist EDL

MPs, trade unionists, campaigners and community groups have called for a Celebration of Unity rally in Dewsbury on Saturday 30 June.

The call comes in response to plans by the racist thugs of the English Defence League (EDL) to “demonstrate” in the city on that Saturday. The Unity campaign has called for people to gather for a peaceful anti-racist event.

Assemble 11am, junction of Foundry Street and Market Place, Dewsbury.

Please note: The assembly time has been brought forward from 1pm.

Dewsbury Unity said in a statement:

The EDL is a racist group dedicated to attacking Asian people and Muslims. Islamophobia — bigotry against Muslims — is as unacceptable as any other form of racism. Its aim is to divide us by making scapegoats of one community, just as the Nazis did with the Jews in the 1930s.Today the EDL threaten Muslims. Tomorrow it could be Jewish people, Hindus, Sikhs, black people, lesbians and gay men, travellers or East Europeans. There is no place for Nazis, racists or the EDL in Dewsbury’s multiracial, multicultural and multi-faith community.”

The following signed the call for Dewsbury Unity event:

Huddersfield TUC (Trades Council); Kirklees UNISON; Kirklees National Union of Teachers; Pakistani and Kashmiri Welfare Association (PKWA), Batley; Leeds University Universities and Colleges Union Branch; Kirklees Unite Against Fascism; Mohammed A. Pandor (Anjuman E Zinatul Islam General Secretary); Hasan Loonat (General Secretary, Masjid-e-Noor)

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Exhibition on Islamic Culture

A FOUR day exhibition is taking place to enable people to find out more about the Islamic culture. The Islamic Exhibition will be held from Thursday to Sunday at Equality House, in Raymond Street, Shelton. One of the organisers Tayyib Musqeem, aged 40, from Grove Place, Shelton said: “We want to welcome non-Muslims as well as Muslims to come and visit the exhibition to learn a bit more about our Islamic culture. The exhibition is free to enter and will be open between 10am and 6pm daily.” Tayyib added: “We already have more than 10 schools confirmed as coming along which is a great turnout. We want to remove some of the myths surrounding our culture.” The exhibition will feature artefacts and historical documents linked with the religion. There will also be a model display of Mecca.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Former City Worker Described as ‘Narcissistic Psychopath’ Jailed for Six Years After Leading Campaign of Harassment Against Ex-Girlfriend

A twisted city worker who terrorised his ex-girlfriend’s family — stalking them with a crossbow and setting fire to their home — has been jailed indefinitely.

Al Amin Dhalla, 42, described as a ‘narcissistic psychopath’, mounted a chilling hate campaign after being dumped by 35-year-old doctor Alison Hewitt, from Brighton, East Sussex.

At one point the police were so concerned for her family’s safety that they had to be airlifted from their holiday home on Lundy Island off the Devon coast.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Hackney Mosque Opens Doors to Offer Meals to Those in Need

Worshippers at the Ramazan-I Serif mosque on Shacklewell Lane are supporting those in poverty by providing cooked meals twice a month

Once a fortnight, the Ramazan-I Serif mosque on Shacklewell Lane serves full cooked meals to the poor and those in need in Hackney. These evenings, which have grown in popularity since they started in August 2011, are now a huge success with over 80 people being served. Hackney’s mosques do all manner of community work to support their worshippers both young and old. What is unique about the Ramazan-I Serif mosque’s community meals is that they are open to all members of the wider local community in need, irrespective of their faith.

[…]

[JP note: Hackeneyed poverty jihad.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Leicestershire Councillor Graham Partner’s Leaflet Was Breach of Conduct Code

A Leicestershire councillor undermined good race relations by producing a leaflet which criticised Muslims, a watchdog has found. Councillor Graham Partner — who quit the BNP to sit as an independent — has been censured “in the strongest possible terms” for sending out the New Year message to more than 5,000 voters in his Coalville division.

The leaflet, which featured part of an article from a national newspaper, said victimhood “comes easily” to followers of Islam. The leaflet said: “Every terrorist atrocity, every blood-soaked massacre is justified by reference to imagined grievances. But the greatest persecutors of other faiths are Muslim, themselves.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Student Promotion of Hizb ut-Tahrir Highlights the Group’s Influence on Campus

Here at Student Rights we have regularly highlighted the way in which the extremist Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT) attempt to target students, including speaking on campuses and using student activists to disseminate material and promote events. This tactic was also pointed out by the Prevent Review, which stated that “we believe there is unambiguous evidence to indicate that some extremist organisations, notably Hizb-ut-Tahrir, target specific universities and colleges…with the objective of radicalising and recruiting students“.

In our recent report ‘Challenging Extremists’, we uncovered evidence of close ideological connections between a network of students and HT. This ranged from the regular sharing of HT material via student social media pages to organising events involving senior HT members.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Soldier Pallbearers Refused a Cup of Tea Before Comrade’s Funeral Because They Were in Uniform

Six soldiers who were preparing to carry the coffin of a fallen comrade killed in Afghanistan were refused a cup of tea in a bar because they were wearing military uniform.

The servicemen, one of whom was the dead soldier’s brother, had taken a short break from rehearsing their duties for the funeral of Cpl Michael Thacker. Cpl Thacker, 27, of 1st Battalion The Royal Welsh, was shot dead on June 1 while manning an observation post in the Helmand district of Nahr-e-Saraj. The father-of-one was laid to rest at Coventry Cathedral with his brother Matthew, also a serving soldier, as one of six pallbearers to carry his coffin. After rehearsing for the ceremony, the group attempted to purchase a cup of tea at Brown’s bar, near the cathedral in Coventry city centre at lunchtime. Instead, staff told the grieving friends they could not serve them because they were wearing military uniforms which broke their dress code.

The shocked servicemen said they then left the bar and went to a nearby pub which served them hot drinks for free. Bar owner Ken Brown said: “I apologise to the family. I wasn’t on the premises at the time. If I was things may have been different. “Staff were unaware of the funeral. They were just following the company’s rules. I don’t really know what else I can say.” A Facebook group calling for people to boycott the bar on Saturday, which is Armed Forces Day, had yesterday attracted a 40,000 followers.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Far-Right Leader in a Sikh Headscarf and a Very Disturbing Anti-Muslim Alliance: EDL Joins Protesters Angry at ‘Grooming of Girls’

At first, the dozen white men mingling with 300 or so Sikh demonstrators besieging Luton police station went largely unnoticed.

They stood on the fringes, content to observe. But as the night wore on and the intensity of the protest increased, the white men grew more raucous and aggressive.

What was remarkable about their presence was that they were members of the far-Right English Defence League.

They had turned up to express support for their Sikh ‘brothers’ who were angry at the way detectives had handled an allegation that a young Sikh woman had been sexually assaulted by a Muslim man.

The EDL makes no secret that it loathes Islamism, but stresses that, unlike the British National Party, it embraces all other creeds.

That said, when EDL supporters have taken to the streets in the past they have done so with St George’s flags and banners bearing inflammatory slogans.

More…

In Luton all 12 men, including EDL leader Tommy Robinson and his right-hand man Kevin Carroll, wore a rumal, the traditional Sikh headscarf.

That night — May 29 — racial tensions had risen in the multicultural town and this time it was Luton’s usually equable Sikh community that was angry.

Bringing traffic to a standstill, female protesters lay down in the dual-carriageway that splits the town centre. Others demanded answers from individual officers.

While there was much anger and plenty of noise, there was no violence, and by midnight it was all over. Yet that night a curious alliance was formed.

A Mail on Sunday investigation has established that the leadership of the EDL has aligned itself with groups of radical Sikhs from Luton, the West Midlands and other parts of the country, who are furious that young women in their communities are, as they see it, being sexually exploited and groomed by British-Pakistani Muslims.

Two days after the protest, Sikhs and EDL members held a secret meeting in Luton to discuss a joint response to the problem. Both sides are said to have favoured acts of vigilantism.

There has been unofficial contact between Sikhs and the EDL for some time, and the links were cemented at the protest.

Asked about the secret meeting, Mr Robinson said: ‘Who told you about that? We can’t comment on exactly what we will do with the Sikhs but we will do whatever we can to work together, raise awareness and combat the problem.’

When pressed about plans to carry out vigilante acts, Mr Robinson — who earlier this year was the focus of a Channel 4 documentary called Proud And Prejudiced — said:

‘When the police fail to protect the community, when they fail to protect daughters, we have to protect them.

‘We live in a community where Muslim paedophile gangs are operating without police pressure. If a Sikh girl is attacked in Luton that is my problem because she is a member of my community.

‘I class everyone in my community as everyone who is non-Islamic.’

The EDL has held many demonstrations across the country since it was formed in Luton in March 2009 after Muslim radicals disrupted a homecoming parade by the Royal Anglian Regiment. It has become the most significant far-Right street movement in Britain since the National Front in the Seventies.

Nick Lowles, director of the anti-fascist organisation Hope Not Hate, said: ‘We are aware there has been contact between the EDL and a small group of radical Sikhs. But there is nothing to be gained by anyone in the Sikh community linking up with the racist EDL.

‘We need to tackle the issue of child exploitation, but it needs to be a community-wide response.’

While the EDL supporters in Luton were welcomed by some, the town’s Sikh elders viewed their presence at the protest as opportunism.

They accuse EDL leaders of trying to hijack the protest and exploiting difficulties between their community and the town’s large Pakistani Muslim population.

The issue of grooming is at the heart of that discord.

The group of radical Sikhs says it receives about three calls a week from Sikh parents fearing their children are being targeted.

There have been few prosecutions, however, largely because the issue touches upon notions of honour and shame.

Jasvinder Singh Nagra, of the Luton Gurdwara temple, said: ‘Young girls of school and college age are being targeted by men from the Pakistani community.

They are duping them into believing they are in love and it all comes to grief because they are treated as sex toys.

‘A small proportion of the Pakistani community feel it is fair game to go for Sikh and Hindu girls.

‘In the past, the Pakistani community have not taken this seriously and neither have the police. They have not looked into the role played by coercion or blackmail.

‘We know that at colleges and universities you have young Muslim men wearing the kara [a bangle worn by Sikhs] to pretend they are part of the community, or they change their names to pretend to be Sikh and our girls fall for it.

‘Before they know it they are with this man and then compromising photographs will be taken of her. She will be threatened with having these shown to her family and the fear of losing honour is a very powerful tool to make her do what the man wants.’

But Mr Nagra said protest organisers did not share EDL’s values. ‘The arrival of the EDL was a total surprise to me,’ he added.

‘They were there to try to make an alliance over what they felt was a common issue. It caused a great deal of anxiety because we wanted, above all, for the protest to be peaceful.

‘The EDL leaders were showing off to our young people by being very aggressive in the way they spoke to the police, pretending to be doing it out of solidarity.

‘I would advise our young people not to be lured down the EDL route of taking the law into our own hands and vigilante activity.’

In response, the day after the protest, some 40 leaders from the Sikh and Muslim communities met at the Gurdwara to discuss their differences in a two-hour meeting.

Mr Nagra said: ‘I was delighted that so many people from the Pakistani community came.’

Zafar Khan, of the Luton Council of Faiths, who chaired the meeting, said: ‘The idea that there is an orchestrated campaign by young Muslim men to target young Sikh women is totally insulting and wrong. This is the language of the EDL.’

He added: ‘The threat of the EDL is very great in Luton. We have a lot of experience in dealing with them and that is why we reacted so promptly.

‘Now we will meet every couple of months to talk about inter- community issues.’

A Bedfordshire Police spokesman urged anyone with evidence of grooming of people ‘from any faith or group’ to come forward, but added that there was nothing to indicate that ‘systematic’ grooming of Sikh girls was taking place in Luton.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: World’s First GM Babies Born

The world’s first geneticallymodified humans have been created, it was revealed last night.

The disclosure that 30 healthy babies were born after a series of experiments in the United States provoked another furious debate about ethics.

So far, two of the babies have been tested and have been found to contain genes from three ‘parents’.

Genetic fingerprint tests on two one-year- old children confirm that they have inherited DNA from three adults — two women and one man.

The fact that the children have inherited the extra genes and incorporated them into their ‘germline’ means that they will, in turn, be able to pass them on to their own offspring.

Altering the human germline — in effect tinkering with the very make-up of our species — is a technique shunned by the vast majority of the world’s scientists.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Whistleblower Reveals Plan to Evacuate London During Olympics

An undercover journalist going by the pseudonym ‘Lee Hazledean’ has blown the whistle on astounding revelations about how he infiltrated the G4S — the company responsible for security at the London Olympics — and discovered shocking plans for the evacuation of London, 200,000 ‘casket linings’ being on standby, along with botched security procedures that leave the Games wide open to attack.

Hazledean’s interview with Tony Gosling, Bilderberg.org editor and host of BCFM’s Friday Drivetime, has gone viral on the web over the last few days. Hazledean is an undercover journalist for a television program in London and has worked with news agencies on hard-hitting subjects, but when he approached the mainstream media with his bombshell story, they showed no interest.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: How Women Are Targeted by Gangs in Egypt’s Tahrir Square

by Richard Spencer

For many people, the most unbelievable aspect of Natasha Smith’s story is that hundreds of people should have been standing there, unable or unwilling to help.

It is not unbelievable to me: on another occasion, I was one of those people. I had heard the stories of sexual violence inflicted on women in Tahrir Square by both the army and the street thugs of Cairo. I had seen the thugs themselves, hanging around menacingly even in broad daylight. So when I saw it, it was immediately clear what was happening. It did not make it seem any the less unreal. I was with my 18-year-old son, walking past the Egyptian National Museum at dusk, when we heard the shouts and saw the scrum. Two young women, local and modestly dressed in colourful headscarves, were surrounded by a gang of about 30 young men. Two other men who seemed to be their friends were trying to fight off the attackers, and, naturally enough, my son and I waded in to help.

It soon became apparent that there was nothing we could do — however hard we fought, we could not get near them, and in the meantime scores more men had joined in.

It is impossible to say, even in retrospect, but I would estimate at least half, possibly three quarters of those involved were, like me, trying to help. But undeniably, we were making things worse as the melee just grew. We extricated ourselves, and watched painfully as the mob, as if a sprawling beast, moved along the pavement and into the well of the closed metro station nearby. There was no escape there — the girls’ friends frantically tried to open the slatted gates into the station, but to no avail. We made a second attempt to help, but were beaten back.

We spoke to onlookers, who shrugged their shoulders — there were no police to call, they said. An ambulance arrived, but was also beaten back. One older man then approached and in nervous English asked us to leave. “You cannot help,” he said, “And are doing more harm than good. You are attracting more crowds.” I could not believe what he was saying, but it was undeniably true. In the dusk, two tall blond foreign men were their own magnet. Hanging our heads, we complied. We walked round the block, and came back to find the whole scene empty, as if it had been a dream. I asked two men what had happened. They looked at me blankly. I read in the local papers the next day a report of two such attacks, which had eventually been broken up, and the girls taken to hospital. It did not make me feel any better. I still look back, and wonder what I could have done differently. I still do not know the answer, but I also know that in all my adult life, I have never felt so ashamed, or so useless.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Food: Algeria Imports 60% of Requirements

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JUNE 19 — Algeria is facing up to a food bill which requires the spending of several billion dollars per year. According to the latest estimates, imports of foodstuffs account for as much as 60% of the country’s requirements — for which 5 billion dollars were spent, a figure which has been rising steadily over the past few years. As experts have underscored, this situation is due to the country being well behind others in terms of the modernisation of cultivation techniques, which in the wheat sector is especially clear. Compared with the 70 quintals per hectare cultivated with wheat in developed countries, Algeria gets only 17 quintals. The efforts that the bodies overseeing the nation’s agricultural sector are now making are directed at attempts to raise this ratio, which in ten years’ time is expected to reach 30 quintals of durum wheat and 40 of bread wheat per hectare cultivated.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: Who ‘Lost’ Egypt?

In the past, American presidential campaigns have featured bitter recriminations over foreign policy reverses. Harry Truman was charged with having “lost China” following the take-over of the Chinese mainland by Mao Tse-Tung’s communists. In subsequent years similar formulations were used to challenge those responsible for the loss to the Free World of Vietnam, Iran and post-Soviet Russia.

Today, the question for voters in the 2012 election to ponder might be posed as “Who lost Egypt?” To make matters worse, it is likely that the losses won’t stop there.

Indeed, before it’s over, we may well see nearly all the Middle East fall under the sway of the team President Obama has helped come to power in Cairo — the Muslim Brotherhood, to the grave detriment of the people most immediately affected, of Israel and of our interests, there and here…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


20 Years on: ‘The Legendary Moto Guzzi’ Is Back

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV — In an eye-catching headline, today’s edition of the daily paper Yediot Ahronot announces the return to Israel after a twenty-year absence of Moto Guzzi, a vehicle that once was both “highly esteemed and loved” by local bike lovers. The bike harks back to a time when Japanese industry was snubbing Israel in order keep its Arab markets sweet, and the Moto Guzzi became the market leader. Many recall the Moto Guzzi TT 650 used by disgraced businessman Roni Leibovic to rob 22 bank branches in rapid succession, without ever firing a shot. The bike-mounted bank robber was nicknamed ‘Ofno-Bank’ by the press and his capture came as a disappointment to many as by then Leibovic represented the figure of the lone combatant against the power of finance. Moto Guzzis, the report continues, are to be marketed in Israel once again by Piaggio distributors. The latter brand ranks third in the market and has been at home in Israel for generations now. Two months ago there was a homage to the Vespa by Tel Aviv’s film museum, showing the cinematic and social presence of the scooter. While its importers are keeping their cards to their chest, Yediot Ahronot expects Moto Guzzi to be a hit among adults who loved the bike as children. It could also attract interest, the paper says, among the Israeli police, providing a competitor to BMW.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Arab Rage: Putin Recognized Jerusalem’s Jewish Past

At Kotel, Russian president said “Here we see how the Jewish past is etched into the stones of Jerusalem.”

Arab Muslims are enraged by remarks made by Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kotel, recognizing Jerusalem’s Jewish roots.

Putin visited the Kotel Tuesday night and toured the Kotel tunnels. He also said: “Here, we see how the Jewish past is etched into the stones of Jerusalem.”

This short remark has aroused the wrath of local Arab leaders, who vehemently deny that the Temple Mount is where the Jewish Temples stood and that Jerusalem was the seat of the Hebrew monarchy for many centuries, long before Mohammed was born.

Attorney Zahi Najidat, spokesman for the Islamic Movement in “the Palestinian Interior” (i.e. — the state of Israel), denounced Putin for allegedly siding with Israel, and mentioned Russia’s support for Bashar Assad “who is slaughtering his own countrymen.”

The Al Aqsa Institute issued a statement to the press in which it said: “We tell Putin and people like him that the Al-Buraq Wall is exclusive Muslim Waqf property, is an inseperable part of the blessed Al Aqsa Mosque and non-Muslims have no rights at this wall or at the blessed Al Aqsa Mosque, and all historic facts and international documents stress the fact that the Al Buraq Wall is Islamic…”

“We stress that every stone in the Al Aqsa Mosque and its buildings shows is evidence that it is Islamic and every stone in Al Quds is testimony to Al Quds’s Muslim and Arabic nature.”

Terror group Hamas’s spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri, said that Hamas rejects Putin’s statement, which he says contradicts historic facts and the Shaw Report of 1930. The Shaw Report was issued by a British delegation after the large scale Arab massacre of Jews in 1929, and said anti-Jewish hostility had resulted from the political and economic frustrations of the Arabs.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Chazan: Democracy is Not Majority Rule

Naomi Chazan ends her term as New Israel Fund president, is replaced by Brian Lurie.

Naomi Chazan has ended a tumultuous term as president of New Israel Fund (NIF), which leads the ultra-leftist camp in Israel through the use of neo-Marxist tactics and public advocacy “rights groups,” and the promotion of “politically correct” Newspeak. The Fund has disbursed well over $200 million in its 23 years of existence.

In her farewell speech at the New Israel Fund’s 2012 Guardian of Democracy Dinner in San Francisco last week, Chazan used Newspeak to describe the current state of events in Israel as a “tug-of-war” between the “neo-nationalist” camp in Israel and the “democratic revival” of “civil society.”

Chazan made it clear that in her view, “democracy” does not refer to majority rule and that she sees Israel’s democratically elected government as ruling only “on the formal level.”

“When you ask Israelis today what is the best form of government in the world — it is democracy,” she said. “But when you ask Israelis what is democracy, over 50% say ‘majority rule.’ That should get you worried. Very much so. The democratic recession has led to a neo-nationalist upsurge in Israel, which is hegemonic. It rules on the formal level.”

“Neo-nationalist Israel is doing very well at the formal level,” she added, noting that the coalition has 94 MKs at present…

           — Hat tip: DW [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Bombs Kill 13 in Iraq, Wound More Than 50

(Reuters) — Three bombings in and around Baghdad killed 13 people and wounded more than 50 on Thursday, hospital sources and police said, the latest in a wave of attacks to raise fears of a return to widespread sectarian violence in Iraq.

In the deadliest of Thursday’s attacks, at least eight people were killed and 30 wounded when a bomb in a parked car exploded at the entrance of a Baghdad market in the mainly Shi’ite Muslim district of Washash, hospital sources and police said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Caroline Glick: About Those Jews…

So it works out that Iran’s vice president really hates Jews. In fact, he hates Jews so much that even The New York Times reported it. On Tuesday, the Times published an account of Iranian Vice President Mohammad-Reza Rahimi’s speech before a UN forum on fighting drug addiction in Tehran.

Rahimi claimed that Jews control the illegal drug trade. We sell drugs, he said, in order to fulfill what he said is a Talmudic writ to “destroy everyone who opposes the Jews.”

He said that our conspiracy is obvious since, he claimed, there are no Jewish drug addicts.

He went so far as to promise to pay anyone who can find a Jewish drug addict.

As he put it, “The Islamic Republic of Iran will pay for anybody who can research and find one single Zionist who is an addict. They do not exist. This is the proof of their involvement in drugs trade.”

Oops, sorry, he doesn’t hate Jews. He hates Zionists.

Some of his best friends are Jews…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Hegemons Seeking to Undermine Iran to Contain Islamic Awakening — Leader

MASHHAD — Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has said that the global tyrants are seeking to undermine the Islamic system, whose victories have provided incentives for Muslim nations to pursue Islamic causes more vigorously. “Today, the bullying global powers have focused their efforts to harm the Islamic Republic system and its great movement, which is a source of inspiration for the Muslim world,” the Leader said during a meeting with judicial officials in Mashhad on Wednesday. Ayatollah Khamenei said, “The current awakening in the Muslim world and the ever-increasing zeal of the masses for Islamic causes” are the result of Iran’s increasing influence in the Muslim world.

[…]

[JP note: On the contrary hegemons such as Obama are more than diligent in awakening the beast.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria: Downed Jet Was Flying With Another Plane: CHP Deputy

A Turkish jet downed June 22 was flying in tandem with another aircraft when Syrian forces took it down, according to Republican People Party (CHP) deputy Orhan Düzgün.

Düzgün demanded that the government reveal the nationality of the accompanying jet, which “Hatay locals saw with their naked eyes.”

“There were two planes flying. The fate of that second plane remains unknown. The government now denies the existence of a plane clearly seen by the people of Hatay,” Düzgün said.

“The key to solving this issue is [the second jet]. Who did it belong to and what was it doing over there?” Düzgün asked.

The second jet belonged to a NATO member but further information on its country of origin has not been provided by official sources, Düzgün said.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



The Al-Qaeda-Muslim Brotherhood Coalition

Not long ago the Arab Spring was seen as a harbinger of democracy. It turns out that, instead, it’s creating breeding grounds for international terror-and safe havens for al-Qaeda itself. That is not just a polemical opinion but the somber assessment of the director-general of Britain’s MI5 internal security agency, Jonathan Evans. The Telegraph reports that Evans, in a rare lecture this week in London, warned that today parts of the Arab world have once more become a permissive environment for al-Qaeda.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tony Blair: We Can’t Ignore the Middle East’s Hunger for Change

by Tony Blair

The West applauds Egypt. But it must now reinforce the idea that democracy is a way of thinking, not just of voting

One of the things about being a leader is that the crises don’t always come sequentially. It would be great if, today, political leaders could confront the economic crisis of the eurozone as the rest of the world stayed calm. But it is at this very time that the Middle East and beyond is also in a state of turmoil. Both crises are really tough; both require active engagement to overcome them. The arrival of a Muslim Brotherhood president in Egypt completes an extraordinary process of change and will naturally be accompanied by mixed emotions. Some will see in it a chance for Egyptians to escape the old era and its ways. Others will fear what a political party that is avowedly religious in motivation and doctrinal content will do.

[…]

[Reader comment by barry1858 on 27 June 2012 at about 2pm.]

I quite like Blair as a bloke but his naivety shines so clearly through this piece. The ‘Arab Spring’ has only ever had one outcome and that is Islamic rule, because wherever the mind-forged manacles of Islam are in the majority, they will never, ever rest until they have an Islamic State. And for Blair’s benefit, an Islamic State is like a one party arrangement, with no possibility, whatsoever, of there ever being a democracy. What Blair understands as ‘politics’ simply do not,and can never, exist under the totalitarian regime of Islam. Once brain-washed, often from the age of 3, the idea of independent thought is forever impossible.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Troops Are Piling Up on Both Sides of the Syria-Turkey Border as Tensions Escalate

Both Turkey and Syria have reportedly sent troops to their shared border in the aftermath of the downing of a Turkish jet last week.

Yesterday Al Arabiya reported that Turkey was deploying troops and at least 30 Turkish military vehicles equipped with anti-aircraft rocket launchers to the border, straight west of the Syrian city of Aleppo, as a precautionary measure after one of its jets was shot down on June 22 after the jet had strayed into Syrian airspace for five minutes.

Today Free Syria Army (FSA) General Mustafa al-Sheikh, head of the association of senior officers who defected from President Bashar al-Assad’s forces (i.e. Higher Military Council), told Reuters that about 170 Syrian tanks had assembled north of Aleppo, about 19 miles from the Turkish border.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey Increases Its Military Presence at Syrian Border

Turkey deploys rocket launchers and artillery down to bases near the Syrian border as rhetoric from Ankara increases over tensions.

A military convoy left from a base at the port city of Iskenderun and arrived at military compounds near Syrian border, the Dogan news agency reported. Tensions have escalated between Turkey and Syria following the shooting down of a Turkish military aircraft by Syrian air defences, giving a new international dimension to the worsening conflict in Syria.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told Syria to beware the wrath of Turkey after the shooting down of the plane and said he had ordered the armed forces to react to any military threat from Syria near the two countries’ border.

[…]

[JP note: Don’t irk the Turk.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Turkish Cypriot “Subservient” To Ankara, Talat Says

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JUNE 22 — Former Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat has said the “subservience” of the Turkish Cypriot administration to Turkey has jeopardized the breakaway states future, as daily Famagusta Gazette reports. He said that the relationship between the occupation regime and Turkey has become one of master and servant, describing it as a “custody relationship”, which is getting worse. Talat said that every thought coming to the occupied areas from Turkey, is considered an order by the “administration” and added that in his time things were very different.

“At that times no intervention came from Turkey. It was the army which was strong and we had problems with them”. He went on and added that if there is no solution, the Turkish Cypriots will be eliminated.

He said further that Ankara is not interested for the Cyprus problem. While the “government” pretends that there is no problem with Turkey, he said, the reaction against Ankara inside the society is very strong and is growing bigger. As he said the Turkish Cypriot businessmen complain about unfair competition between companies that come from Turkey and Turkish Cypriot companies.

Talat also said that the trade unions especially, are reacting strongly against Turkey and they are sending the message that the Turkish Cypriots want to administrate themselves.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Canadian Military Police Cleared in Afghanistan Abuse Report

OTTAWA-Eight military police officers were cleared of wrongdoing for not investigating Canadian commanders who may have turned a blind eye to battlefield detainees being tortured by Afghan authorities. Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative government penchant for secrecy bore the brunt of the Military Police Complaints Commission’s criticism in the final report of a four-year investigation of Canada’s handling of Afghan detainees. But after reams of public testimony, years of political brinksmanship and several on-the-ground investigation of Afghanistan’s notorious prisons, the last avenue for probing whether Canadian politicians and military leaders broke international law by putting detainees in the custody of potential torturers has run its course with no conclusive result.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Carabiniere Killed in Afghanistan

Two others injured in attack on training camp

(ANSA) — Rome, June 25 — An Italian paramilitary policeman was killed and two others were injured on Monday in an attack on an Afghan police training camp in the western town of Adraskan.

The fatality takes Italy’s death toll in the NATO-led ISAF mission up to 51.

According to initial reports, the sentry box the members of the Carabinieri force were in was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade.

Manuele Braj, a 30-year-old from the southern town Galatina of Lecce, leaves behind a wife and an eight-month-old boy.

“It’s very sad news,” said Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi. “We have lost a courageous young Italian who was working to build a more secure future for our children and an Afghanistan in which the Afghans can decide their future. “I express my support for the family of our Carabiniere, to whom I give my deepest condolences, and for the others injured in this cowardly attack”.

The two injured men have been taken to an American base hospital at Shindand with serious leg wounds. They are not in a life-threatening condition.

Premier Mario Monti gave his “deepest and most sincere condolences” to Braj’s family. “My thoughts go to the family of Braj and to the Carabinieri, who are engaged in an important mission training the Afghan police forces,” Monti said. “I hope the Carabinieri injured in the attack recover soon.

“Our country is making a very big effort in Afghanistan to support stability and security against international terrorism”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



India: Kareena Won’t Convert to Islam to Marry Saif

She will follow in Sharmila Tagore’s footsteps by wearing her sharara for the big day but Kareena Kapoor will not convert to Islam like her mom-in-law-to-be did 43 years back. Kareena will reportedly not change her name or identity for marrying beau Saif Ali Khan. In fact, Saif himself told Mail Today,”I would never want her (Kareena) to change her religion. That is the trouble with religion really… it expects conversion. I don’t buy or believe that. I think it’s good that the government, too, has — unless I’m misinformed about the law amended to include it in the Special Marriage Act. If and when we do get married, no one has to change his or her religion.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Maldives Sees Islamist Resurgence

WASHINGTON — Former Maldivian president Mohamed Nasheed has expressed concerns about the state of democracy in his home country, noting the dividing effect of a rising tide of Islamist extremism. In the midst of a tour of the United States that “includes an award from the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict”, Nasheed, speaking at the US Institute of Peace (USIP), said: “People don’t want radical Islam to take over.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Rape Case in Afghanistan Turns Focus on Local Police

KUNDUZ, Afghanistan — The policeman spoke with calm and assurance as he insisted that he could not have raped the teenage daughter of a local sheepherder, because a mullah had married them just before intercourse. “Once the marriage contract is done, any sexual intercourse is not considered rape,” said Khodaidad, 42, who until he was detained in the case had worked for the U.S.-trained Afghan Local Police. His brother, Ghulam Sakhi, accused by the young woman of participating in her abduction, sat beside Mr. Khodaidad on the floor of a small traditional reception room at the Kunduz provincial jail. He chimed in: “In Pashtun culture, the girls do not have the right to say who they marry and who they don’t want to marry. Whomever their parents choose for them, they should marry.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


China’s Cops Get Gatling Guns

While the world bites its nails over China’s military growth, China itself has more internal concerns. 2012 marks the second year since national spending on “public security” has surpassed that of the military. This year’s budget for jails, courts, police and various security and para-military forces is 701.8 billion yuan (US$110 bn), an 11.5% increase from 2011. By contrast, military spending went up 11.2% to 670 billion yuan (US$105 bn).

Disaster relief and border patrol are just part of public security’s purview. Police and para-military are often called in to control “mass incidents,” public gatherings and protests. Armed police were dispatched to Lhasa after two monks self-immolated on May 27. Others have gone to the scene of riots in Zhongshan and Zuotan, Guangdong.

The star of this year’s China Police Expo at the Beijing International Convention Center was a 7.62 mm Gatling machine gun built by the Chongqing Jianshe Industry Group (pictured above). It can fire anywhere from 2500 to 6000 rounds per minute.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



China Seeks to be OIC Observer

In a significant development, China has officially desired to be made an observer member at the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the Jeddah-based 57-member group of Islamic nations. China’s deputy foreign minister Jhaa Jane told visiting OIC Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu in Beijing on Wednesday that his country desired to obtain the observer member status at the group. “He expressed his country’s desire to know the list of criteria required for becoming an observer member in the OIC, voicing hope that China could get this membership in the forthcoming meeting of the OIC council of foreign ministers in Djibouti,” a spokesperson for Mr Ihsanoglu told this newspaper.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Uighurs Attempt Hijacking With Broken Crutch, Bid Foiled

From K J M Varma Beijing, Jun 29 (PTI) Uighur militants today made a brazen but futile bid to hijack a passenger plane using a broken crutch in China’s restive Xinjiang region, creating a mid-air drama which climaxed with alert passengers and crew overpowering the six hijackers. The incident that left 10 people injured occurred in the restive Xinjiang province of western China, where Uighur Muslim militants are fighting against Chinese rule. The Tianjin Airlines’ Flight GS 7554 flight carrying 100 people took off from Hotan airport and was headed to the Xinjiang capital of Urumqi, 1400 km away, but just 10 minutes into air six hijackers tried to take over the aircraft, state run Xinhua news agency quoted regional public security bureau as saying. The hijackers tried to break into the cockpit using a broken crutch as a weapon but were overpowered by passengers and crew, a statement from Hou Hanmin, a spokeswoman for the Xinjiang regional government was quoted as saying by BBC. At least ten passengers and crew were injured. While two flight policemen were seriously injured, a head attendant and seven passengers were slightly injured in the fight with hijackers, police said. The plane returned to the Hotan airport and the suspects were detained. Police said they were Uighur separatists. Xinjiang, the home of Uygurs, a Turkik speaking Muslim community has experienced ethnic clashes as Uighurs have resented the increasing settlement of Han Chinese majority in their region. (MORE)

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Australia: Facebook Page Aims to Inflame Muslim Tensions

A Facebook page opposing the Syrian regime has been set up, listing several businesses it says should be boycotted for allegedly supporting the regime of President Bashar al Assad. But businesses targeted by the group say the people behind the page belong to a minority that’s trying to stir up tensions within Australia’s Muslim community.

Transcript

EMILY BOURKE: Relations between Turkey and Syria are continuing to deteriorate, with accusations that Syria has fired at a second Turkish plane after shooting down one fighter jet last Friday. Turkey has labelled Syria’s actions a hostile act of the highest order and called an emergency NATO meeting to discuss the incident. And the sectarian divisions in the Middle East are also being felt in Australia, with one group inflaming tensions here, via social media. One Facebook page, called Boycott Tyranny has been set up, listing a number of locally run Shia and Alawi-run businesses it says should be boycotted, to show support for its quote “Syrian brethren”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Gina Rinehart Saves the World

by James Delingpole

Which of these makes a more useful contribution to the well-being of the world, would you say?

a) an industry which creates thousands of (very well-paid) jobs, brings in billions of dollars in export earnings, massively boosts economic growth, contributes greatly to the government’s tax revenues and furnishes the world with an incredibly useful product essential to everything from bridge- and house-building to car manufacture to sauce pans to knives and forks.

b) an industry which depends for its survival on spreading fear and panic around the world — poisoning the minds of children, warping the outlook of adults — using a mix of junk science and propaganda with a view, ultimately, to slowing economic growth, rationing consumption, stealing freedoms, increasing taxes and regulation, and subverting the democratic process.

Hmm. Yes. I think so too.

As exhibit a) I present to you the Australian Iron Ore industry. As exhibit b) I present the environment industry, as embodied by publicity stunts like Earth Hour and anti-jobs, anti-growth activist organisations such as Earth Hour’s co-sponsors the World Wildlife Fund.

Now, which of those two industries would pose the greater threat were it to gain any kind of control over a large and influential media organisation?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Hostel in Australia Refuses to Take Irish

A DUBLIN man who runs a pub and hostel in the north Queensland town of Prosperpine is refusing to accommodate any more Irish backpackers after a series of drunken and property-damaging incidents.

The latest episode saw two Irish men being arrested at the hostel adjoining O’Duinns bar after they allegedly caused damage by breaking chairs, windows and a table.

Thomas Dunne, whose business is close to the famous Airlie Beach resort, said: “We have security here from 11 o’clock at night because people are getting up at five for work [on local farms] and it’s usually the Irish ones who are causing all the problems.

“The security tell me they are getting the same from the Irish at pubs in Airlie Beach, giving them lots of lip.

“It used to be the English,” he added, “now it’s the Irish.”

Mr Dunne’s 55-bed backpacker hostel is used by young people on working holiday visas who work on farms for three months in order to get a second-year visa.

He said some local farmers no longer wanted to hire Irish people because of their poor work.

“We’ve just been told by one farm a couple of days ago ‘We’re not taking any more Irish or English, no Europeans at all. All we want is Koreans’.

“So we sent 40 Koreans out to that farm.”

After these and other incidents, including an alleged arson attack by an Irish woman, Mr Dunne no longer wants Irish people staying on his premises.

“If Irish people ring up we say ‘Sorry, we’re full’.

“If they’re going to be here for three months [working on a farm] you don’t want all that trouble, that’s why we knock them back straight away.”

Mr Dunne added: “It’s distressing for my wife. She’s just gone to the police now because she can’t put up with it. And also my 17-year-old daughter, who is working here in the bar with us: she is all distressed about what’s happening.”

Mr Dunne, who also has a 15- year-old son and a 19-year-old daughter who is currently in Dublin, contrasted the behaviour of some Irish backpackers with that of asylum-seekers trying to get to Australia.

“Hundreds of poor boat people died last week trying to get into Australia,” he said, “and these guys who could not get a job in Ireland have been given the opportunity to work and the opportunity to extend their visa an extra year by working 12 weeks on a farm.”

He said “low-lifes” who caused damage should be kept in Ireland to “give the real refugees a chance”.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Mali: Tuareg, Islamist Rebels Clash in Northern Mali

MALIAN Tuareg and Islamist rebels yesterday clashed in the northern town of Gao, witnesses told Agence France Presse (AFP). “It is happening not far from the governorate; fighters from the two movements are firing at each other with heavy weapons,” said the owner of a petrol station next to the governor’s offices. The fighters were the Tuareg National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) and members of the Al-Qaeda offshoot Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO)

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Why Churches Are Target of Bombings — Police

The Nigerian Police have given reason why places of worship have become the main targets of bombing attacks in the country. According to a release by the Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba, most churches have limited protective measures and do not demand any means of identification before worshippers are allowed in.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Luis Fleischmann: The Lugo Case and Its Discontents: A Symptom of Regional Pathology

The ouster of Paraguayan president, Fernando Lugo, after a brief impeachment and the reactions it has generated provide a lot of food for thought. The event that took place in Paraguay disclosed a number of problems that not only concern Paraguay, itself, but the region as a whole.

The Ouster of Fernando Lugo

I am in agreement with all those who claim that the impeachment process by the Paraguayan Senate was too fast and did not allow Lugo the opportunity to properly defend himself in what was supposed to be a fair congressional trial.

It is interesting to note that had Paraguayan democracy been a parliamentary system, the same action would have constituted a vote of non- confidence in the prime minister who would have had to step down immediately. In other words, in a parliamentary system the ouster of Lugo would have constituted a legitimate step. Historically, in countries such as Italy, this case has been the rule rather than the exception.

One of the problems in the Latin American presidential system is that presidents historically have had more power than Congress and have used it and abused it. This is very much in contrast with the American system where presidential powers are more limited…

[Return to headlines]



Luis Fleischmann and Nancy Menges: The Next Mexican President and the ‘War on Drugs’

On July 1st, Mexicans are going to the polls to elect the next president of Mexico.

Twelve years ago, the decade’s long rule of the Revolutionary Institutional party (PRI) came to an end as the candidate of the National Action party (PAN), Vicente Fox won the election. The PRI lost the election then after decades of corruption, fraud, and one-party rule that held control over most sectors of civil society leaving little space for alternative voices.

The PRI is the likely winner under the charismatic leadership of Enrique Pena Nieto though the PRI’s victory should not be taken as a foregone conclusion. The gap between Pena Nieto and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the Workers Party has been narrowing. With a sizeable number of voters still undecided as to whom they will vote for and with a large youth vote favoring Obrador, a surprise upset is not out of the question. While it is likely that Pena Nieto will maintain cordial and mostly cooperative relations with the United States, this assumption cannot be counted on in connection to Obrador.

In terms of the PRI, some commentators have expressed concern over the return to their past practices. Given the crisis of legitimacy the PRI faced a little over a decade ago, it is not likely that the party will return to their old practices. Yet, it is important to point out that given the PRI’s history, some political actors of the past may return…

[Return to headlines]



Paraguay “Coup” Averted Marxist Takeover

This week we have witnessed the impeachment of the President of Paraguay, Fernando Lugo. (Seen above with the Castro mob brothers.)

Acting lawfully according the Constitution, the Congress voted him out by an impressive majority of 76 votes to just one. The Senate confirmed the act with a 39/4 count.

Among many accusations, like nepotism and corruption, Lugo was ousted mainly for promoting rural Marxist terrorist groups, which were creating havoc in the country. By abiding to the Constitution, the Paraguayan Congress effectively prevented a bloody Marxist takeover of the country.

However, the communist machine in the surrounding countries is already in full throttle. Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela (Marxist dictatorships in fact), alongside with Brazil, Bolivia and Argentina, have challenged the new government, trying to create a crisis where there is none and demanding that Lugo return to the presidency. The leftist media is on fire, calling the impeachment a coup.

[Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australia Debates Bill to Allow Asylum Seekers to be Processed Offshore

Julia Gillard, the Australian prime minister, urged politicians to “look into their conscience” on Thursday as a bill to allow boat people to be sent offshore for processing was debated in the Senate.

The bill passed the House of Representatives, or lower house, on Wednesday after an angry and emotional debate sparked by another crowded asylum-seeker boat sinking off the remote Australian territory of Christmas Island. Some 130 people were rescued, one body was recovered and three people went down with the vessel. The incident came just days after another boat capsized, with 110 people saved but an estimated 90 killed. “I am calling on each and every senator today to look into their conscience, to think deeply about this,” Miss Gillard said, adding that if the bill did not pass, there would be no effective message of deterrence to people-smugglers.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Diane Sawyer’s Bias in Favor of Illegal Migration

On Monday, June 25, 2012, when the Supreme Court voted to validate Arizona’s S.B. 1070 law that allows police officers to check for immigration status after a traffic stop, the ACLU, LaRaza and other pro-illegal migrant organizations cried racism and discrimination. They screamed about the breach of human rights thrust upon illegal aliens residing in Arizona.

Arizona Governor Janet Brewer hailed the decision as another tool in her arsenal to rid the state of illegal aliens. Illegal alien President Barack Obama immediately condemned the Supreme Court by cutting all 287G and ICE activity in Arizona.

Attorney General Eric Holder, up to his eyeballs in legal problems, stood in contempt of court for his “Fast and Furious” activities—so he couldn’t take much action to undermine our laws.

But on Monday night, ABC’s anchor Diane Sawyer put on a show of bias in favor of illegal aliens that hasn’t been seen in years. Sawyer, paid a reported $12 million annually, nearly came to tears in her sadness that the Supreme Court actually validated Arizona’s right to defend itself from its reported 1.1 million illegal aliens that trash its schools, welfare, lunch programs, medical care, undercut taxes and cost millions for criminals in their jails.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Should Playboy Playmate Have Received ‘Genius’ Visa? Controversy After Former Girlfriend of Hugh Hefner Granted Status for ‘Extraordinary Ability’

Shera Bechard, the Canadian-born former girlfriend of Playboy Enterprises founder Hugh Hefner, would not be an obvious candidate for the special visas that the U.S. government reserves for ‘individuals with extraordinary ability’.

Playboy magazine crowned Bechard Miss November in 2010, and she also started an online photo-sharing craze called ‘Frisky Friday’.

Neither seems quite on the level of an ‘internationally recognized award, such as a Nobel Prize’, which the government cites as a possible qualification.

But Los Angeles immigration lawyer Chris Wright argued that Bechard’s accomplishments earned her a slot. The government ultimately agreed.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Mutated Pests Are Quickly Adapting to Biotech Crops in Unpredicted and Disturbing Ways

Genetically modified crops are often designed to repel hungry insects. By having toxins built into the plant itself, farmers can reduce their use of environmentally unfriendly insecticide sprays. But as any first-year evolutionary biology student can tell you, insects are like the Borg in Star Trek: they quickly adapt. And this is precisely what is happening — but in ways that have startled the researchers themselves.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Eco-Mosque Checklist — 7 Steps to a Greener Mosque

As the days creep into weeks and months, it seems that an entire year has passed and Ramadan has come knocking on our doors again. I say it every year, but every year I literally can’t believe its Ramadan again. Where does the time go? Anyway, in an effort to help fellow Muslims build some green momentum leading up to the holy month of fasting, I am going to look at the top seven things every green mosque should have. Whether it’s an edible garden, a green bank account or a water policy, I have come up with a list of things your local mosque could be doing to reduce its carbon footprint and tread more softly on this old planet of ours.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120627

Financial Crisis
» Cyber Criminals Steal Millions From EU Banks
» Cyprus Gets Full-Blown Bailout
» Eurobonds Wrong Choice, Merkel
» Italy: MPs to Incorporate Subsidiaries, Close 400 Branches
» Italy to Put €2bn Into World’s Oldest Bank Banca Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena
» Merkel Blasts Euro Partners on Eve of Summit
» OPEC (Oil Prices Explain Crisis)
» Political Support to Monti, Hollande
» Spain Issues Stark Financing Warning Ahead of EU Summit
» When the Derivatives Market Crashes (And it Will) U.S. Taxpayers Will be on the Hook
 
USA
» Bain’s World: Inside the Mind of the Next President of the United States
» Breaking: New Evidence Shows Hillary a Mastermind Behind Gunwalker
» Castro’s Puppet Works for “Progressive Congress”
» ‘Obama Truth Team’ Orders Godaddy to Shut Down Website
» Terrorism Denial From Dhimmi Democrats
» Unplugged Metal Detector Triggers JFK Chaos
 
Europe and the EU
» Austrian Family Lives a Life Without Plastic
» Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Tragic Decline of Gibraltar’s Spanish Neighbor
» EU Urges Cyprus to Comply With EU Waste Law
» Germany: Muslims and Jews Outraged by Circumcision Ruling
» Greece: Public Employees, Athens Swindles Troika
» Greece: Microsoft Headquarters in Greece Attacked
» Pope’s Butler to Stay in Vatican Cells
» Queen in Landmark Handshake With Ex-IRA Chief
» The Chinese Presidential Visit Gave China Billions in Export Agreements. The Visit Was Not So Lucrative for Denmark.
» UK: EDL Responds to Harry’s Place ‘Call to Action’ Against Muslim Conference
» UK: Evil Dressed Up as Good
» UK: Michelle Rhee: ‘Witchfinder General’ Of America’s Classrooms Flies in to Give Gove Her Gospel
» UK: Ofcom Condemns Lutfur’s Broadcaster: Should Leveson Have a Look?
» UK: Rowan Williams May or May Not be the Antichrist
» UK: Rowan Williams Was Always an Enemy of the Liberal State
 
North Africa
» Arab Spring Unsettles Africa’s Sahel Region
» Egypt’s Turmoil
» Egypt: Defeated Candidate Shafiq Leaves With Family
» Egypt: Morsi Open to Iran But Mystery Over Interview
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» “The Left, The Jews and Israel”
» EU: 9.9 Mln to Poor Palestinian Families
 
Middle East
» British Muslims Killed Fighting in Dammaj, Yemen
» Can Turkey Sustain Its Economic Miracle?
» Iran: Jews ‘To Blame for Drugs Trade’
» Iran: “Islam-Christianity Make Iran-Russia Close to Each Other”
» Iran: Salman Rushdie Fatwa Turned Into Iranian Video Game
» Lebanon: Asir Accuses Syria, Allies of Launching Campaign Against Him
» Qatar: Emir Buys US Embassy Building and Le Figaro in Paris
» Syria: Sana: Airforce General Kidnapped in Damascus
» Syria: Gunmen Storm Pro-Assad Syrian TV Channel
» Syria: Fierce Fighting Rages Close to Damascus, Assad Acknowledges Country is at War
» UAE: British Man Facing Death Penalty in Abu Dhabi
 
South Asia
» Insurgent Attacks Kill 10 Police in Afghanistan
 
Far East
» EU Seeks WTO Panel to Settle China Rare Earths Dispute
» Migrant Workers Clash With Locals in Southern China
» Unhappy Migrant Workers in China Are a Growing Problem
 
Australia — Pacific
» Inquiry Exposes Fear of Muslims
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigeria: Terrorism: IGP Gives Security Tips to Churches, Mosques
» Uganda: Sheikh Sentamu Murder: Police Chase 3 Leads, Remain Clueless
 
Immigration
» Australia: Refugee Killed as Boat Capsizes
 
General
» Video: Urgent Warning to All Cell Phone Users

Financial Crisis


Cyber Criminals Steal Millions From EU Banks

Cyber attacks have siphoned off at least €60 million from personal and business accounts in 60 banks located in Europe, the United States, and Latin America. Security firms Guardian Analytics and McAfee published the findings in a joint report called “Dissecting Operation High Roller” on Tuesday (26 June).

High-balance accounts in Italy, Germany and the Netherlands were the initial targets of the attacks before they spread out to the Americas.

The experts say at least €2 billion could have been stolen if the fraud campaign had demonstrated the same level of success against accounts based in The Netherlands.

In March alone, fraudsters initiated transfers totaling €35 million from 5,000 Dutch business accounts based in two banks.

The Guardian Analytics and McAfee study identified 60 servers processing thousands of attempted thefts that initially targeted consumers before moving onto businesses. Every class and size of financial institution was targeted.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Cyprus Gets Full-Blown Bailout

Cyprus will receive a full-blown bailout, including with funds from the International Monetary Fund, reads a statement from the Eurogroup of finance ministers on Wednesday. This puts the tiny island nation on the same footing as Greece, Portugal and Ireland. Spain, meanwhile, only gets eurozone bailout money for its banks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Eurobonds Wrong Choice, Merkel

(ANSAmed) — BERLIN, JUNE 27 — “Eurobonds are the wrong way to go,” Angela Merkel told the Bundestag today. “ “Eurobonds and Eurobills are not compatible with the constitution in Germany, I consider them wrong and counterproductive,” said Merkel, repeating the words she said two days ago in Berlin. The chancellor underlined that “guarantees joint liabilities must go hand-in-hand.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: MPs to Incorporate Subsidiaries, Close 400 Branches

Italy’s third biggest bank will sell 60% of Biverbanca

(ANSA) — Rome, June 27 — Italy’s third biggest bank Monte Dei Paschi di Siena (MPS) on Wednesday announced plans to incorporate its subsidiaries into the main group and close 400 branches by 2015 as part of its new industrial plan.

MPS and other Italian banks have seen their share prices hit and long-term debt and deposit ratings downgraded because of their exposure to the eurozone debt crisis.

It also said it was selling just over 60% of the Biverbanca group to CariAsti for 203 million euros.

MPS, which was founded in 1472 and is the world’s oldest bank still doing business, saw its share price gain 3.41% on the Milan stock exchange soon after the announcement.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy to Put €2bn Into World’s Oldest Bank Banca Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena

The Italian government said Tuesday it will provide struggling Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the world’s oldest bank, with up to €2bn to cover a capital shortfall.

The government has adopted “urgent measures to raise BMPS’s capital funds”, it said in a statement, as Italy struggles to stave off debt crisis contagion.

The aid was necessary because the bank had admitted it was “impossible” to find private investors to boost its funds owing to “currently highly volatile market conditions” as the eurozone crisis intensifies, the government said.

The financial lifeline will allow the Tuscan bank, founded in 1472, to bring its core tier one capital ratio to 9pc of total assets, thereby conforming to the rules of the European Banking Authority (EBA).

On top of the aid, Rome will substitute a loan it gave the bank in 2009 with a new loan, bringing the total amount of aid channelled into BMPS to a maximum of €3.9bn (£3.1bn).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Merkel Blasts Euro Partners on Eve of Summit

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has signalled she is ready for a fight at Thursday’s summit, criticizing the euro reform blueprint presented by top EU officials and again ruling out jointly issued debt in the strongest of terms. She warned that Germany can’t save the euro on its own.

Chancellor Angela Merkel reinforced her Nein to euro bonds on Wednesday and sharply criticized euro zone reform proposals presented by top EU officials this week. Her remarks set the stage for what promises to be a difficult, fractious EU summit on Thursday.

In a statement to Germany’s lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, Merkel made clear that she will not bow to intense international pressure on Germany to agree to joint bond issues that would calm the euro crisis by stabilizing ailing euro-zone member states like Italy and Spain.

She said the blueprint for closer financial integration drafted by European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, Euro Group President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi contained major shortcomings, and that she would seek support for her own ideas in Brussels.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



OPEC (Oil Prices Explain Crisis)

On the Deep End we don’t exactly overlook the contribution of the Eurozone to the great economic crisis of our times. But there is another multinational enterprise that deserves the occasional mention — the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Writing for the American Interest, Gal Luft and Anne Korin remind us of the importance of oil prices to the economy:

“All but two of the post-World War II recessions were preceded by a sharp spike in oil prices; there is no question that the fivefold increase in oil prices since 2003 has contributed to the current economic dislocation. For perspective, forty years ago, at the zenith of the Cold War, the United States spent $4 billion on oil imports, an amount that equaled 1.2 percent of the defense budget. In 2006, the United States paid $296 billion, equal to half of the defense budget. By 2008, U.S. foreign oil expenditures grew so much they almost equaled the entire defense budget.”

It’s become common for politicians — especially American politicians — to worry about the extent to which we depend on oil imports. But as Luft and Korin point out, it is price not supply that is the real problem. The market for oil is thoroughly globalised, therefore there’s not much that oil producers can do to block supplies to particular importers.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Political Support to Monti, Hollande

Courageous reforms, Italy virtuous country

(ANSAmed) — PARIS — Italy has the “full political backing” of France, and President Francois Hollande “will help” Mario Monti find solutions to get out of the crisis, including the idea of using the European bailout fund as a spread-stabilising mechanism, a source in the Élysée Palace said from Paris. “Hollande,” the source said, “wants to help Mario Monti and recognises the courage and determination of the reforms” launched by the Italian premier. “There is no reason for Italy to finance itself at prohibitively high interest rates. Hollande supports Mario Monti’s Italy on a political level.” Regarding the idea suggested by the Italian premier of using the European bailout fund (FESF) as spread-stabilising mechanism, the source said that it is “a system that allows the more virtuous countries, like Italy, to finance themselves at reasonable rates. It is feasible, we will discuss it, negotiations are in progress. Hollande will help Monti,” the source concluded.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain Issues Stark Financing Warning Ahead of EU Summit

Spain cannot finance itself for long at the high rates it now pays on the markets, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned Wednesday on the eve of a European Union summit.

If Spain, the eurozone’s fourth biggest economy, is shut out of the markets it could lead to a full-blown bailout for the country with unfathomable consequences for the 17-nation eurozone.

“The most urgent subject is the subject of financing,” Rajoy told parliament.

“We cannot finance ourselves for a long time at prices like those we are now paying,” he said as the yield on Spanish government 10-year bonds traded at more than 6.8 percent.

Rajoy’s message served as a blunt warning to his EU partners to take actions to reassure markets and bring down the punitive rates that Spain, Italy and other fragile eurozone economies must pay to finance themselves.

“There are institutions and also financial entities that cannot access the markets. It is happening in Spain, it is happening in Italy and it is happening in other countries,” he said.

Investors are deeply concerned over Spain’s banking sector, which has been thrown a 100-billion-euro ($125 billion) rescue loan by the eurozone to fix balance sheets heavily exposed to the collapsed real estate sector.

But markets also are sceptical of Spain’s targets of slashing the public deficit during a recession with unemployment at 24.4 percent — the highest in the industrialised world. That recession is deepening, the Bank of Spain warned.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



When the Derivatives Market Crashes (And it Will) U.S. Taxpayers Will be on the Hook

Warren Buffett once said that derivatives are “financial weapons of mass destruction”, and that statement is more true today than it ever has been before. Recently, JP Morgan made national headlines when it announced that it was going to take a 2 billion dollar loss from derivatives trades gone bad. Well, it turns out that JP Morgan did not tell us the whole truth. As you will see later in this article, most analysts are estimating that the losses will eventually be far larger than 2 billion dollars. But no matter how bad things get for JP Morgan, it will not be allowed to fail. JP Morgan is the largest bank in the United States, so it is essentially the “granddaddy” of the too big to fail banks.

If JP Morgan gets to the point where it is about to collapse, the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve will rush in to save it. Because of this “security blanket”, banks such as JP Morgan feel free to take outrageous risks. Today, JP Morgan has more exposure to derivatives than anyone else in the world. If they win, they win big. If they lose, U.S. taxpayers will be on the hook. Not only that, but thanks to Dodd-Frank, U.S. taxpayers are on the hook for bailing out the major derivatives clearinghouses if there is ever a major derivatives crisis. So when the derivatives market crashes (and it will) you and I will be left holding a gigantic bill.

Derivatives almost caused the complete collapse of insurance giant AIG back in 2008. But instead of learning our lessons, the derivatives bubble has gotten even larger since that time.

[…]

So if the real number isn’t 2 billion dollars, how much will JP Morgan eventually lose?

Morgan Stanley says that the losses could eventually reach 5 billion dollars.

The Independent is reporting that the losses could eventually reach 7 billion dollars.

One author featured on Zero Hedge suggested that the losses could ultimately reach 20 billion dollars…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Bain’s World: Inside the Mind of the Next President of the United States

by Peter Foster

Mitt Romney’s campaign continues to show no sign of sharing with American voters what he’d actually be like as President, once again spending most of Monday giving evasive answers to questions about whether he did or didn’t support the Arizona’s tough immigration laws. Rupert Murdoch, a straight-talker whatever you think of him, expressed the Romney problem succinctly over the weekend, firing off a tweet that fizzed with exasperation at the candidate’s standoffishness.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Breaking: New Evidence Shows Hillary a Mastermind Behind Gunwalker

Last week it was reported that the State Department and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were deeply involved in the scandal known as Operation Fast and Furious, or Project Gunwalker. Today, however, new evidence has surfaced indicating that not only was Hillary deeply involved in the scandal but was one of the masterminds behind it. According to investigative citizen journalist Mike Vanderboegh, sources close to the development of the Gunwalker scheme state that early on, Hillary and her trusted associated at State, Andrew J. Shapiro, devised at least part of the framework of what would later become Operation Fast and Furious. It was Shapiro who first described the details of the proposed scheme early in 2009 just after the Obama Administration took office. Vanderboegh relates the following:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Castro’s Puppet Works for “Progressive Congress”

A former AFL-CIO political director, who is now running a project to establish a “progressive Congress,” walked away in disgust last week when I tried to question her about a trip she had made to Castro’s Cuba. The exchange, such as it was, occurred at the “Take Back the American Dream” conference in Washington, D.C., where Karen Ackerman had appeared on a panel about how to elect progressive candidates in the 2012 elections and ensure Democratic Party control of the House and Senate.

“Why do you care?” she responded, as I pursued her with questions about a pro-Castro junket she took to the communist “island paradise.”

The trip to communist Cuba was one of several initially organized by Weather Underground terrorist Bernardine Dohrn and run by the Cuban intelligence service, the DGI. Young people on the trips were indoctrinated in the communist philosophy and given training in terrorism. Dohrn and her husband, fellow communist terrorist Bill Ayers, were associates of Barack Obama when he was launching his political career in Chicago.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘Obama Truth Team’ Orders Godaddy to Shut Down Website

A political website [www.homelandsecurityus.com/] that contained stinging criticism of the Obama administration and its handling of the Fast and Furious scandal was ordered to be shut down by the Obama campaign’s ‘Truth Team’, according to private investigator Douglas Hagmann, who was told by ISP GoDaddy his site contained information that was “maliciously harmful to individuals in the government.”

Hagmann, CEO of Hagmann Investigative Services, Inc., a private investigative agency serving a roster of Fortune 500 clients, was given 48 hours by GoDaddy to find a new home for his website before it was deleted.

Hagmann was told the reason for the shut down was because the website featured “morally objectionable” material. After GoDaddy refused to identify the complainant, only saying that it was not “any official government agency,” further investigation by Hagmann revealed that the order came from a group tied to Obama campaign headquarters.

Speaking with the chief investigator in the GoDaddy Abuse division, Hagmann discovered, “Ultimately it was found that the complaint originated ostensibly with a group associated with the campaign to re-elect Barack Hussein Obama.”

Turning to his contacts within government, Hagmann then spoke with another source who confirmed that the ‘Obama Truth Team’ was responsible for the shut down order.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Terrorism Denial From Dhimmi Democrats

by Daniel Greenfield

There are topics that aren’t supposed to be discussed in polite society. Islamic terrorism has become one of those topics. After September 11, it was put forward to us that the problem was not Islam, but the radicalization of some Muslims. And yet the defenders of that formulation also refuse to discuss Muslim radicalization as a tangible reality, rather than a convenient excuse for shelving the topic. Congressman Peter King’s attempts to hold hearings on Muslim radicalization have been met with attacks from the very people who should be welcoming the hearings. If the problem really is a minority of extremists, then why not hold hearings that delve into how this radicalization occurs and what can be done about it?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Unplugged Metal Detector Triggers JFK Chaos

These fools are keeping us safe?!?

The TSA’s bungling reached a new low yesterday when a JFK Airport terminal had to be evacuated and hundreds of passengers marched back through security screening all because one dimwitted agent failed to realize his metal detector had been unplugged, sources told The Post.

The stunning error led to hours of delays, two planes called back from the runway and infinite frustration for furious passengers.

“The truth is, this is the failure of the most basic level of diligence,” a law-enforcement source said.

“How can you expect the public to feel confident of the mission of the TSA if they don’t even know if the lights are turned on?”

The chaos at Terminal 7 was caused by screener Alija Abdul Majed, who had manned Lane No. 1 during the morning shift with no idea his metal detector had no juice, sources said.

Amazingly, he failed to realize that alert lights never flashed once as streams of passengers filed through the dead detector, the sources said.

Majed was so clueless that he couldn’t even tell police how long the machine had been shut off or how it happened, the sources said. “It was simply an unplugged machine — the TSA doing its best,” another source said.

Higher-ups at the Transportation Security Administration finally discovered the security boondoggle at 9:44 a.m. — leaving the Port Authority with no choice but to call for a complete evacuation of the international terminal that is home to British Airways, Cathay Pacific, United Airlines and others.

The extraordinary measure meant that two jumbo jets — including a San Francisco-bound United flight — had to return to the gate so passengers could be rescreened at a metal detector that was actually turned on.

The TSA would not confirm or deny that its detector had been unplugged, releasing a statement saying only that a metal detector suffered a “malfunction.”

Eight to 10 flights were delayed as a result of the power-cord bungle, sources said.

Frustrated passengers tweeted photos and gripes throughout their hours-long ordeal.

“How many hours will it take to send a terminal full of people BACK through security?” tweeted one passenger off to Los Angeles.

Other inconvenienced passengers had less of a sense of humor about the situation.

“This is terrible,” said Michael Dorn, 29, who was headed for Hawaii.

“I hate waiting in line. It’s nerve-racking. I don’t know if I will make my flight or why we evacuated.”

Others, like Jason Bailey, who was headed to San Diego, didn’t mind the delay.

“It’s a big inconvenience, but it’s better safe than sorry,” he said.

PA officials reopened the terminal at 11:45 a.m., two hours after they were called in to clean up the TSA mess, sources said. “Obviously, the horse was out of the barn by the time we were notified,” a PA source said.

In scary twist, the source couldn’t be certain that every passenger who went through the powerless detector had been accounted for and hadn’t gotten on a flight.

The incident is just the latest in a long line of TSA fiascoes.

Last year, agents allowed a woman to carry a steak knife onto a plane departing from Newark Airport.

At JFK, agents allowed Eusebio Peraltalajara, 45, to make it onto a flight to the Dominican Republic with the same type of box cutters used by the 9/11 hijackers.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Austrian Family Lives a Life Without Plastic

Is it possible to live modern life without plastic? One Austrian family, concerned about dangers to the environment and health caused by the material, decided to find out. What was meant to last a month has evolved into a new way of life.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Tragic Decline of Gibraltar’s Spanish Neighbor

Many places in Spain are suffering as a result of the euro crisis, but few have been hit as hard as La Línea, a Spanish town which neighbors the prosperous British overseas territory of Gibraltar. With the city on the verge of bankruptcy, many residents have turned to smuggling to earn money. The residents of La Línea de la Concepción are leaving, like rats deserting a sinking ship.

They’ve been crossing the border by the thousands since early morning, first the cleaning women, nannies and construction workers, and then the smugglers. They all want to get out of Spain, if only for a few hours. There is work across the border, in the British overseas territory of Gibraltar, and work spells hope for a better life.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Urges Cyprus to Comply With EU Waste Law

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JUNE 27 — Two EU Member States have not correctly interpreted or applied EU waste laws: Cyprus (for landfill) and Lithuania (for packaging waste), causing harm to human health and the environment, potentially creating barriers to trade and distorting competition. On the recommendation of Environment Commissioner Janez Potocnik, the Commission is referring Cyprus to the European Court of Justice and sending Lithuania a reasoned opinion, requesting amendments to its national legislation. The EU Landfill Directive is intended to prevent or reduce the adverse effects of the landfill of waste on the environment, in particular on surface water, groundwater, soil, air and human health. Under the Directive, existing landfills must meet certain conditions in order to continue to operate. In Cyprus several landfills have been found to be operating in violation of the directive. While progress has been made through the closure and rehabilitation of a number of landfills and the establishment of an adequate waste management system, six landfills continue to operate in breach of the EU legislation. These landfills still absorb the waste generated by the municipalities of Nicosia and Limassol, as adequate waste infrastructure has yet to be built in these municipalities. The Commission sent a related reasoned opinion to Cyprus in January 2012, but the reply indicated full compliance is not expected before 2015. Consequently the Commission decided to refer the case to the Court.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Germany: Muslims and Jews Outraged by Circumcision Ruling

Leaders of Germany’s Jewish and Muslim communities have criticized a court ruling they fear could make circumcision a punishable offense in the country. Only 10 percent of German boys are circumcised, but the issue of whether parents should be able to decide if their children undergo the procedure remains divisive.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Public Employees, Athens Swindles Troika

Fired from jobs and re-hired from the back door

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JUNE 25 — Four ministers of the former government of Giorgos Papandreou are apparently among the principle culprits for the failure of the Greek memorandum. The news has emerged yesterday from a report by representatives of the Troika (The IMF, EU and ECB). As a matter of fact, according to the document handed to the new officers of the ministry by outgoing finance minister Giorgos Zanias and published on the esteemed weekly magazine To Vima (The Tribune), three ministries — Health, Citizen Protection and Culture and Tourism, plus local committees and agencies, have actually increased instead of decreased their employees in 2010-2011, something which had been agreed upon with the EU authorities.

The report states that “The ministers, while making laws on the reduction of state employees, were hiring others to fill in the gaps and the political agenda and while they were proceeding to approve the law known as “Kallicratis”, to proceed with the fusion of a number of councils and save over 1.5 billion euros, went on to hire over 12,000 employees.” In 2010, as it seems from the report, over 53,000 government employees went on pension, but the number of hired workers remained more or less unvaried: 692,301 units, which basically translates into the fact that almost all of the places which were left free were replaced with new employees being hired. In 2011, when the Troika has already imposed the rule for which every five pensioners there would be only one new employee, 40,025 workers went on pension. Nonetheless, the number decreased only by 24,266 units.

To Vima reports that “the biggest fun” was had by the local committees and agencies where in 2011, 12,000 employees were hired. It is clear that the reform wanted by the minister of the Interior Gianni Ragusis failed due to the incapability to control the economic situation in the sector. Another sector in which the reduction of employees failed is that of the Health ministry where the former minister Andreas Loverdos, other than the hiring carried out in his own ministry to make up for the positions freed after the pensioning, even approved the hiring of about 6,000 employees in the National Health System (ESY) which today gives work to about 90,000 people with dreadful results which are only too familiar with Greeks needing assistance.

The situation hasn’t improved either at the ministry of civil protection where according to the report, former minister Michalis Chissochoidis went ahead to fill the gaps created by the pre-pensioning plan of those who were afraid of further cuts in salary and of the prolonging of the years of service necessary to reach a pensionable age. In 2010 2,257 new workers were hired, whereas the Troika is in search of at least 500 people “hired in a very vague manner”.

Instead of diminishing, the number of officials has risen also at the ministry of culture and tourism in the period in which Pavlos Geroulanos was minister. In the 2010-2011 biennium, there were 1,000 new people hired. After all it is clear that nothing was done even to move out 150,000 jobs from state administration as had been agreed upon between the Greek government and the Troika.

The agreement also foresaw the abolition of the State agencies which were not being employed and the acceleration of procedures to ascertain the real working validity of the staff which should be completed within 2012 with the abolition of 15,000 jobs. To all of this one must also add the double electoral vote in just 40 days with negative consequences in the administrative sector of the state, because as they say in Greece, “it already doesn’t work when it should, never mind during the elections.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Microsoft Headquarters in Greece Attacked

Assailants attacked the offices of Microsoft in Athens early on Wednesday, driving a van through the front doors and setting off an incendiary device that burned the building entrance, police said.

There were no reports of injuries in the pre-dawn attack on the US company’s headquarters in the Greek capital, located in the Maroussi suburb north of the city centre. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Authorities said no warning call had been made before the attack. Greece has experienced attacks by several small armed anarchist or domestic terrorist groups for decades, which usually target official buildings, banks or symbols of state power with small bombs or incendiary devices. The attacks usually occur late at night and rarely cause injuries.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pope’s Butler to Stay in Vatican Cells

Paolo Gabriele arrested last month following document leaks

(ANSA) — Vatican City, June 26 — Pope Benedict XVI’s butler is set to remain in a cell inside the Vatican after being arrested last month for being in possession of sensitive Church documents, the Holy See’s spokesman said on Tuesday.

The spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi, added that Vatican prosecutors had not set dates for more questioning of Paolo Gabriele for the moment.

Gabriele was arrested on May 25 for allegedly being in possession of illegally obtained documents linked to the so-called ‘Vatileaks’ scandal regarding the leaking of confidential Catholic Church papers to the Italian press earlier this year.

The documents included letters to the pope and Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone from the Holy See’s ambassador in Washington, Carlo Maria Vigano’, who was the deputy governor of Vatican City when they were written.

The letters contained allegations of corruption in the management of Vatican City.

The Vatican has denied speculation that there are suspicions senior clergymen, including a cardinal, are suspected of involvement in the leaks and blasted media coverage of the affair.

Bertone accused journalists of playing at being Dan Brown, saying they were guilty of “inventing tales and peddling legends” in an interview with Catholic weekly Famiglia Cristiana.

Bertone also said Benedict was baffled at why his butler Paolo Gabriele ended up being involved.

“The pope has asked himself many times, with distress, for an explanation about the motive for the gesture of Paolo Gabriele, who he loved like a son,” Bertone said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Queen in Landmark Handshake With Ex-IRA Chief

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth shook hands Wednesday in Belfast with former IRA commander Martin McGuinness, a move hailed as a milestone following three decades of sectarian violence. McGuinness is now a deputy first minister of Northern Ireland.

AFP — Queen Elizabeth II shook hands with former IRA commander Martin McGuinness on Wednesday in a landmark moment in the Northern Ireland peace process, Buckingham Palace said.

The initial handshake between the queen and McGuinness, who is now deputy first minister of the British province, took place away from the media spotlight behind closed doors in a Belfast theatre.

The two then shook hands a second time for the cameras as the queen left the building. McGuinness held the monarch’s hand for a few moments, spoke to her in Irish and told her the words meant: “Goodbye and God speed.”

The meeting is seen as an important milestone in Anglo-Irish relations after three decades of sectarian violence, known as “The Troubles”, which largely ended with the Good Friday peace agreement in 1998.

A spokesman for British Prime Minister David Cameron said the handshake had “taken relations between the two countries to a new level”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Chinese Presidential Visit Gave China Billions in Export Agreements. The Visit Was Not So Lucrative for Denmark.

The bottom line following the recent Chinese presidential visit is that billions went to China while Denmark, for the moment, has to make do with millions.

In the three days that the visit lasted, Danish and Chinese companies signed agreements totalling some DKK18billion, according to Information. But most of that was Danish investment in China, while the oncoming traffic to Denmark totalled a few hundred million.

“China has only begun to scratch the surface in investing in Europe — but it is one of the places in the world where there is capital available for investment,” says Confederation of Danish Industries (DI) China Adviser Nis Høyrup Christensen.

“It is worrying that there is not too much Chinese investment in Denmark. The problem is that it is not until recently that Denmark has become interesting for the Chinese,” he tells Information.

According to DI’s calculations, Danish companies are currently investing some DKK300billion more abroad, than foreign companies are investing in Denmark.

“The result following the presidential visit shows that Denmark is following the trend in the rest of the world. China is the country that is attracting investment,” Høyrup Christensen says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: EDL Responds to Harry’s Place ‘Call to Action’ Against Muslim Conference

Where does the English Defence League get its ideological inspiration from? Well, obviously from the likes of Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller, with whom the EDL is jointly organising the launch of a “worldwide counter-jihad alliance” in Stockholm in August. However, the international counterjihad movement is not the only source of inspiration for the EDL. They also take their cue from the terrorism-supporting Zionist blog Harry’s Place, as is shown by their enthusiastic response to a “call to action” against a so-called “jihadist conference” in London next month, posted at HP by Hasan Afzal of British Muslims for Israel.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Evil Dressed Up as Good

by Martin Durkin

The Archbishop of Canterbury is writing a book in which he lambasts the government for shrinking the State. In its current ‘shrunken’ form, the state accounts for around half of the UK economy. This is evidently sinful. It should be bigger, presumably like the economies of the former communist countries of Eastern Europe. Anglicanism has become extremely political. The Archbishop’s Council has just reprimanded the government for vetoing changes to the EU treaty last December and warned them not to think of leaving the EU. In his speech at the St. Paul’s service to mark the Queen’s diamond jubilee, the Archbishop cursed bankers and said we ought to look after the environment and be less greedy. A short while ago the churchmen were expressing support for the posh anti-capitalist demonstrators outside St. Paul’s.

[…]

Thank God he’s going.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Michelle Rhee: ‘Witchfinder General’ Of America’s Classrooms Flies in to Give Gove Her Gospel

Richard Garner meets the woman who lives to sack teachers

Michael Gove yesterday endorsed the policies of an American education expert who advocates sacking large numbers of incompetent teachers. Michelle Rhee has earned a reputation as a “witchfinder general of the classroom” in the US, identifying under-performing teachers and forcing them out of the profession. She also advocates dramatic pay rises for talented teachers who help pupils obtain good grades. This week she flew into Britain to pass on her experience to ministers and education officials — and the Education Secretary indicated that her hard-nosed policies could well be adopted here.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ofcom Condemns Lutfur’s Broadcaster: Should Leveson Have a Look?

As Lord Justice Leveson comes towards the end of his scrutiny of the links between politicians, businesses and the national press, he may want to have a chat with the broadcasting regulator Ofcom for its views on what is happening in Tower Hamlets. It goes without saying that the media has some influence over people’s opinions, but in Tower Hamlets its role is crucial. There is probably no other borough in Britain in which there is such an appetite for “news”. The Bengali population, particularly the more elderly, devour the bulletins broadcast in Bangla by several satellite TV stations, including ATN Bangla, Channel i and Channel S. However, in all the years I’ve been covering Tower Hamlets, it has been rare to see reporters from those TV stations actually attend council meetings. Yes, cameras are banned, but that doesn’t stop proper journalists observing proceedings and filing reports outside.

Instead, these channels rely on council press releases and town hall handouts. When Labour was in power, they knew this and for years, their cabinet councillors quite sneakily and divisively held briefings exclusively for the Bengali media. Papers such as the East London Advertiser were deliberately excluded from these cosy affairs, often held at various curry houses in Brick Lane. When the Commission for Racial Equality found out, they ruled the practice divisive. However, to some extent, this still goes on. Mayor Lutfur Rahman, more than anyone else, knows the power of these satellite channels and he has spent years courting them, including Channel S, which was founded (and quite possibly still run) by Mohammed Ferdaus Jalil, a convicted insurance fraudster. So important is Channel S that Mayor Rahman poached its chief reporter Mohammed Jubair to act as his special political adviser on media affairs. Well, I say “poached” but that’s not strictly true because Jubair continued to work for Channel S. Could you imagine the BBC’s political editor Nick Robinson doubling up as an adviser to David Cameron? In Tower Hamlets, though, anything goes.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Rowan Williams May or May Not be the Antichrist

by James Delingpole

I am a bit worried about the Rev Dr Magister. Or the Archbishop of Canterbury, as he is known these days. It seems to me that behind that wild, comedy-wizard beard and those gnomic, overintellectual pronouncements and Rev JC Flannel platitudes lurks a malign spirit of genuinely evil purpose and influence. And I’m not the only one to have noticed. So has Martin Durkin. In a characteristically brilliant essay titled Evil Dressed Up As Good, Durkin notes the paradox of the modern Church: that while expressing much concern for issues like the plight of the poor and the state of the planet, it persistently champions policies guaranteed to make the poor poorer and the planet more ruinously ruined than ever.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Rowan Williams Was Always an Enemy of the Liberal State

by Theo Hobson

Do the archbishop’s remarks about Muslims and the state mean he sees that he’s mishandled the issue of religion in public life?

Rowan Williams has flashed a few glimpses of his final book as archbishop. One of these relates to British Muslims. Muslims living in Britain should show loyalty to “the nation state” rather than “the international Muslim community”. They “must make clear that their loyalty is straightforward modern political loyalty to the nation state”. It is hard to know what to make of this. For 10 years he has been sending out a very different message, insisting that religion of all stripes is threatened by the aggressively secular liberal state. He has often implied that all serious religious believers are naturally wary of “modern political loyalty to the nation state”. For example in a lecture of 2008 (shortly after the sharia law episode), he argued that the Christian had an alternative “citizenship” beyond the state: for the believer “the community to which you belong is greater than any limited human society”. The secular state must be resisted, for it gravitates towards “coercion of conscience”. Has he now belatedly understood that his handling of the whole issue of religion in public life has been one-sided?

[…]

[Reader comment by Piggy1 on 27 June 2012 at 9:21 AM.]

Perhaps he’s right

And if Muslims in the UK were to show loyalty to the UK rather than the ummah we would not have Muslims in the UK trying to kill fellow citizens. But then that would mean rejecting part of Islam so it’s not really going to happen.

[JP note: Hobson’s choice.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Arab Spring Unsettles Africa’s Sahel Region

The demise of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi has sent shock waves through the Sahel and Mali has been hit the worst. The roar of the Arab Spring still rumbles through many African countries.

A date for a presidential election had been fixed, but the band of Malian soldiers was not prepared to wait. At the end of March 2012, four weeks before the ballot, President Amadou Toumani Toure was toppled in a military coup. The coup plotters alleged that he was incapable of running the country or of defeating the rebels in the north. Since the beginning of the year, the rebel Tuaregs and their allies had been notching up territorial gains in their campaign against the government in Bamako. Their ranks had been filled by mercenaries, who just months beforehand had been fighting for the Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. This was something the Malian military felt they could tolerate no longer and so they decided to seize power.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Egypt’s Turmoil

While the evening news showed thousands of Egyptians in Cairo’s Tahrir Square celebrating the election of Muslim Brotherhood-backed Mohammed Morsi, what it did not show was the nearly fifty percent of Egyptians who did not show up to vote, nor those Egyptians who now have good cause to live in fear for their lives, the Copts, a Christian sect that has long been under attack there, and others who are not Muslims.

Modern day Egypt dates back back to the days of Farouk the first, the tenth ruler from the Muhammad Ali Dynasty, who succeeded his father in 1936 and was overthrown in a 1952 revolution. In the wake of the revolution, he was replaced by Gamal Abdel Nasser who died in office. Following the assassination of Anwar al-Sadat, Hosni Mubarack, took over in 1981 until being forced from office in 2011.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Defeated Candidate Shafiq Leaves With Family

Heads for Abu Dhabi, ex-intelligence boss Soleiman also away

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, JUNE 26 — Ahmed Shafiq, the defeated candidate in Egypt’s presidential elections and the last man to serve as Prime Minister under Hosni Mubarak, has left Egypt for Abu Dhabi along with his two daughters and three grandchildren, say sources from Cairo airport. The sources say that the Mubarak’s former head of intelligence, Omar Soleiman, also left the country for the same destination with his family this morning.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Morsi Open to Iran But Mystery Over Interview

Comments to FARS on Camp David change denied

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, JUNE 25 — Mohamed Morsi’s term as President of Egypt has begun with international confusion in both the diplomatic and information sectors after Egypt’s new head of state granted an interview to the Iranian agency FARS. The content of the interview, which was seized by the main international news agencies, was denied first by the Muslim Brotherhood and then officially by Egypt’s press agency. “Morsi has given no interview or statement,” a presidential source said. Taking in strategic relations with Tehran, after a “great cold” of more than 30 years, a change to Camp David peace agreements with Israel, a cornerstone of Egyptian foreign policy under Hosni Mubarak, and distance from Saudi Arabia, a historic ally of Egypt’s, the new President’s interview with the semi-official Iranian agency has been enough to generate major uproar and redesign completely new foreign policy only a few hours after the announcement of the results of the presidential elections.

Suspicions were initially raised by comments attributed to Morsi over the change to the Camp David agreements, the day after his first televised speech as President-elect, in which he said that Egypt respects all international agreements and treaties. “We will review the Camp David agreements,” FARS quoted Morsi as saying. “But all of this will be done by government and cabinet organs because I alone will not take decision,” says the Iranian agency’s wire, which leads with the headline “New Egyptian leader underlines need to review Camp David agreements”. A few hours before the denial, a close collaborator of Morsi’s reaffirmed the President’s stance during the election campaign, saying that the agreements would be respected and that the peace deal with Israel would only be modified after a popular referendum.

Upon reading the text, the analyst and professor of political science, Mahmoud Zaher, who was contacted by ANSA for analysis on what appeared to be a radical reorientation of Egypt’s foreign policy, expressed strong doubts over the reliability of the interview. “Decisions on relations with Iran do not depend only on him,” Zaher said. “Morsi has not yet taken oath, has yet to form his presidential team and the military is still in power. During his election campaign, he continuously said that he wanted to maintain balanced relations with all countries, including Iran, and we should not forget that the Military Council has constantly said that the National Security Council is in charge of the matter. In all of this, though, one fact remains. Tehran was quick to congratulate Morsi yesterday, while the Israelis, also yesterday, said that they respect the outcome of the vote in Egypt. The congratulations of the Saudi King, Abdullah bin Abdel-Aziz, however, only came today.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


“The Left, The Jews and Israel”

by Winston Pickett

This is the subtitle of a new book by historian Robert Wistrich (University of Nebraska Press). As a stand-alone, its apparent neutrality gives little away, reminding me of T.S. Elliot’s Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. The topic appears cool and analytical, ‘like a patient, etherised upon a table.’ Until, that is, you look at the full title: From Ambivalence to Betrayal.

When talking about the Left, this pretty much sums it up, doesn’t it? Perhaps not. Readers will need to wait until this Friday’s edition of the Jewish Chronicle to find out. I’ve written a profile of the head of the well-known director of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism at Hebrew University, where I focus on the ‘betrayal’ aspect of the title as a key to Wistrich’s thesis.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: 9.9 Mln to Poor Palestinian Families

Contribution channeled by Pegase, which gave 1,34 bln since 2008

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 25 — For the second time this year, the European Union has contributed approximately 9.9 million euros to the Palestinian Authority’s quarterly payment of social allowances that will directly benefit 64,417 eligible Palestinian families living in extreme poverty in the West Bank and Gaza.

Identified in cooperation with the PA Ministry of Finance, eligible beneficiaries are households living in extreme poverty registered under the cash transfer programme of the PA Ministry of Social Affairs. The programme is designed to provide basic safety net to the poorest and most vulnerable Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, through cash and in-kind assistance.

Payments will be made across a network of local banks.

Like most of the European Union’s assistance to the PA, this contribution is channelled through PEGASE (‘Mecanisme Palestino-Europeen de Gestion de l’Aide Socio-Economique’), the European mechanism for support to the Palestinians, launched in 2008.

As well as helping to meet a substantial proportion of its running costs, European funds support major reform and development programmes in key ministries, to help prepare the PA for statehood. Since February 2008, 1.34 billion euros have been disbursed through the PEGASE Direct Financial Support programmes. In addition, the EU has provided assistance to the Palestinian people through UNRWA and a wide range of cooperation projects.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


British Muslims Killed Fighting in Dammaj, Yemen

Two men from a mosque in West London have been killed fighting alongside Islamic fundamentalists in Yemen, it can be disclosed.

The two men, one a former accountancy student, had travelled to a religious school to study Islam but took up arms in Yemen’s increasingly bloody civil war, their friends and relatives told the Daily Telegraph. They were killed fighting rival shia Muslims in the mountains around the small town of Dammaj in Northern Yemen, according to one report.

It comes as Jonathan Evans, the director general of MI5, warned that Yemen has become a destination for a small number of British “would-be jihadis” seeking to use the Arab Spring for training and militant activity. The father of one of the men said he considered his son to be “shaheed” [a martyr] and his whole family had been inspired to adopt fundamentalist Islam. Both men attended a small mosque in Cranford, West London, under the flight path into Heathrow, which was also occasionally attended by Asif Hanif, Britain’s first suicide bomber. Hanif killed himself in an attack on a waterfront bar called Mike’s Place in Tel Aviv in 2003.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Can Turkey Sustain Its Economic Miracle?

Turkey has impressed the world with its decade-long economic boom. But many economists are raising doubts about the future and suggest that Turkey cannot continue its growth pace with the current model.

Despite the gloomy economic outlook in Europe, Turkey’s economy continues to grow rapidly, making the country an attractive destination for foreign investments. Economic growth was close to 7.5 percent in 2011 and this year the Turkish government estimates the economy to expand by a further 4 percent. Turkey’s exports and imports continue to rise, as another sign of strength of the world’s 15th-largest and Europe’s 7th-largest economy. Turkey’s sovereign debt has been reduced to just 42 percent of its gross domestic product, one of the lowest levels in Europe after Sweden and the Czech Republic.

Following all the recent positive developments, Moody’s, one of the world’s top three rating agencies, last week raised Turkey’s national credit rate to Ba1, strengthening the country’s position as an emerging financial power.

Turkish Economy Minister Zafer Caglayan said Moody’s upgrade was “right, but not enough.” He stressed that where Turkey once had been dependent on International Monetary Fund credits, it had now gained a stronger profile, becoming one of the creditors of the IMF and even recently pledging $5 billion (4 billion euros) to its crisis fund. Stressing that Turkey’s budget gap — GDP ratio is smaller than most of the EU countries, Caglayan said the country deserved a higher rate, at the very least an “investment grade” level.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran: Jews ‘To Blame for Drugs Trade’

Iran’s vice president used the podium of an international conference on drugs in Tehran yesterday to deliver a baldly anti-Semitic speech, saying that the Talmud, a central text of Judaism, was responsible for the spread of illegal drugs around the world.

European diplomats in attendance during the speech by the vice president, Mohammad-Reza Rahimi, expressed shock. Even Iranian participants in the conference, co-sponsored by Iran and the United Nations, privately wondered at the Iranian government’s motivation for allowing such a speech, despite its longstanding antagonism toward Israel.

More than 25,000 Jews live in Iran, and they are recognized as a religious minority, with a representative in parliament.

The speech seemed bound to further isolate Iran just days before a new set of onerous Western economic sanctions, notably a European embargo on Iranian oil, is set to be enforced because of the longstanding dispute over Iran’s nuclear program. Iran says their nuclear program is peaceful; Western nations and Israel suspect it is a cover to develop the ability to make nuclear weapons.

Mr Rahimi, second in line to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said the Talmud “teaches to ‘destroy everyone who opposes the Jews.”

The “Zionists” are in firm control of the drug trade, Rahimi said, asking foreign dignitaries to research his claims.

“Zionists” is Iran’s ideological terminology for Jews who support the state of Israel.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran will pay for anybody who can research and find one single Zionist who is an addict. They do not exist. This is the proof of their involvement in drugs trade,” he said.

What made his remarks even more striking is that Iran’s fight against the illegal drug trade is one of the few issues in which the Islamic republic can count on Western sympathy. Iran’s battle to stop the flow of drugs coming in from neighbouring Afghanistan has often been mentioned as a potential field of cooperation during negotiations between world powers and Iran over the country’s nuclear programme.

Several Iranian ministers gave politically neutral briefings on the impact of the drug trade on the country. Antonio De Leo, the UN Office on Drugs and Crimes representative in Iran, praised the Islamic Republic as a “key strategic partner in the fight against drugs.”

Mr Rahimi, who spoke after De Leo, told stories of gynecologists killing black babies on the orders of the Zionists and claimed that the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 was started by Jews, and he said that mysteriously no Jews died during that uprising.

He said the Talmud teaches Jews to think they are a superior race.”They think God has created the world so that all other nations can serve them,” he said.

Halfway through the speech, Rahimi said there was a difference between Jews who “honestly follow the prophet Moses” and the Zionists who are “the main elements of the international drugs trade.”

A European diplomat said afterward: “This was definitely one of the worst speeches I have heard in my life. My gut reaction was: Why are we supporting any cooperation with these people?”

But the diplomat, who declined to be identified by name or country, defended his presence at the conference.”If we do not support the United Nations on helping Iran fight drugs, voices like the one of Mr. Rahimi will be the only ones out there,” he said.One Shiite Muslim cleric, a judge, said that he was appalled by the speech. T

The judge, who also requested anonymity because of his sensitive position, said the world must ignore Rahimi and he hoped that he and Mr Ahmadinejad would disappear after the presidential elections in 2013.

“We all need to be patient for some more months,” the judge said.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Iran: “Islam-Christianity Make Iran-Russia Close to Each Other”

MOSCOW, Russia (Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — Iran’s Secretary General of World Assembly of Islamic Religious Proximity said that Islam and Orthodox Christianity talks have made Iran and Russia close to each other. Ayatollah Mohammad Ali Taskhiri in a meeting with Archbishop Eilarion, head of foreign relations office of Russian Orthodox Church, on the sidelines of the 8th round of Islam and Orthodox Christianity talks on Tuesday said that he considers his participation in this round of talks very valuable. He added, ‘There is a special closeness between Shia and Orthodox Christianity and we found out this reality in the recent years when we are so close to each other.’ The 8th round of talks between Islam and Russian Orthodox Christianity started its work on Tuesday and will continue until Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Iran: Salman Rushdie Fatwa Turned Into Iranian Video Game

The Stressful Life of Salman Rushdie and Implementation of his Verdict unveiled as Tehran hosts games expo

Salman Rushdie was the target of a notorious fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic republic of Iran, 23 years ago. Now, the author of The Satanic Verses is the subject of an Iranian computer game aimed at spreading to the next generation the message about his “sin”. The Stressful Life of Salman Rushdie and Implementation of his Verdict is the title of the game being developed by the Islamic Association of Students, a government-sponsored organisation which announced this week it had completed initial phases of production.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Asir Accuses Syria, Allies of Launching Campaign Against Him

Imam of Sidon’s Bilal bin Rabah mosque Salafist cleric Ahmed al-Asir considered on Tuesday that the campaign against him by the Syrian regime and its allies is linked to his opposing stances. “The allies of the Syrian regime are besieging me” by turning the Sunnis against him, he told the Kuwaiti al-Seyassah newspaper. Asir pointed out that the Syrian regime wants to maintain its hegemony on the Lebanese people by “enslaving them to the regime.” “Anyone who dares to say no or demands his rights will be humiliated and even killed,” he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Qatar: Emir Buys US Embassy Building and Le Figaro in Paris

(ANSAmed) — DOHA, JUNE 25 — Qatar has purchased for 300 million euros the building which hosts part of the US Embassy in Paris and the main offices of Le Figaro newspaper, as reported by weekly magazine Arabian Business. The building of 23,000sqm is in 14 Boulevard Hausmann in the centre of Paris. It’s not the first American Embassy to be purchased in Europe by the Emirate: also in 2009 Qatar bought the US Embassy building in London.

News of the new purchase in Paris arrives a day after the announcement that a group of American hotels, Starwood Capital, sold four French Hotels to a Doha investor, including the famous Martinez in Cannes and the Concorde Lafayette in Paris.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: Sana: Airforce General Kidnapped in Damascus

(ANSAmed) — DAMASCUS, JUNE 26 — An airforce general of the Syrian army, Faraj Shehadeh al-Muat, “has been kidnapped today in Al-Adawi street”, state agency Sana reports. Al-Adawi street is in the heart of the capital, about 3 km from the offices of the UN observers and a few steps from the government offices.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: Gunmen Storm Pro-Assad Syrian TV Channel

(Reuters) — Gunmen stormed a pro-government Syrian TV channel headquarters on Wednesday, bombing buildings and shooting dead three employees, state media said, in one of the boldest attacks yet on a symbol of the authoritarian state.

President Bashar al-Assad declared late on Tuesday that his country was “at war”. U.S. intelligence officials said the Syrian regime was “holding fairly firm” and digging in for a long struggle against rebel forces who are getting stronger.

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           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria: Fierce Fighting Rages Close to Damascus, Assad Acknowledges Country is at War

Only rarely since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad broke out 16 months ago has fighting raged so close to Damascus, the capital that has stayed largely loyal to the regime. “This is the first time that the regime has used artillery in fighting so close to the capital,” Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told Agence France-Presse.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UAE: British Man Facing Death Penalty in Abu Dhabi

A British man has been sentenced to death in Abu Dhabi after being caught selling cannabis worth just £250 to an undercover policeman.

The Briton was caught, along with a Syrian man, trying to sell 20 grammes of marijuana to a local police officer for 1,500 dirhams, Abu Dhabi criminal court was told. , Neither of the men has been named, but they were aged 21 and 19 respectively. The men’s mothers were in court, according to local newspaper reports of the case, and the British mother broke down in tears as the death sentence was handed down. Legal experts said however, that it was unlikely the sentence would be carried out — the only man to have gone before a firing squad in the United Arab Emirates in the last four years was a local man convicted of raping and murdering a four-year-old boy.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Insurgent Attacks Kill 10 Police in Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgent attacks in several parts of Afghanistan have killed 10 police officers over 24 hours, officials said Wednesday. Warming weather in the summer usually brings an uptick in insurgent activity, but the surge this year is more than expected. Data from the NATO military coalition in Afghanistan show that attacks increased sharply in May compared with same time of year in 2011, from around 2,500 incidents to around 3,000. Statistics for June were not yet available.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


EU Seeks WTO Panel to Settle China Rare Earths Dispute

(BRUSSELS) — The European Union asked the World Trade Organization on Wednesday to set up a dispute settlement panel in order to resolve a row over China’s export restrictions on rare earths.

The EU, along with its allies Japan and the United States, tried to end the dispute through formal consultations with China at WTO headquarters in Geneva in April, but Brussels said they failed to reach an agreement.

“China’s restrictions on rare earths and other products are a violation of China’s WTO commitments and continue to significantly distort global markets, creating a disadvantage for our companies,” said EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht.

“We regret that we are left with no other choice but to solve this through litigation,” De Gucht said in a statement on the dispute, which also includes Chinese restrictions on exports of tungsten and molybdenum.

The United States, Japan and the EU lodged a complaint at the WTO earlier this year, complaining that China was unfairly benefiting its own industries by monopolising global supply of rare earths.

Despite the consultations, “there have been no signals from China that it would remove the restrictions,” the EU statement said.

China produces 97 percent of the world’s supply of rare earths like lutetium and scandium, which are used to make key components for products such as flat screen TVs, hard drives, hybrid car engines or camera lenses.

Critics say Beijing’s strategy is aimed at driving up global prices of the metals and forcing foreign firms to relocate to the country to access them.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Migrant Workers Clash With Locals in Southern China

A rights organization has reported that at least 30 people have been injured in southern China in clashes between migrant workers and locals of Shaxi town.

The Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy, a rights group, said on Tuesday that scores of people had been injured when police attempted to break up clashes between migrant workers and Chinese locals in Guangdong province’s Shaxi town.

China’s Guangdong province is located next to Hong Kong, and is also known as the “world’s factory floor.” In recent decades, millions of migrant workers have moved to this area in search of job.

The rights group said the Monday’s unrest started after a fight broke out between a migrant youth and a young local man.

Eyewitnesses told AFP that the clashes started Monday afternoon but escalated late night. Several thousand people were involved in these clashes.

“There were lots of riot police outside last night, and there are still many outside now. More than 30 people were injured,” said Liu Tianjin, a Shaxi factory worker.

Chinese officials have confirmed the unrest. “We are now working on it, a local policeman told AFP on condition of anonymity. “There are many police officers posted outside the Shaxi government.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Unhappy Migrant Workers in China Are a Growing Problem

China’s problems with migrant workers aren’t going away, as shown by a fresh outbreak of social unrest in the economic powerhouse of Guangdong. Does the ‘factory of the world’ need to retool its labor system?

Migrant workers in China have long been unhappy with their pay, inhumane treatment in factories and lack of equal education opportunities for their children. They are increasingly launching factory strikes and taking to the streets to protest.

And clashing with locals as a group of migrant workers did on Tuesday in the town of Shaxi in the Guangdong province, which is known as the “world’s factory floor.”

Migration from the countryside has provided the cheap labor that has fueled China’s economic boom. Today, more than half of the 14 million residents in Guangzhou are now migrants. And their numbers are swelling in other cities, too.

The voluntary migration of workers in China — said to be the largest in human history — has not only created huge housing, healthcare and education obstacles for the big cities that have attracted them; it has also helped raise the expectations of those workers and their children who come from towns and villages where options are few.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Inquiry Exposes Fear of Muslims

AUSTRALIANS are comfortable with multiculturalism and racial diversity, but an overwhelming number of people have expressed concerns that Muslims are not integrating and are coming to Australia to impose their values on the nation.

A far-reaching bipartisan federal parliamentary inquiry into the nation’s acceptance of culturally diverse communities, due to report in August, will conclude that the largest issue facing the nation is the acceptance of Muslims, who many Australians fear have an agenda not at one with the country’s values. Labor MP Maria Vamvakinou, who chairs the inquiry, has told The Australian her committee believes the country needs strong political leadership to address the crisis over Islam. She said the committee looking at multiculturalism would not extend “rights” and would not recommend the introduction of a multicultural act because people resented being told what to think.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigeria: Terrorism: IGP Gives Security Tips to Churches, Mosques

Acting Inspector General of Police Mohammed Abubakar has given some security tips to churches and mosques to stave off terrorist attacks. A statement by the Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba, advised churches and mosques to carry out risk assessment and vulnerability surveys to enable them determine the level of risk, they are exposed to. According to Abubakar, location of the church/mosque, analysis of its neighbourhood demography, size and architectural design of the church/mosque, population of the members, nature of access roads to the place etc are crucial to the assessment survey.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Uganda: Sheikh Sentamu Murder: Police Chase 3 Leads, Remain Clueless

Police investigators are following three possible leads to the murder of Sheikh Abdul Karim Sentamu two months ago, The Observer has learnt. The prominent Muslim scholar was gunned down on April 20 along William street, moments after he left a mosque on the same road. His death caused outrage in the Muslim community and Police vowed to hunt down the murderers. Police suspect that Sentamu was still in contact with Jamir Mukulu, the leader of the DR Congo-based Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) rebels; he could, therefore, have been involved in some clandestine activities that led to his killing. The second line of investigation is that the murder might be linked to Muslim leadership wrangles between the factions of Sheikhs Zubair Kayongo and Ramathan Mubajje. Police have also severally questioned the woman who was with him in the car at the time of the shooting.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australia: Refugee Killed as Boat Capsizes

One body has been recovered after a crowded boat carrying asylum seekers to Australia capsized in the Indian Ocean. Merchant ships have rescued 125 survivors in an area midway between Christmas Island and the main Indonesian island of Java, and an air and sea search is ongoing for as many as 20 people who could still be missing, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Video: Urgent Warning to All Cell Phone Users

If you think the jury’s still out on whether cell phones can be dangerous to your health, then you might want to take the time to listen to this video. Dr. Devra Davis, author of the book, “The Secret History of the War on Cancer,” has been researching the safety hazards of radiation emanating from your cell phone.

Like many people, Dr. Davis just didn’t believe the possibility of cell phones being dangerous — until she studied it. And now, with the toxicological and epidemiological evidence to back up her claims, she’s trying to get the word out that cell phone radiation is not only dangerous, but can be downright lethal.

In her lecture, Dr. Davis explains how the biological impact of your cell phone is not related to its power, which is quite weak, but rather to the erratic nature of its signal and its ability to disrupt resonance and interfere with DNA repair. This is now believed to be the most plausible theory for understanding the wide array of health impacts discovered, which includes cancer…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120626

Financial Crisis
» Cyprus: Russia’s Masterstroke: Bailing Out Cyprus
» EU Proposes Banking Union as ‘Big Leap Forward’ To Save Bloc
 
USA
» FBI Probing Islamic Extremists in US Military After ‘Lone Wolf’ Attack by Qaeda Sympathizer
» Muslim Woman Sues Religious-Freedom Commission for Discrimination
» New York Man to be Tried for Allegedly Plotting to Blow Up Synagogues
» Pool of American Imams Too Small to Meet the Demand
» Possible Alien Message to Get Reply From Humanity
 
Europe and the EU
» Al-Qaida Trains Norwegian to Attack
» Belgium: 6 Terrorism Accused Muslims Found Guilty
» Danish Prime Minister Skips Referendum Commitments
» Germany: Venezuelan Tribe Angry at “Sacred” Stone in Berlin
» Norwegian Terrorist Ready to Strike
» Planet European Parliament, Billions of Miles From Reality
» UK: Big Ben Tower to be Renamed in Honour of the Queen
» UK: Call to Action: Grand Connaught Rooms to Host Jihadist Conference
» UK: New Scunthorpe Mosque Seeking Approval From North Lincolnshire Councillors Tomorrow
» UK: Observer Misrepresents Rowan Williams on Muslims
» UK: The Bomber Command Memorial is a Noble, Handsome Thing
» UN Criticises Europe’s ‘Baby Boxes’
 
North Africa
» Egypt’s Triumph is Islam’s Triumph — JI
» Egypt: Now Morsi Says He Wants Closer Ties With Iran
» Our Coverage of the Arab Spring Was Over-Excited, Admits BBC
» The Last Jews of Tunisia
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Analysis: The Return of the PLO
» Birthplace of Christ Used in Bid for Palestinian Statehood
» Police Arrest Ultra-Orthodox Jews Over Pro-Hitler Graffiti
» Russian President Tours Key Christian Shrine in West Bank, Talks With Palestinian Leader
 
Middle East
» Iranian Pair Face Death Penalty After Third Alcohol Offence
» NATO Stands by Turkey After Jet Downed by Syria
» Of Course the Arab Spring Has Brought Forth Monsters
» OIC Mulls Syria’s Supsension
» Turkey: From Regional to Global Player
» U.K. Spy Chief: Arab Spring Creates “Permissive Environment” For Al Qaeda in Middle East
 
Russia
» Russia and US Discuss Nuclear Cooperation Plans
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Joe Biden Memo Warned Obama on Flawed War Plans
» Dubai Company Wins Dh29 Billion Deal to Supply US Forces in Afghanistan
» In Pakistan Schools, ‘B’ For ‘Bandook’ , ‘J’ For ‘Jihad’
» India: Pakistan in the Cold on Lashkar After Abu Jundal’s Arrest
» Indonesia Struggles to Win Jihadist Hearts and Minds
» Italian Soldier Killed in Afghanistan Blast
» Militants ‘Behead Pakistani Troops After Crossing Border From Afghanistan’
» Rotting Grain Adds to India’s Food Problem
 
Far East
» China Jails 14 Over Mosque Clash
 
Australia — Pacific
» Beyond a Joke
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» 7/7 Widow Samantha Lewthwaite ‘Suspected in Kenya Attack’
» Islamic Maghreb, Boko Haram Concern U.S. Africa Commander
» Nigeria: Christians, Muslims to Embark on Joint Preaching
 
Latin America
» Mexico City Airport Shootout Leaves Three Police Dead
 
Immigration
» Australia: Entire 737 Used to Transport Injured Asylum Seeker
» Greece: Alarming Rise in Violence Against Immigrants
» Refugees in Greece Smuggled Into Europe
 
General
» Al-Qaida Calls for ‘Forest Jihad’
» Nanoparticles May Explain Moon Dirt’s Odd Behavior

Financial Crisis


Cyprus: Russia’s Masterstroke: Bailing Out Cyprus

by Peter Martino

What a fine mess the Europeans have made with their deluded dream of a common European currency for 17 countries with different languages, cultures, traditions and economic systems. As a result of the experiment with the euro, almost all countries along Europe’s southern rim are on the brink of bankruptcy. One of them is Cyprus. It, too, urgently needs a bailout. This week, the Cypriotic government needs €4bn to recapitalize the country’s second largest bank.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU Proposes Banking Union as ‘Big Leap Forward’ To Save Bloc

With the European Union facing its biggest crisis in 60 years, Brussels proposed Tuesday taking “a big leap forward” to save the troubled bloc by setting up a single banking union.

The suggestions to be put to a summit on Thursday and Friday were made public after being delivered to the bloc’s 27 capitals by EU president Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso, European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi and Eurogroup head Jean-Claude Juncker.

A report from the four titled “Towards a genuine economic and monetary union” suggests EU leaders agree that a pan-European banking authority be put in place and give Brussels the final say over national budgets in the eurozone.

“We need a banking union, a fiscal union and further steps towards political union,” Barroso told a conference.

“The first of these building blocks that can be achieved quickly without treaty change is an integrated financial framework, a banking union,” he said

Under intense global pressure as the two-and-a-half-year sovereign debt crisis infects Spain and Cyprus after Greece, Ireland and Portugal, EU officials have been scrambling to shore up monetary union with banking, fiscal, and eventually political union.

The report however sets no deadlines for deepening EU integration, offering instead to finalise a grand roadmap for the future in December.

Diplomatic sources say a firm proposal on banking union is expected in October if EU officials get the go-ahead from heads of state and government at the June 28 and 29 summit.

The proposal sees the Frankfurt-based ECB tasked with banking supervision across the 17-nation eurozone, with the London-headquartered European Banking Authority (EBA) overseeing the sector in the remaining 10 non-euro states.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


FBI Probing Islamic Extremists in US Military After ‘Lone Wolf’ Attack by Qaeda Sympathizer

Washington, June 26 (ANI): The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is investigating more than 100 suspected Islamic extremists in the U.S. military. The probe comes in the wake of the 2009 ‘lone wolf’ attack by an alleged Al-Qaeda sympathizer that killed 13 people at a Texas army base, news.com.au reports. About a dozen extremists are considered to be ‘serious’ threats, with suspects believed to be actively planning attacks, or are in contact with dangerous fanatics, reports said. The potential internal threats come from those in active military service, reserves and civilians who have access to military installations.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Woman Sues Religious-Freedom Commission for Discrimination

Safiya Ghori-Ahmad claims the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom rescinded a job offer because she is Muslim. As Sarah Wildman reports, this isn’t the first time the commission has come under fire.

Safiya Ghori-Ahmad is one of those overqualified types that Washington, DC, seems to attract. At 31, she is fluent in Urdu and Hindi, and holds both a law degree and a master’s in international development. She was born and raised in Arkansas to a family who had emigrated from India. You probably wouldn’t have heard of her, except that earlier this month she filed suit in federal court, claiming that a job she was offered at a government agency was taken away from her because she’s Muslim. The kicker? The agency that rescinded the offer was created to fight religious discrimination around the world.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



New York Man to be Tried for Allegedly Plotting to Blow Up Synagogues

Judge approves rare state-level terrorism prosecution that stems from NYPD’s controversial surveillance of Muslim groups

A judge ruled Monday that an unusual state-level terror case against a man charged with plotting to blow up New York synagogues can go forward. Ahmed Ferhani’s lawyers have argued that the prosecution was based on insufficient evidence and dubious police tactics that targeted a mentally unstable man. But the Manhattan district attorney’s office says Ferhani was intent on attacking a synagogue and bought three guns and a grenade to do so. The buy was a sting.

Ferhani and co-defendant Mohamed Mamdouh were arrested last year and have pleaded not guilty. A grand jury declined to indict the men on a top-level terror conspiracy charge but they still face other terror and hate crime charges that carry up to 32 years in prison.

Ferhani, a 27-year-old Algerian immigrant, and Mamdouh, a 21-year-old American citizen of Moroccan descent, were arrested in May 2011. Authorities said the two planned an attack to avenge what they saw as mistreatment of Muslims around the world.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pool of American Imams Too Small to Meet the Demand

SHARON, Mass. — The Islamic Center of New England has always been led by imams born outside America. The two-campus mosque would like to change that, but it’s proving harder than leaders had thought. The ICNE’s mosque here on the South Shore of Boston has been without an imam since 2006, when the last imam was arrested for immigration fraud. A rotating cast of lay and trained imams have led congregational Friday prayers and other mosque functions since then. After dozens of interviews, the mosque board is eyeing a U.S-born convert who’s familiar with American culture and who studied Islam and Arabic in Saudi Arabia. The imam’s academic pedigree impressed the immigrant members of the mosque, while his fluency in American pop culture helped him connect with mosque youth.

[….]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Possible Alien Message to Get Reply From Humanity

If there’s something you’d like to say to aliens, now’s your chance. The Wow! signal, a mysterious radio transmission detected in 1977 that may or may not have come from extraterrestrials, is finally getting a response from humanity. Anyone can contribute his or her two cents — or 140 characters, to be exact — to the cosmic reply via Twitter.

All tweets composed between 8 p.m. EDT Friday (June 29) and 3 a.m. EDT Saturday (June 30) tagged with the hashtag #ChasingUFOs will be rolled into a single message, according to the National Geographic Channel, which is timing the Twitter event to coincide with the premiere of the channel’s new series, “Chasing UFOs.”

Then on Aug. 15, exactly 35 years after the Wow! signal was detected, humanity’s crowdsourced message will be beamed into space in the direction from which the perplexing signal originated.

“We are working with Arecibo Observatory to develop the best way to encrypt the transmission,” said Kristin Montalbano, a spokeswoman for the National Geographic Channel. “Earlier transmissions have focused on simplicity, whereas this one will rely more on creating a complex but noticeable pattern, hopefully standing out from other random, natural noise.

“More than likely we will be using binary phase codes,” or sequences of 1s and 0s.

The Wow! signal is the only blip of incoming data to have stood out from the noise in the four decades that astronomers have been scouring the heavens for signs of life — an effort known as the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence, or SETI. The Big Ear radio observatory at Ohio State University picked up the intense 72-second radio transmission coming from the direction of the constellation Sagittarius. At its peak, the transmission was 30 times more powerful than ambient radiation from deep space, prompting the volunteer astronomer Jerry Ehman to scrawl “Wow!” next to the data on a computer printout, giving the signal its name.

No one knows whether the seemingly unnatural signal really was beamed toward us by aliens, and despite great effort, scientists have never managed to detect a repeat transmission from the same spot in the sky. Thirty-five years on, the Wow! signal remains a complete mystery.

It is hoped alien scientists — if they do, in fact, exist — will have better luck decoding humankind’s reply.

“After recognizing the pattern, the scientists on the other end would theoretically be challenged to find a way to decrypt the transmission and understand our language. No small feat, but surely finding a signal of intelligent origin from another planet would be a momentous and impactful find for them — assuming they don’t already know about us from past visits! Or already follow us on Twitter,” Montalbano told Life’s Little Mysteries.

And if they’re the aliens that sent the Wow! signal in the first place, they are likely to be an extremely advanced civilization. Scientists say the signal would have required a 2.2 gigawatt transmitter, vastly more powerful than any existing terrestrial radio station.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Al-Qaida Trains Norwegian to Attack

STOCKHOLM (AP) — A Norwegian man has received terrorist training from al-Qaida’s offshoot in Yemen and is awaiting orders to carry out an attack on the West, officials from three European security agencies told The Associated Press on Monday.

Western intelligence officials have long feared such a scenario — a convert to Islam who is trained in terrorist methods and can blend in easily in Europe and the United States, traveling without visa restrictions.

Officials from three European security agencies confirmed Monday the man is “operational,” meaning he has completed his training and is about to receive a target. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly. They declined to name the man, who has not been accused of a crime.

“We believe he is operational and he is probably about to get his target,” one security official said. “And that target is probably in the West.”

A security official in a second European country confirmed the information, adding: “From what I understand, a specific target has not been established.”

European security services, including in Norway, have warned in recent years of homegrown, radicalized Muslims traveling to terror training camps in conflict zones. Many of the known cases involve young men with family roots in Muslim countries.

But the latest case involves a man in his 30s with no immigrant background, the officials said. After converting to Islam in 2008, he quickly became radicalized and traveled to Yemen to receive terror training, one of the officials said. The man spent “some months” in Yemen and is still believed to be there, he said.

The official said the man has no criminal record, which would also make him an ideal recruit for al-Qaida.

“Not even a parking ticket,” he said. “He’s completely clean and he can travel anywhere.”

The official would not specify what preventive measures were being taken but said “there is a well-established relationship between Western security services, and they share the information needed to prevent terrorism.”

The officials declined to specify what makes them think the man is operational.

Signs that a would-be jihadist is ready for an attack could include the creation of so-called martyrdom videos for release online in conjunction with an attack, or an abrupt cutoff of communication and contacts with peers to avoid detection.

The man has not been accused of a crime in Norway, where traveling abroad to attend terror training camps is not a crime per se. In many European countries, suspects are not named unless they have been formally charged with a crime.

Yemeni military officials said they had information on Europeans training with al-Qaida in the southern part of the country but that they weren’t aware of a Norwegian being among them. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

CIA and FBI officials in the U.S. declined to comment on the AP report…

           — Hat tip: Seneca III [Return to headlines]



Belgium: 6 Terrorism Accused Muslims Found Guilty

BRUSSELS: Six Muslims have been found guilty on charges of terrorism. The leaders of the gang received 11 and 8 years’ imprisonment, others were given penalties up to 5 years. The suspects spread messages of hatred and were talking about possible bomb attacks in Belgium, judges argued. 7 people had to defend themselves against charges of terrorism. All of them had links with a radical mosque in Molenbeek, Brussels. One of them also travelled to Iraq to take part in the “Holy War” against the West a couple of years ago. When he returned, he and his friends tried to convince other Muslims to take up the arms and take part in the war. For that purpose, they used a website, spreading messages of hatred. During tapped telephone conversations, they talked about bomb attacks in Belgium. The court found this unacceptable, and decided to inflict heavy punishments. The lawyer of one of the leaders was not too preoccupied. He told reporters that his client is presently in Syria, fighting the Assad regime, and suggested the court to arrest his client there. One suspect was cleared of all charges. According to the court, he does have extremist ideas, but he was involved in the gang’s activities.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Danish Prime Minister Skips Referendum Commitments

Danish premier Helle Thorning-Schmidt has dropped her centre-left government’s promise of a referendum on Danish EU opt-outs. She told Politiken newspaper there is so much “anxiety and uncertainty” about the European project that it may take several years before the Danes come to an EU referendum again.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Venezuelan Tribe Angry at “Sacred” Stone in Berlin

Wolfgang von Schwarzenfeld’s sculptures in a Berlin park were meant to promote world peace, but the 79-year-old German now finds himself at war with a Venezuelan tribe which accuses him of stealing a sacred pink stone known to them as “Grandmother”.

The Venezuelan government is championing the Pemon Indians of the “Gran Sabana” region by demanding the return of the polished stone from Berlin’s Tiergarten park — putting the German government in something of a dilemma.

With Caracas calling it robbery, and the sculptor arguing that the stone was a legal gift, the monolith is emitting more negative energy than its esoteric fans in Berlin are used to.

Blissfully unaware of the diplomatic tug-of-war, Robert, a Berlin gardener, got off his bicycle to light joss sticks among the stones from five continents that form the “Global Stone Project”, awaiting friends for an afternoon shamanic ritual.

But newly arrived Venezuelan tourists Grecia Melendez and Juan Carlos Brozoski knew all about the war of the stone and suspected there were political motives behind the protests.

“(President Hugo) Chavez always wants a conflict with someone,” said 32-year-old Melendez, taking photos of the 12 cubic meter stone, which is engraved with the word “love” in different languages — and graffiti with couples’ names and hearts.

Von Schwarzenfeld, a frail figure with whispy white hair and scuffed brown shoes, waved a sheaf of documents authorizing the removal of the stone from the Canaima National Park in 1998.

As with all the stones arranged in a circle in Berlin, a “sister” stone remained behind. Every summer solstice, their burnished surfaces reflect the sun “as a symbol of a united mankind, hopefully one day in peace”, he said.

The project was inaugurated in 1999 near Berlin’s landmark Potsdamer Platz and Brandenburg Gate. As children played among the stones, Von Schwarzenfeld defied Venezuela to take back what he called a “gift to Berlin” from former president Rafael Caldera.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Terrorist Ready to Strike

Justice Minister Grete Faremo has declined to say whether the country’s security services know the identity of a Norwegian man reported to have trained as a terrorist with Al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Planet European Parliament, Billions of Miles From Reality

Martin Callanan MEP is Chairman of the European Conservatives.

The European Parliament increasingly resembles the mirror universe from Alice Through the Looking Glass. When you step through those doors it’s like you enter a parallel universe completely detached from reality. Nothing summed this up better than a debate we had last week ahead of the EU’s make-or-break summit next week. For many of the single currency’s strongest advocates, the types of proposals on the table now — a banking union, more power for the ECB, common debt instruments — were all envisaged as part of the inexorable march towards the U.S of Europe. I believe that this crisis highlights the failure of the euro — because it was a political project rather than an economic one. Federalists see it as a success because finally they will use the cover of fear to instigate the real objectives of a federal Europe.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Big Ben Tower to be Renamed in Honour of the Queen

The Queen’s 60 years on the throne will be honoured by having the clock tower at the Houses of Parliament renamed The Elizabeth Tower, it was announced today. A committee of MPs under Speaker John Bercow gave the final approval last night to the move which has been backed by David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband. “They have agreed to the suggestion and all that remains now is to work out the details with the Palace of when the renaming will happen,” said a delighted Westminster official.

[…]

[JP note: Absurd — this will confuse tourists no end.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Call to Action: Grand Connaught Rooms to Host Jihadist Conference

On the 8th of July 2012, the Grand Connaught Rooms in London will host a conference featuring several hate preachers. Their repertoire includes justifying suicide bombings, glorifying jihad, promoting venomous homophobia, spreading crude antisemitism, and encouraging reprehensible bigotry against Shia Muslims. Stand for Peace has tried to speak to the management of the Grand Connaught Rooms to ensure they know of the consequences of giving Islamists a platform (as per the Prevent review). However, one senior member of management told Stand for Peace: “[it] didn’t bother me at all“.

Urgent action is required to convince the Grand Connaught Rooms to put decency before profit and to pull the plug on the conference. You can call the venue on +44 (0) 2074 057 811 — ask for Oliver Six, the General Manager. The owner of the venue is the Principal Hayley Group, based in North Yorkshire. The number for Principal Hayley is +44 (0) 1423 853 800 — you can ask for Tony Troy (Chief Executive Officer) or Colin Bailey (Group Operations Director) The event is organised by the Al-Muntada Trust, a London-based Islamist group. It has an extensive record of hosting and boosting some of the UK’s worst hate preachers over many years.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: New Scunthorpe Mosque Seeking Approval From North Lincolnshire Councillors Tomorrow

A decision will be made tomorrow (Wednesday June 27) on whether a new Scunthorpe mosque should be approved. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Association is seeking planning permission for change of use to a mosque, community use and living accommodation at Concorde House, Bessemer Way, Scunthorpe. North Lincolnshire Council’s planning committee of elected councillors from across the district now considers only a small proportion of the total applications lodged with the authority, the remainder being dealt with by staff. However, in the case of the mosque, the committee will consider the application because of “significant public interest.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Observer Misrepresents Rowan Williams on Muslims

Sunday’s Observer had a piece about a forthcoming book by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, entitled Faith in the Public Square. The main subject of the article is Williams’ criticisms of David Cameron’s “big society” policy. However, the authors also attribute to Williams some highly controversial views about the Muslim community

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Bomber Command Memorial is a Noble, Handsome Thing

by Harry Mount

The memorial — which the Queen will unveil on Thursday — has been attacked on two fronts: for commemorating the mass killing of German civilians and for being an ugly, classical pastiche. Wrong on both counts. The memorial commemorates the 55,573 airmen who were killed during those bombing raids — and who is to say that they shouldn’t be commemorated? There is no element of triumphalism in the building — just an austere, serious recognition of those men who took part in raids with a 50 per cent overall casualty rate over the course of the war.

The memorial was largely paid for by Telegraph readers — and they have built a fine building. In an age when the classical orders are largely forgotten — and monuments are largely gimcrack, simplistic things of flat steel and glass planes — it is a pleasure to see the orders revived. The order chosen — Doric — is the simplest and earliest of the Greek orders, thought by ancient experts to be the most manly, too. Whatever its manliness, the Doric order certainly has an unfussy dignity worthy of the airmen who died.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UN Criticises Europe’s ‘Baby Boxes’

The United Nations has criticised the growing number of “baby boxes” in Europe, warning they violate a child’s rights to know their parents.

Often found in the walls of hospitals the boxes offer a safe place where parents can place an unwanted child, and have becoming increasingly popular in European countries such as the Czech Republic, Germany and Latvia.

Since 2000 some 400 children have been left in the 200 boxes scattered across the continent, and their proponents claim the boxes save the lives of babies that may otherwise have been aborted or abandoned in a dangerous location.

The boxes have won the backing of conservative and religious circles, eager to promote a system that apparently protects and saves lives.

But the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has said the boxes contravene the state’s “duty to respect the child’s right to maintain personal relations with his or her parent”, and violate the child’s right to a name and nationality.

The committee also dismissed claims that the boxes save lives.

“Just like medieval times in many countries we see people claiming that baby boxes prevent infanticide there is no evidence for this,” Maria Herczog, a member of the UN committee, told the Guardian newspaper.

A prominent child psychologist, she argued that the boxes should be replaced with better provision for family planning to prevent unwanted pregnancies.

Despite this, the baby-box system retains popularity. A survey in the Czech Republic one of the most enthusiastic supporters of the system from earlier this year found that the majority of the population favoured keeping the country’s 47 boxes.

The Czechs also rejected an earlier request from the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child to close their boxes pointing out that a special ministerial commission concluded that the system was in accordance with Czech law and saved lives.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt’s Triumph is Islam’s Triumph — JI

KARACHI — Jamaat-e Islami (JI) on Monday observed the “Thanksgiving Day’ on the triumphant of Mori Essa of Muslim Brotherhood (Ikhwan Al Muslimeen” as the elected President of Egypt.The party observed a countrywide day of thanksgiving on the directives of JI Chief Munawar Hassan. They offered subjugation to the Almighty Allah over the victory of Muhammad Morsi Essa. A large number of party members in a special ceremony at Idara-e Noor-e Haq offered special prayers as gratitude. JI Karachi Chief Muhammad Hussain Mahenti offered special thanksgiving prayers after Asr. JI Sindh Chapter Chief Asadullah Bhutto, JI Karachi Chapter General Secretary Naseem Siddiqui, Deputy Chiefs including Nasarullah Khan Shaji, Hafiz Naeem Ur Rehman and Dr Wasay Shakir addressed the ceremony.While speaking on the occasion, Asadullah Bhutto in his address said that books by Maulana Maudoodi had played a pivotal role in bringing Islamic revolution in many countries especially in Iran and Egypt.He said that as Ikhwan Al Muslimeen had been victorious after they followed the writings by Maulana Maudoodi, JI was also stepping forward and making effort to create public awareness, because it believed that any revolution could only be brought with the support of the people and for that purpose, electoral politics was the best option.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Now Morsi Says He Wants Closer Ties With Iran

by Con Coughlin

You read it here first! Following my suggestion this morning that Egypt could be heading the same way as Iran following the overthrow of the Shah in 1979, Mohammed Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood leader who is now Egypt’s president-elect, has helpfully confirmed my suspicions by saying he wants to have closer ties with Iran to create “a balance of pressure in the region.” And in the same breath he says he wants to revisit the historic Camp David peace accords with Israel, which has now kept the peace between the two former sworn enemies for more than thirty years. Time to don the tin hats, I fear…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Our Coverage of the Arab Spring Was Over-Excited, Admits BBC

The BBC’s coverage of the Arab Spring has been heavily criticised — by the corporation’s bosses.

Head of news Helen Boaden admitted that her journalists got carried away with events and produced ‘over-excited’ reports.

She told a BBC Trust report that in Libya, where reporters were ‘embedded’ with rebels, they may have failed to explore both sides of the story properly.

Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen was among those criticised in the study into coverage of the uprisings, which found that ‘excitement’ did sometimes ‘infect’ the reporting, which some viewers described as ‘too emotive’ and ‘veering into opinion’.

The document, published yesterday, also raised concerns about the corporation’s use of footage filmed on mobile phones and other user-generated content. It noted that the BBC failed to warn viewers with ‘caveats’ about the ‘authenticity’ of such footage in 74 per cent of cases.

It also warned that the corporation ignored events in some countries as it concentrated on ‘big’ stories.

Early coverage of Egypt and Libya was ‘over-excited’Miss Boaden is quoted saying: ‘In the conflict in Egypt in the beginning . . . we might have sounded over-excited — you can take on the colour of who you’re with. I had to say “just be careful about your tone”.

‘In Libya too, where we were essentially embedded [with the rebels] at the start, we might have sounded over-excited — you have to be careful if you can’t get to the other side of the story.’

While the report found that overall the BBC’s coverage was ‘generally impartial’, it did raise concerns about aspects of its reporting.

Embarrassingly for Mr Bowen, it suggested he should ‘travel a little less’ so he would have more time to provide ‘insight’ and ‘strategic guidance’ to bosses.

The report’s author, former UN director of communications Edward Mortimer, added that the BBC made mistakes in its reporting of countries such as Bahrain, where he said coverage was ‘rather sporadic’ and arguably insufficient.

The report added there should have been ‘greater eagerness’ in covering the situation in Yemen and also questioned coverage of Algeria, Morocco and Jordan.

Alison Hastings, chairman of the trust’s editorial standards committee, said: ‘We’re keen to see if improvements can be made . . . both in the scope of coverage to provide a fuller picture of events, and in providing better context for audiences.

‘We’ll ask the director of news to report back to us with an update in the autumn.’

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



The Last Jews of Tunisia

Jews lived all over the Middle East and North Africa for thousands of years, and they lived among Arab Muslims for more than 1,000 years, but they’re almost extinct now in the Arab world. Arabs and Jews didn’t live well together, exactly, but they co-existed five times longer than the United States has existed. They weren’t always token minorities, either. Baghdad was almost a third Jewish during the first half of the 20th century. Morocco and Tunisia are the last holdouts. In Tunisia, only 1,500 remain.

What happened? What changed? Islam didn’t happen all of a sudden, nor did the arrival of Arabs in Mesopotamia, the Levant, and North Africa. Both have been firmly in place since the 7th century. A far more recent cascade of events transformed the region, and for the worse: the occupation of Arab lands by Nazi Germany and its puppet Vichy France, the Holocaust, post-Ottoman Arab Nationalism, Israel’s declaration of independence, and the Arab-Israeli conflict.

As a consequence of all that, rather than the Arab invasion or the rise of the Islamic religion, almost the entire Arab world is Judenrein now. And since the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamic Republic regime in Iran, relations between Arabs and Jews are worse than they were at any time during the entire history of either.

Yet 1,500 Jews hang on in Tunisia. The ancien Ben Ali regime kept them safe, as has Tunisia’s relatively tolerant and cosmopolitan culture. But what will become of them now that Ben Ali is in exile and his government is overthrown?

I met with Haim Bittan, the chief rabbi of Tunis. My colleague Armin Rosen joined me, as did our fixer and translator Ahmed Medien.

“You should say something to the rabbi in Hebrew,” Ahmed told Armin. Armin is Jewish and speaks a bit of the language of Israel. “It will make him happy.”

The three of us met the rabbi and his assistant in an office behind an enormous synagogue in central Tunis…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Analysis: The Return of the PLO

By Daoud Kuttab

The past 25 years witnessed the slow death of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

The PLO, established in June 1964 by the Arab League and then taken over internally by the various resistance movements, led by Fatah, is credited with the unification of the Palestinians in the diaspora. It is also seen as the main factor that reignited Palestinian identity in pursuit of national liberation.

The PLO’s importance faded in 1993 when its leader and chairman of its executive committee, Yasser Arafat, signed a memorandum of understanding with the state of Israel. And while the Palestinian Authority became the focal point of Palestinian political activity, few people noted that the PA is subservient to the PLO.

Every single official document of the PA confirms that the Oslo accords and all its ministries and institutions are part and parcel of the PLO.

Having control over land, people, money and guns, albeit small weapons, made the PA a much more important organization than the scattered PLO. After Beirut and Tunisia, the PLO was but a few offices, usually at Palestinian embassies. And with money drying up, it was mostly Ramallah that was keeping the PLO alive.

But the PLO’s problem was not just that its attention was turned inside Palestine, albeit in the small enclaves named by Israel and the US as Palestinian Authority areas. It had a bigger problem in terms of legitimacy.

Yes, the PLO continues to call itself the sole and legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, and its national council, the PNC, continues to be referred to as the Palestinian parliament in exile. But the rise of the Islamist movements, especially Hamas, and this latter’s refusal to join the PLO rendered the term “sole and legitimate” representative rather empty.

While the PLO was fighting for legitimacy, its embrace became a joke after candidates affiliated with the Islamic movement won the majority of seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council. And while the Palestine National Council automatically considered all elected parliamentarians de facto members of this parliament in exile, the legitimacy of the PLO continued to be questioned as long as Hamas refused to join.

A number of factors, not least of which the failure to reach a Fatah-Hamas reconciliation, have revived the ailing movement…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Birthplace of Christ Used in Bid for Palestinian Statehood

by Christine Williams

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), will soon decide whether to honor the Palestinian application to award The Church of the Nativity the designation of a World Heritage Site-a title reserved for locations considered to have outstanding Universal Value. The World Heritage Committee is now meeting in Saint Petersburg, Russia, presumably to decide to whom to award the Church of the Nativity, said to be the birthplace of Christ, as well as the Pilgrimage Route in Bethlehem. Here is where it gets problematic: although only applicants recognized as having an independent state are eligible for consideration, the Palestinians are being considered even though they do not meet that qualification.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Police Arrest Ultra-Orthodox Jews Over Pro-Hitler Graffiti

Israeli police have arrested three ultra-Orthodox Jews for spraying hate speech on the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem. The men apparently admitted they had defaced the site as well as two army memorials.

The men were due to appear in court later on Tuesday. Aged 18, 26 and 37, they came from Jerusalem, the southern Israeli port city of Ashdod and Bnei Brak, a religious suburb near Tel Aviv, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

“The suspects were questioned in connection with the graffiti in Yad Vashem and admitted to carrying out the incident as well as other similar incidents in Jerusalem’s Ammunition Hill and a memorial in the Jordan Valley,” Rosenfeld told the AFP news agency.

The pro-Hitler and anti-Zionist graffiti were found on numerous walls at the national Holocaust memorial two weeks ago. One of the Hebrew slogans said “Hitler, thank you for the Holocaust.” Another said “If Hitler hadn’t existed, the Zionists would have invented him.” A third was signed “world ultra-Orthodox Jewry.”

Similar slogans were found sprayed on the Israeli army sites at Ammunition Hill, a former Jordanian military post in Jerusalem, and a West Bank memorial for fallen soldiers and policeman in April.

Some extremist Jews reject the existence of Israel in the belief that a Jewish state should only be established once the Messiah returns.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Russian President Tours Key Christian Shrine in West Bank, Talks With Palestinian Leader

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — Visiting Russian President Vladimir Putin praised his Palestinian counterpart Tuesday for what he said was a “responsible” position in negotiations with Israel, frozen for nearly four years, and said Russia has no problem recognizing a Palestinian state. Putin also offered veiled criticism of Israel, saying unilateral actions — an apparent reference to continued Israeli settlement expansion on war-won land — is not constructive.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iranian Pair Face Death Penalty After Third Alcohol Offence

Two people previously lashed 160 times for consuming alcohol, which is forbidden under Islamic Sharia law

Two Iranians have been sentenced to death for persistent consumption of alcohol under the country’s Islamic Sharia law, which forbids the use, manufacturing and trading of all types of alcoholic drinks. The two, who have not been named by the authorities, have each previously been lashed 160 times after twice being arrested for consuming alcohol. Being convicted for the third time makes them liable for the death penalty. The head of the judiciary Seyed Hasan Shariati, based in Iran’s north-eastern province of Khorasan Razavi, told the semi-official Isna news agency that the supreme court had upheld their death sentences and that officials were preparing for their execution.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



NATO Stands by Turkey After Jet Downed by Syria

NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen has expressed the alliance’s solidarity with Turkey following the downing of a Turkish aircraft by Syrian forces on Friday. NATO countries had met in Brussels to discuss the incident.

Addressing reporters in Brussels, Rasmussen said the NATO members condemned the incident “in the strongest terms.”

“What we have seen is a completely unacceptable act,” he said, “and I would expect Syria to take all necessary steps to avoid such events in the future.”

At Turkey’s request, NATO held the emergency meeting under Article 4 of its charter. It is only the second time in NATO’s 63-year history that it has convened under Article 4, which can be invoked when a member state feels its territorial integrity, political independence or security is under threat.

Turkey has said the fighter jet, which was on an unarmed training mission, was shot down a mile (1.6 kilometers) inside international airspace. The plane inadvertantly entered Syrian airspace for a short time before it was shot down. Turkey has said both pilots are still missing.

Syria, meanwhile, has defended its actions as an act of defense, insisting the plane was inside Syrian airspace.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Of Course the Arab Spring Has Brought Forth Monsters

by The Rev Dr Peter Mullen

I look at this morning’s front page: “Arab Spring spawns new generation of UK terrorists”. Are we supposed to be surprised by this? I was called all the rude names under the sun for mocking these velvet revolutions in Egypt and Libya. All those bright Westernised kids on their mobile phones preaching the gospel of “democracy”, while the serious revolutionaries — the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Qaeda, Salafists, Sunni fundamentalists and other armed-to-the-teeth totalitarians — were biding their time.

It brought back recollections of our Romantic poets’ enthusiasm for the French Revolution. Coleridge, Southey and their barmy ideas of a utopian “pantocracy”. And above all, weary Willie Wordsworth’s approbation, “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive; and to be young was very heaven.” He changed his tune in 1793 when the reign of terror broke out and Madame Guillotine toured the land, cutting off heads, under the auspices of “The Committee for Public Safety.”

Why has it taken the Western media so long to wake up to the fact that there is a fundamentalist religious and political uprising in a score of countries? And that this is an existential threat to the West? Why do The Guardian and the Today Programme and the rest of the ignoramus bien pensants laud the “activists” in Syria, as if the terrible events taking place there are so easily polarised between nice rebels and nasty Assad?

Events in Libya have already turned sour with attacks on British officials by the same people we were aiding and abetting just a few months ago. Egypt is firming up ties with Iran. No wonder the Israelis have posted tanks on the edge of the Sinai. Yemen is a no-go area for everyone who is not a paid-up member of al Qaeda. Meanwhile this hideous reactionary revolution across north Africa and the whole of the Middle East is being appeased by Western statesmen who are really the successors of Baldwin and Chamberlain. And no one dare criticise this religiously inspired thuggery for fear of being thought politically incorrect.

I don’t mind dying. Really, I don’t. But I don’t want to die of ignorance and stupidity.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



OIC Mulls Syria’s Supsension

Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, secretary-general of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), is seriously considering suspension of Syria from the membership of the pan Islamic organization and its affiliated bodies. “Foreign ministers from the member countries will discuss the issue and take a decision at the ministerial level meeting to be held in Djibouti on Nov. 15,” he said. Ihsanoglu was replying to queries from Arab News during a press conference held at the end of the ministerial-level extraordinary meeting of the OIC Executive Committee here on Sunday.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Turkey: From Regional to Global Player

With its growing political influence, Turkey is seeking a stronger role in world politics. However, its domestic political problems, as well as regional crises, pose major challenges to its foreign policy ambitions.

“Turkey has become one of the five or six most important countries in the world,” former US National Security Adviser Stephan J. Hadley told an international audience recently at the Council on Foreign Relations think-tank. “It’s ironic… if you look at economic performance, you wonder whether Turkey ought to join the EU or the EU ought to join Turkey,” he said.

Hadley’s remarks underscore Turkey’s remarkable economic and political transformation and highlight the changing perceptions in the international arena.

Almost a decade ago, Turkey was regarded as an underdeveloped and undemocratic country, dependent on aid from the International Monetary Union and desperately seeking accession to the European Union. But now, with its record-breaking economic growth for a decade, Turkey is widely described as “the China of Europe.” As a majority Muslim country with a non-religious democratic political system and a functioning liberal economy, Turkey has been highlighted as a model for the Middle East and Africa.

In the EU, no one disputes Turkey’s growing economic and political importance for the Union. But the country’s accession process has been effectively halted, due to the decades-long dispute over Cyprus and the opposition of some leading countries to Turkey’s full membership, preferring a “privileged partnership” instead. However, the almost six-year-long political stalemate with the EU has not prevented Turkey from increasing its political influence, instead it has prompted the Turkish government to develop closer political and economic ties with the regional organizations throughout the world, a strategy coined as “360 degrees foreign policy” by Turkey’s influential Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

Turkey has opened dozens of new embassies and consulates, particularly in Africa and the Middle East and increased its presence in almost all multilateral platforms, from the Organization of American States to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation. Turkey obtained an “observer status” in the African Union in 2005 and started ministerial meetings with the Arab League in the same year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



U.K. Spy Chief: Arab Spring Creates “Permissive Environment” For Al Qaeda in Middle East

(CBS/AP) LONDON — Britain’s spy chief has warned that the Arab Spring, which has shifted the power from several long-time autocrats in the Middle East, is also creating an opening for al Qaeda to move back into countries where Islamic militancy was born.

Not so long ago, 75 percent of the terror threats prioritized by British spy agency MI5 had links to Afghanistan or Pakistan. But Britain’s efforts, along with those of its international partners, have brought that percentage down to below 50 percent, MI5 Director General Jonathan Evans said in a Monday speech in London.

Evans warned that the international terrorist threat is no longer “monolithic,” with al Qaeda affiliates in Yemen, Somalia and across north Africa becoming, “more dangerous as al Qaeda in Pakistan has declined.”

Although the Arab Spring revolutions have brought about radical political changes in some countries, they have also brought fresh opportunities for al Qaeda affiliates to seek refuge.

Evans said the Arab Spring has once again made parts of the Arab world a “permissive environment for al Qaeda.”

Evans called it the completion of a cycle that first saw al Qaeda move most of its operations to Afghanistan in the 1990’s, due to pressure in their Arab countries of origin, including Egypt and Saudi Arabia. They were allowed to flourish under the rule of the Muslim hardline Taliban.

When the U.S.-led invasion after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks toppled the Taliban government, much of al Qaeda’s leadership made the short trip across the border into Pakistan.

Now, says Evans, “some are heading home to the Arab world again.”

According to the MI5 boss, Britain has noticed a “small number of British would-be Jihadis are also making their way to Arab countries to seek training and opportunities.”

“Some will return to the U.K. and pose a threat here,” Evans said. “This is a new and worrying development and could get worse as events unfold. So we will have to manage the short-term risks if there is to be a long-term reward from the Arab Spring.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Russia and US Discuss Nuclear Cooperation Plans

The U. S. deputy energy secretary says the United States and Russia are planning to enhance cooperation in nuclear reactor design, while maintaining joint efforts to prevent nuclear materials from falling into the wrong hands.

Daniel Poneman said Tuesday after a nuclear energy security working group meeting between the two countries that both nations have developed a “strong partnership” in the field.

Moscow and Washington have launched a joint effort to return fuel from Soviet- and U.S. nuclear reactors built overseas for reprocessing to reduce the danger of highly enriched uranium falling into the wrong hands.

Russia’s Rosatom nuclear agency chief Sergei Kiriyenko said it has already removed all highly enriched uranium fuel from Ukraine, and is now planning its retrieval from Uzbekistan and Vietnam.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Joe Biden Memo Warned Obama on Flawed War Plans

CIA assessment was sidelined, new book says

WASHINGTON — As President Obama considered adding as many as 40,000 US forces to a backsliding war in Afghanistan in 2009, Vice President Joe Biden warned him that the military rationale for doing so was flawed, a new book about Obama’s expansion of the conflict says. The book, “Little America: The War Within the War for Afghanistan,” also says that in planning the drawdown of troops two years later, the White House intentionally sidelined the CIA. Obama purposely did not read a grim CIA assessment of Afghanistan that found little measurable benefit from the 30,000 “surge” forces Obama eventually approved, the book quotes a US official as saying.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Dubai Company Wins Dh29 Billion Deal to Supply US Forces in Afghanistan

A Dubai company has won a contract worth an estimated US$8.1 billion (Dh29.75bn) to supply food to American troops serving in Afghanistan.

Anham will take over from the long-standing supplier Supreme Foodservice, which has been embroiled in billing dispute with the Pentagon. Anham was awarded the deal after a month-long competition and welcomed the news, saying it was grateful for the opportunity to expand its support to “those serving around the world”. “We have a long track record of conducting large-scale, successful operations in the most demanding conditions,” it said. “Whether it is our support of the US troops and state department in Iraq, Kuwait and Jordan or the United States army in Afghanistan, we deliver the best services on time and within budget,” it added. The Pentagon’s current contract with Supreme in Afghanistan has been in place since 2005, during which time it has spent about $6.8bn.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



In Pakistan Schools, ‘B’ For ‘Bandook’ , ‘J’ For ‘Jihad’

LONDON: Citing stark examples from school curriculum, a prominent Islamabad-based scholar has said that extreme religious and anti-India views fed into children in schools reinforced the cycle of extremism that showed no signs of receding in Pakistan. Pervez Hoodbhoy, nuclear physicist and commentator on current issues, presented the examples at a seminar in the King’s College on the role of education in combating terrorism , organized by the Democracy Forum.

The examples showed by Hoodbhoy included images and text from a primer that mentioned the Urdu equivalent of A as ‘Allah’ , B as ‘bandook’ , Te as ‘takrao’ , J as ‘jihad’ , H as ‘hijab’ , Kh as ‘khanjar’ and Ze as ‘zunoob’ . He also showed a college going up in flames, containing images of things considered sinful: kites, guitar , satellite TV, carom board, chess, wine bottles and harmonium. Examples cited by Hoodbhoy from another curriculum document for Class V students included tasks such as discussion on: ‘Understand Hindu-Muslim differences and the need for Pakistan’ , ‘India’s evil designs against Pakistan’ , ‘Make speeches on shehadat and jehad’.

“There has been a sea change in Pakistan in the last six decades. The poison put into education by Gen Zia-ul-Haq was not changed by subsequent regimes. And attitudes have changed over the years, makes my country alien to me,” Hoodbhoy said. Recalling his childhood in Karachi, he said the city was home to Hindus, Parsis and Christians. “They are all gone. The same is true of much of Pakistan. Minorities have no place in Pakistan today.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Pakistan in the Cold on Lashkar After Abu Jundal’s Arrest

The main political gain for India from the arrest of Lashkar-e-Taiba operative Abu Jundal, also known by his operational name Abu Hamza, will be its impact on Pakistan. Islamabad, already isolated on other issues, will be shocked when it realises how the arrest took place. Various sources say the initial tip-off that Jundal was in Saudi Arabia came from US intelligence. He was then apprehended by Riyadh which in turn told India to send a special plane to pick him up. “That a number of governments worked together to help India increases pressure on Pakistan,” says counter-terrorism expert Ajai Sahni. That the two countries involved were ones Pakistan has seen as “allies” would be especially unnerving. Pakistan-based security analyst Talat Masood said the Saudi role was “significant” — Pakistani-Saudi security links were even closer than those Islamabad had with the US.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia Struggles to Win Jihadist Hearts and Minds

Indonesia has spent the decade since the Bali nightclub bombings in a fight to win over Islamist militants and gain vital intelligence. While there have been some convincing results, critics say this is rare.

Since 2002, Indonesian courts have sentenced more than 700 people for terrorism offenses. During this time, there has been a rehabilitation program aimed at “de-radicalizing” those that are taken into custody.

Those on the inside say that authorities are “nice to terrorists so that they can extract information from them,” even though the scheme has recently been criticized as ineffective.

However, an example of the success of the program is Ali Imrom, the brother of two bombers who helped mastermind the Bali bombings in 2002. The brothers, Amrozi and Ali Ghufron, were executed in 2008.

Ale, as Ali Imron is usually called, was also involved. However, he has now said he regrets his part in the attacks that killed more than 200 people.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Soldier Killed in Afghanistan Blast

ROME/KANDAHAR: An Italian soldier was killed on Monday and two others were wounded in an explosion at a police training camp in Adraskan in western Afghanistan, Italy’s Defence Ministry said. “The explosion hit an observation hut near a shooting range,” the ministry said in a statement, without giving further details on what caused the blast. Military spokesman Francesco Tirino in Herat told SKY TG24 television that the blast was caused by “a rocket launched from outside the camp”.

Manuele Braj, 30, who was married, with an eight-month-old baby, was killed instantly. Two other Italian soldiers were wounded to the legs but are out of danger. All three belonged to the Police Speciality Training Team (PSTT). Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti expressed his “deep and most sincere condolences” to “Braj’s family and the troops engaged in an important training mission of the Afghan police”. Separately, six Afghan police officers were killed when a bomb tore through their vehicle in southern Afghanistan, an official said on Monday.The roadside bomb hit a police patrol vehicle in Chora district of Uruzgan province late on Sunday, provincial spokesman Abdullah Hemat told AFP. The Taliban, who frequently use roadside bombings to target Afghan and foreign military forces, claimed the responsibility for the deadly attack on their website.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Militants ‘Behead Pakistani Troops After Crossing Border From Afghanistan’

Pakistani military says 13 soldiers were killed, including seven who were beheaded, after attack on patrol in Upper Dir region

Militants have crossed into Pakistan from Afghanistan and killed 13 troops, beheading seven of them, according to the Pakistani military.

Officials said militants from Afghanistan had crossed into the north-western Upper Dir region on Sunday night and clashed with Pakistani forces on a patrol. Six Pakistani troops are said to have been killed immediately. Seven who went missing were beheaded, while four have not been found. The military’s statement also said Pakistani troops had killed 14 of the militants.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Rotting Grain Adds to India’s Food Problem

Although India harvested a bumper crop of grain this season, officals have warned that too much of it is rotting away in storage, instead of feeding the hungry poor.

The right time to eat for a rich man is when he is hungry; for a poor man when he has something to eat. This Mexican proverb highlights the plight of hungry Indians.

The total stocks across India in the central storage pool are expected to be at an all-time record of 75 million tons in June this year — almost one hundred thousand tons more than last year, The Food Corporation of India (FCI), announcing its latest estimates to the government, simultaneously warned, however, that there was a serious problem of vital food grains rotting away in silos.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Jails 14 Over Mosque Clash

Authorities in northwestern China sentence a group of Hui Muslims who fought to protect their place of worship.

Authorities in the northwestern Chinese region of Ningxia have handed jail terms of up to six years to 14 ethnic minority Hui Muslims for “inciting violence” and “obstructing public duty,” following clashes over the destruction of a mosque at the end of last year, local residents said. Police in Tongxin county near Ningxia’s Wuzhong city detained around 40 Muslim Hui people following riots last New Year’s Eve sparked by the forced demolition of a local mosque. Four were later released, and 36 stood trial on April 24.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Beyond a Joke

With a sense of humour guaranteed to make you laugh, Nazeem Hussain is surely one of the friendliest guys you could meet in Melbourne’s east. Born and bred in Burwood, Hussain is passionate about creating a harmonious Australia where people of every race and religion can happily co-exist. In 2008, Hussain and his mate Aamer Rahman were awarded with the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Best Newcomer Award for their stand-up show, Fear of a Brown Planet. “It’s a political comedy show about issues of race, religion, discrimination, prejudice, power, privilege and growing up in a modern white society,” Hussain says.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


7/7 Widow Samantha Lewthwaite ‘Suspected in Kenya Attack’

Samantha Lewthwaite, the widow of one of the 7/7 bombers, is believed to have been behind an attack in Kenya that killed three people as they watched England during Euro 2012, according to reports.

The 28-year-old, whose husband Germaine Lindsay killed 26 people aboard a Piccadilly Line train, is being hunted through east Africa in connection with a foiled plot to attack hotels in Mombasa. Kenyan police last night said that a woman matching Lewthwaite’s description had been seen near the Jericho Beer Garden shortly before a grenade attack on Sunday night which killed three and left 25 injured. “We suspect Samantha Lewthwaite was actively involved in the terrorist attack on the club,” a Kenyan official told the Daily Mail.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Islamic Maghreb, Boko Haram Concern U.S. Africa Commander

Al Qaeda and its relative organizations are finding areas on the African continent where they can operate mostly unfettered and could be forging new cooperative alliances. That concerns U.S. Africa Command’s top military officer Army Gen. Carter Ham. In a June 25 speech at the African Center for Strategic Studies in Arlington, U.S. Ham said while it is true the U.S. military is focused on the Asia-Pacific region and the middle east, the strategic guidance refers to “some very consistent and very relevant priorities for those of us who operate with our African partners.” These include combating extremist organizations, transnational threats and illicit trafficking; countering piracy, building partner capacity; developing nations’ capabilities to deal with humanitarian assistance and disaster relief missions; and contributing to regional security, Ham said.

According to a report from the American Forces Press Service, which is operated by the Department of Defense, Ham said Al Qaeda in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb and Boko Haram, pose particular concerns on the continent. U.S. military officials, he said, are increasingly concerned with the Islamic Maghreb, which has a safe haven in a large portion of Mali after a military coup.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Christians, Muslims to Embark on Joint Preaching

Minna — Muslims and Christians under the aegis of Interfaith Group for Peace in Niger State have concluded arrangements to commence a joint preaching programme to promote peaceful co-existence among Muslims and Christians in the state. Addressing newsmen yesterday in Minna, chairman, planning committee of the group, Mohammad Jameel Mohammad, said 12 persons were drawn from the Network of Islamic Organization for Peace (NIOP) and Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) to design the activities that would bring the two religious bodies together with a view to promoting relative peace in the state. He added that the group has put together short, medium and long term plans, and that under the short term plan, the group would visit secondary schools, compose radio and television jingles, produce joint leaflets on peace for Muslims and Christians, as well as organize a two days seminar for resource persons on interfaith dialogue. According to him, under the medium term plan, the group would be mainly concerned with interfaith mobile clinics, visitation to primary schools and drama presentation, while the long term plan would focus on visitation to churches and mosques.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Mexico City Airport Shootout Leaves Three Police Dead

Three Mexican policemen have been killed in a shootout with two other officers at Mexico City’s main airport. Officials say those shot dead were attempting to arrest the two officers who are suspected of involvement in a cocaine trafficking ring.

Passengers dived for cover when the suspected traffickers opened fire, killing two officers immediately and injuring a third who later died. The two suspects escaped and are being sought by the authorities.

Officials said they had spent 18 months investigating corrupt federal and local officials who they suspect are part of a drug trafficking ring operating at the airport.

The area was sealed off immediately after the incident but flights were reported to be operating normally in and out of the airport. “When the alleged perpetrators were surrounded by the police, shots were fired against the federal agents,” a security ministry statement said.

The two officers have been identified, authorities said. Eyewitness Israel Lopez told the Associated Press news agency: “We were in the food court, and some policemen came in and started shooting at another policeman who was on the floor.”

The BBC’s Will Grant in Mexico City says shootings in public spaces in broad daylight remain rare in the capital, which has been largely insulated from the violence seen elsewhere in the country.

Though traffickers use the capital’s main airport to move drugs, money and illegal migrants and have seized 440lb (200kg) of cocaine there so far this year, violence related to drug trafficking seldom occurs in passenger areas.

Reuters reports that gang violence has been growing in Mexico City and its suburbs, with around 300 gang-related murders last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australia: Entire 737 Used to Transport Injured Asylum Seeker

AN ENTIRE 737 plane was chartered just to fly one injured asylum seeker from Christmas Island to Perth, it has emerged.

The aircraft, which usually carries around 130 passengers flew the man, a detention centre guard and an immigration to Perth on Saturday so the man could receive urgent medical attention.

The man is believed to be on the asylum seeker boat which sank last week and was being treated for two severed fingers.

The Immigration Department has confirmed the plane was used to transport the man.

However, a department spokesman told the West Australian the decision was made to use the jet to move the man because it was already sitting on standby at Christmas Island’s airport and it was the “quickest and best” way to get him to Perth for treatment…

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Greece: Alarming Rise in Violence Against Immigrants

Foreigners attacked and injured every day

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — Racially motivated attacks are becoming more frequent and more violent by the day in Greece but, worse still, most of the attacks go unpunished because the police does not make arrests.

The alarm has been sounded by the Kathimerini newspaper, which reports almost daily brutal attacks and bloody brawls targeting immigrants, both legal and illegal. The paper quotes a surgeon practicing at the Evangelismos hospital in Athens, who says that “during every (12-hour) shift we have to deal with six or seven cases of foreigners who have been attacked and who are suffering from cuts, bruises and often even knife wounds”.

The attackers, who generally catch their victims by surprise, arrive in groups, hooded and dressed all in black, making them difficult to identify. Even if victims are able to identify and report their attackers to police, they are very unlikely to do so for fear of being attacked again, or worse. Yet everyone knows that almost all of the attackers are members or sympathisers of Golden Dawn, the far-right party with clear pro-Nazi sympathies, which at the recent general election earned almost 7% of the vote and 18 seats in Parliament. Kathimerini reports as an indicative factor that attacks against immigrants in the Athens area of Thissio have doubled since the party opened a new office in the area two months ago, a statistic backed up by health officials at the local hospital. A number of attacks have been recorded in the last month across Attica, of which Athens is the capital, but also on the island of Crete.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Refugees in Greece Smuggled Into Europe

Refugees and asylum seekers in Greece may be paying up to €5,000 to get smuggled into Italy and elsewhere in Europe. Children are left behind with the smugglers who use them as “guarantees” or “deposits” to ensure future payment by desperate parents.

Once the parents obtain asylum, in say Sweden or the Netherlands, the smugglers then escort the children to Athens-based NGOs who are then able to reunite them.

“We have become a tool of the smugglers and part of this game,” Kenneth Brant Hansen from the Greek Council for Refugees in Athens told EUobserver.

“Of course we are not happy about this situation; on the other hand we cannot refuse to reunite families especially when it involves minor children,” he said. Hansen said the men who bring him the children are professional Afghan smugglers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Al-Qaida Calls for ‘Forest Jihad’

The latest issue of the al-Qaida propaganda publication Inspire contains the usual dose of narcissism, delusional threats and overwrought tributes to dead terrorists, but what is striking is the space it devotes to an unexpected target: trees. Eleven pages of the online magazine are handed over to discussions about starting forest fires in NATO countries, providing both a tactical and religious justification for it, and an illustrated step-by-step guide on how to do it using a device made out of gasoline and a washing machine timer. “Fire is one of the soldiers of Allah,” it says.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nanoparticles May Explain Moon Dirt’s Odd Behavior

The famously strange behavior of lunar soil may be caused by nanoparticles embedded in the dirt, a new study reports. The study found that nanoparticles — specks of matter whose tiny size imparts exotic and often bizarre properties — are common in samples of moon dirt brought back to Earth by Apollo astronauts.

The discovery may explain why moon soil is such a poor conductor of heat, why it hovers above the lunar surface far longer than gravity should allow, and why it’s so sticky and abrasive — characteristics observed, and sometimes deplored, by moonwalking astronauts four decades ago.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120625

Financial Crisis
» Cyprus Applies for Eurozone Bailout
» EU Warned Over Supplies of Medicine to Greece
» France ‘Needs 10 Billion to Tackle Deficit’
» Germany Would if it Could, But it Can’t So it Won’t
» Germans Panic-Buy Over-Priced Swiss Houses
» Germany Rejects Obama’s Criticism in Euro Crisis
» Imagining the Unthinkable
» Spain Officially Requests Aid for Its Ailing Banks
» Swiss Central Bank in Swap Deal With Poland
 
USA
» Los Angeles Jewish Federation Hosts, Endorses Pam Geller’s Islamophobia
» Major Nidal Hasan’s Beard
» New Black Hole Spotted
» Teens Desecrate 9-11 Memorial
» The Twin Faces of Islam
 
Europe and the EU
» Al-Qaida Trains Norwegian to Attack
» Belgium: European Islamic Group Praises Holocaust-Denier
» Italy: Tourists Stealing Cobblestones and Mosaic From Ancient Rome
» Jihadis Using Switzerland as a Base: Police
» Research Finds Stonehenge Was Monument Marking Unification of Britain
» UK: ‘Sex Gang Had Values Entrenched in Foothills of Punjab’
» UK: Britannia Rules Aid
» UK: Lambeth’s Urban Clearance
» UK: Mum Maroon Rafique Banned From Manchester College Parents’ Evening… for Wearing a Veil
» UK: Sex Gang Ringleader Unmasked
» UK: Why Gang Leader Could Not be Unmasked
 
North Africa
» Arab Spring Provided New Breeding Ground for British Terrorists — Spy Chief
» Egypt: A Muslim Brotherhood President Does Not Prove That We Are All ‘Chimps’
» Egypt: A Liberal Challenge to Wahhabist Orthodoxy May be the Way Forward for Islam
» Egypt: Khairat Al Shater: The Brother Who Would Run Egypt
» Egypt Might Not Follow Radical Islam Path — Official
» Egypt’s Powerless New Head of State
» The Brotherhood’s Bait and Switch
» Tunisian Ministry of Relgious Affairs to Increase Control of Mosque Activities
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Fatal Failure to Fight for Right
» Obama, His Rabbi and Political Islam
» Vladimir Putin Flies to Israel for Iran and Syria Talks
 
Middle East
» Qatar: Forum Aims to Foster Bioethics Research
» ‘Syria’s Stonehenge’: Mysterious Ruins in Desert Could be 10,000 Years Old — But Scientists Can’t Get Near to Investigate
 
South Asia
» India: Prophet Pic in School Book Irks Muslims
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» Nigeria: US Puts Three Boko Haram Leaders on Terror List
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Immigration
» Netherlands: Amsterdam’s Newcomers Thrive Even as Immigration Gets Tougher
» UK: Right Scandal
 
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» Australia: Muslim Imam Condemns Homosexuality as Salvos Apologise for Death-to-Gays Insult
 
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» The Evils of the Muslim Brotherhood

Financial Crisis


Cyprus Applies for Eurozone Bailout

Cyprus Monday announced it will apply for a eurozone bailout. “The purpose of the required assistance is to contain the risks to the Cypriot economy … due to its large exposure in the Greek economy,” said a government statement. Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already had international bailouts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Warned Over Supplies of Medicine to Greece

Europe’s drug industry has written to EU leaders to seek help to keep medicines flowing to crisis-hit countries like Greece, Reuters reports. The industry wants to prevent discounted products in southern Europe from being exported to rich states in the north and wants Europe to do more for drug research.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France ‘Needs 10 Billion to Tackle Deficit’

France must find up to €10 billion to cut its public deficit to 4.5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said on Monday. Moscovici told iTele television that the new socialist government was looking for seven to 10 billion euros ($12.5 billion), and added: “We are somewhere in the middle I imagine, but I am waiting to see the official figures”.

The numbers given were slightly lower than the government’s previous estimate of about €10 billion.

In 2011, France posted a public deficit, which includes state and social services spending such as the public health system, of 5.2 percent of GDP, and in March the former government cut its 2012 target to 4.4 percent.

Under EU rules, eurozone countries are supposed to keep deficits below 3.0 percent of GDP, and work towards a balance or even a surplus in times of economic growth.

Moscovici also said that a European Union summit to take place on Thursday in Brussels had to see eurozone countries offer “structural solutions” to a crisis that is now in its third year.

He insisted that this meeting of EU leaders “is not a banal summit”.

Markets and other countries around the world “expect Europeans to finally come up with structural solutions, and that is what they are looking for”.

Moscovici said the summit should “finally provide the euro with a political spine, and banking regulation”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Would if it Could, But it Can’t So it Won’t

Does Germany have a duty to bail-out the Eurozone? Some people say yes, some people say no (or rather nein seeing as most of them are German). Writing for the Washington Post, Robert Samuelson says it doesn’t matter, because the Germans couldn’t bail-out their neighbours even if they wanted to (which they don’t).

[….]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germans Panic-Buy Over-Priced Swiss Houses

Wealthy Germans are being pushed into panic-buying property at sky-high prices in Switzerland as fears grow for the safety of their euro assets, a newspaper reported on Sunday.

“Do something before the euro finally splutters its last cough and dies, taking your assets down with it.” This is the message Swiss investment companies are sending to wealthy Germans, Die Welt said on Sunday. “Transfer your assets to the most secure democracy in Europe. To Switzerland, where private assets are respected,” reads one newsletter sent out by one unnamed company quoted in the article.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Rejects Obama’s Criticism in Euro Crisis

In a sign of tensions between Berlin and Washington, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble said on Sunday that President Barack Obama should focus on cutting America’s own budget deficit before advising Europe on how to tackle its debt problems.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble rebuffed recent criticism of Germany’s handling of the euro crisis from Barack Obama, telling the US president to get his own house in order before giving advice.

“Herr Obama should above all deal with the reduction of the American deficit. That is higher than that in the euro zone,” he told German public broadcaster ZDF on Sunday night. It is easy to give advice to others, he added,

Obama, worried about the impact of the debt crisis on the global economy and financial markets — and on his own prospects for re-election —has been urging Europe to step up its efforts to tackle the problem.

In the interview, Schäuble also reiterated his opposition to euro bonds, saying countries must remain individually liable for their public debt as long as they were taking sovereign decisions on how the money was being spent.

“If you spend the money from my account, you won’t be frugal with the money,” said the finance minister. He added that he was against devoting large sums of money — for example from the European Central Bank — to fight the crisis. The roots of the crisis needed to be fought credibly, he said, adding that that was succeeding in Ireland and Portugal, which have both received international bailouts. “It’s not succeeding so well in Greece,”he added.

Schäuble said a new structure needed to be found for the single currency, and that reforms could come quickly. He added that credible decisions could be taken at the next EU summit on Thursday and Friday when proposals for deeper integration will be presented.

One of the decisive questions at the summit would be how much power the member states should transfer to Brussels. In an interview with SPIEGEL published on Monday, Schäuble said he could imagine that Germany will soon have to hold a referendum on a new constitution enshrining greater EU sovereignty.

“I don’t know when that will happen, and I doubt anyone does,” he told SPIEGEL. “But I assume that it’ll happen sooner than I would have thought a few months ago.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Imagining the Unthinkable

The Disastrous Consequences of a Euro Crash

As the debt crisis worsens in Spain and Italy, financial experts are warning of the catastrophic consequences of a crash of the euro: the destruction of trillions in assets and record high unemployment levels, even in Germany.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain Officially Requests Aid for Its Ailing Banks

On Monday, the Spanish government in Madrid officially requested EU aid for its troubled banks. Spain will be expected to reform its financial industry in exchange for help, but who will determine the conditions that are applied?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss Central Bank in Swap Deal With Poland

Switzerland’s national bank agreed on Monday to a deal with its Polish counterpart to cover any cash shortages in Poland as borrowers face repaying loans in expensive Swiss francs.

“The Swiss National Bank (SNB) and National Bank of Poland (NBP) have concluded a Swiss franc/zloty swap agreement,” the SNB said in a statement. “In the event of tensions in the Swiss franc interbank market, the facility enables the NBP to provide Swiss franc liquidity to banks in Poland. “The two central banks do not anticipate that this agreement, which has been concluded as a precautionary measure, will need to be called upon.”

According to the terms of the “swap” agreement, SNB would have to approve any demands for funds by NBP for a maximum duration of one week.

A spokeswoman for SNB said that Polish households had “a relatively high volume” of franc-denominated loans that could require refinancing.

The agreement was the second of its kind between the two countries since 2008 and similar to one drawn up between Hungary and SNB in 2008, the spokeswoman said.

“This (swap agreement) is because there is a relatively high volume of outstanding loans in Poland. There could be a high need to refinance these loans there,” said Silvia Oppliger, SNB spokeswoman.

“But this is a precautionary measure and we don’t think it will have to be activated. If it is needed, it is in place.”

Since September last year the Swiss franc has been capped at 1.20 to the euro by the SNB, but it was at 1.30 to the euro at the beginning of last year and significantly more attractive in 2007 when investors banked on getting 1.64 francs to the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Los Angeles Jewish Federation Hosts, Endorses Pam Geller’s Islamophobia

by Richard Silverstein

Well, now I’ve seen everything. In the course of writing this blog, at various points I’ve made similar statements. But invariably an even greater outrage occurs and I have to amend myself. Tonight is such a time.

CAIR’s daily press briefing reveals that the Los Angeles Jewish Federation will be hosting a lecture by rabid Muslim-hater Pam Geller, Islamic Jew Hatred: The Root Cause of Failure to Achieve Peace. The official sponsor of the event is the Zionist Organization of America, but she will speak tomorrow on their behalf in the Sanders Board Room, the Federation’s main meeting space.

[…]

[JP note: See also atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2012/06/la-jewish-federation-caves-to-hamas-linked-muslim-groups-cancels-geller-event.html ]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Major Nidal Hasan’s Beard

This week military judge Gregory Gross barred Major Nidal Malik Hasan from appearing in court because he has refused to shave a beard he reportedly grew as a badge of his deep Islamic faith. The beard, judge Gross said, was a violation of Army policy. As it happens, so were Hasan’s actions in November of 2009 at Fort Hood, Texas.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



New Black Hole Spotted

US astrophysicists have discovered a black hole, hurled out of its galaxy by what experts describe as powerful gravitation forces.

The orbital telescope Chandra spotted the unusual phenomenon unfolding 4 billion light years from Earth. Specialists attribute the gravitational field disturbance to a collision of two galaxies which, in turn, adds credence to the “wandering black holes” theory.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Teens Desecrate 9-11 Memorial

The New York Dept. of Education has launched an investigation over reports that a group of middle school students were caught throwing trash into the reflecting pools of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum during a recent school field trip.

Eyewitnesses told the Daily News (newspaper) that the kids threw empty soda bottles and baseballs into the pools — marking the original footprints of the World Trade Center towers.

Besides trash:

In addition, one of the students reportedly tried to bring firearm ammunition into the site. Police said they found three .33-caliber rounds in a plastic bin in the security area.

Respect is taught and these “teens” parents have failed miserably in their parenting skills.

“It really is so sad that anyone would disrespect the souls that were lost in the terrorist attacks back on 9/11,” said Al Hagan, president of the Uniformed Fire Officers Association.

“One can only hope that these children do not become lost and that they;

“learn from their mistakes.”

“No one was disrespecting. It wasn’t nothing like that,” said one student. “No one was being serious. Everyone was kind of bored and it was just something to do.”

So much for “learning from mistakes”.

“They were making jokes and throwing stuff in the fountain,” said another student. “It didn’t seem like a big deal.”

But other visitors were outraged by their behavior.

“That is an absolute disgrace,” Sharon Hooks told the newspaper. “I don’t care if these children were too young to remember the events of that day. They need to be taught to be respectful.

“It’s a memorial,” Rene LaRosa told the Daily News. “They showed an absolute lack of respect.”

BTW, where were the school staff?

Looking the other way?

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



The Twin Faces of Islam

by M. Zuhdi Jasser

The complexities of the “Muslim issue” in America are often exploited and bandied about between two extremes — one that wants to be believe that Islam is universally peaceful and no “real” Muslim could be a radical, and the other that has become suspicious of every American Muslim. The vast majority of Americans are hopelessly confused somewhere in between. They are fearful but searching for solutions and looking for hope. The greatest security threat we face as Americans has one common ideological thread across the globe — not spiritual Islam but political Islam (Islamism). That threat is a byproduct of a soulful Muslim battle between liberalism and Islamism.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Al-Qaida Trains Norwegian to Attack

A Norwegian man has received terrorist training from al-Qaida’s offshoot in Yemen and is awaiting orders to carry out an attack on the West, officials from three European security agencies told The Associated Press on Monday.

Western intelligence officials have long feared such a scenario — a convert to Islam who is trained in terrorist methods and can blend in easily in Europe and the United States, traveling without visa restrictions.

Officials from three European security agencies confirmed Monday the man is “operational,” meaning he has completed his training and is about to receive a target. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly. They declined to name the man, who has not been accused of a crime.

“We believe he is operational and he is probably about to get his target,” one security official said. “And that target is probably in the West.”

A security official in a second European country confirmed the information, adding: “From what I understand, a specific target has not been established.”

European security services, including in Norway, have warned in recent years of homegrown, radicalized Muslims traveling to terror training camps in conflict zones. Many of the known cases involve young men with family roots in Muslim countries.

But the latest case involves a man in his 30s with no immigrant background, the officials said. After converting to Islam in 2008, he quickly became radicalized and traveled to Yemen to receive terror training, one of the officials said. The man spent “some months” in Yemen and is still believed to be there, he said.

The official said the man has no criminal record, which would also make him an ideal recruit for al-Qaida.

“Not even a parking ticket,” he said. “He’s completely clean and he can travel anywhere.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgium: European Islamic Group Praises Holocaust-Denier

Brussels-based Federation of Islamic Organizations in Europe (FIOE) mourned death of French Holocaust-denier Roger Garaudy.

BERLIN — The Brussels-based Federation of Islamic Organizations in Europe (FIOE) issued a statement mourning the death on June 13 of French Holocaust-denier Roger Garaudy, prompting fierce criticism on Saturday from the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s office in Paris. According to the president of the Islamic organization, the “FIOE received with great sorrow the news of the death of the French thinker Roger Garaudy, known to the world as a distinguished philosopher with a life of diverse contributions and interactions across the world.”

According to the president of the Islamic organization, the “FIOE received with great sorrow the news of the death of the French thinker Roger Garaudy, known to the world as a distinguished philosopher with a life of diverse contributions and interactions across the world.” The FIOE statement, which was posted on the group’s website, added that Garaudy was a “great thinker” and “whether people agree or disagree with pioneering thinkers, they cannot in any way ignore the vibrant ideological and human life of a thinker, who spent close to a whole century of our lifetime, with a keen concern for achieving understanding between nations, and interaction between civilizations.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italy: Tourists Stealing Cobblestones and Mosaic From Ancient Rome

Tourists are stealing cobblestones, marble mile markers and bits of mosaic from ancient Rome and are being caught at customs trying to smuggle them home, airport police have disclosed.

Dozens of the square stones used by Romans 2,000 years ago to pave roads are ending up in passengers hand luggage. Security staff screening bags at the Italian capital’s main airports at Fiumicino and Ciampino have reported a surge in findings as x-ray scanners pick up the objects when luggage is screened and they in turn call police. On Sunday, police in Rome put on display a vast collection of the cobblestones and artefacts that they have seized from passenger luggage in the first six months of this year. The majority of those caught are “northern Europeans” and several British tourists have been among those caught red handed and left embarrassed in front of other passengers when items are pulled from their luggage. Ancient Romans used volcanic stone to make the cobbles for the roads that led away from the city and they date back 2,000 years.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Jihadis Using Switzerland as a Base: Police

The Swiss Federal Police are worried that Islamic terrorists are using Switzerland as a base.

The Swiss Federal Police are worried that Islamic terrorists are using Switzerland as a base. “Suspected jihadis continue to use Switzerland as a base to acrtively support Islamist groups by placing propaganda and incitement to violence on the web,” FedPol said in its annual report published on Thursday, newspaper Tribune de Genève reported.

A new specialist department, formed at the beginning of 2011, has been looking into the websites and their operators.

A preliminary investigation conducted in Germany also found that a Swiss convert to Islam had planned over the web to carry out a terrorist attack involving explosives against an American institution in Germany. The man was eventually released from police custody due to lack of evidence.

The report said that the fact the man identified was Swiss proved that “not only people with immigrant backgrounds could be supporters of jihad,” newspaper Tages Anzeiger reported.

The Federal Police are working closely with the Swiss Intelligence Services who confirmed that they have identified more than ten trips from Switzerland to jihadi training camps overseas.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Research Finds Stonehenge Was Monument Marking Unification of Britain

After 10 years of archaeological investigations, researchers have concluded that Stonehenge was built as a monument to unify the peoples of Britain, after a long period of conflict and regional difference between eastern and western Britain.

Its stones are thought to have symbolized the ancestors of different groups of earliest farming communities in Britain, with some stones coming from southern England and others from west Wales.

The teams, from the universities of Sheffield, Manchester, Southampton, Bournemouth and University College London, all working on the Stonehenge Riverside Project (SRP), explored not just Stonehenge and its landscape but also the wider social and economic context of the monument’s main stages of construction around 3,000 BC and 2,500 BC.

“When Stonehenge was built”, said Professor Mike Parker Pearson of the University of Sheffield, “there was a growing island-wide culture — the same styles of houses, pottery and other material forms were used from Orkney to the south coast. This was very different to the regionalism of previous centuries. Stonehenge itself was a massive undertaking, requiring the labour of thousands to move stones from as far away as west Wales, shaping them and erecting them. Just the work itself, requiring everyone literally to pull together, would have been an act of unification.”

Stonehenge may have been built in a place that already had special significance for prehistoric Britons. The SRP team have found that its solstice-aligned Avenue sits upon a series of natural landforms that, by chance, form an axis between the directions of midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset.

Professor Parker Pearson continued: “When we stumbled across this extraordinary natural arrangement of the sun’s path being marked in the land, we realized that prehistoric people selected this place to build Stonehenge because of its pre-ordained significance. This might explain why there are eight monuments in the Stonehenge area with solstitial alignments, a number unmatched anywhere else. Perhaps they saw this place as the centre of the world”.

Although many people flocked to Stonehenge yesterday for the summer solstice, it seems that the winter solstice was the more significant time of the year when Stonehenge was built 5,000-4,500 years ago.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Sex Gang Had Values Entrenched in Foothills of Punjab’

London: British historian David Starkey has provoked controversy after proclaiming that the Rochdale child exploitation gang, who raped vulnerable teenage girls, had values ‘‘that were entrenched in foothills of the Punjab’’ or whatever it is. According to The Daily Mail, Starkey was branded a ‘‘racist’’ and a ‘‘bigot’’ following a heated conversation with a journalist during a discussion at Wellington College in Berkshire.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Britannia Rules Aid

SACKS emblazoned with Union Jacks are to be used to distribute the £8.4billion of British aid abroad.

In a defeat for the PC lobby International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell has waived a four-year ban on the flag. It was imposed by Labour after officials said it was “too colonial” and could upset locals. Mr Mitchell is also bringing in a new logo. It has a Union Jack and the words “UK Aid — from the British people”. It replaces one which carried a government crest. Astonishingly, it has emerged that designing the old symbol cost taxpayers £97,480 in 2008. The new one was done at ZERO cost on a ministry computer.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Lambeth’s Urban Clearance

by Brixton Observer

Labour-controlled Lambeth Council describes itself as the “co-operative council”. But it is in the process of destroying a number of housing co-operatives, shipping out residents of longstanding and destroying their communities, selling the properties allegedly at a loss, and acting in an opaque and heavy-handed fashion against residents who get in its way.

[…]

The indifference to the plight of the “small people” and the abject cleaving to the party line are redolent of East Germany circa 1972.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Mum Maroon Rafique Banned From Manchester College Parents’ Evening… for Wearing a Veil

A mum was turned away from a college parents’ evening — because she was wearing a veil. Maroon Rafique was refused entry to Manchester College by senior staff who told her there was a ban on face coverings. The mum-of-two, from Whalley Range, said she was left stunned and dismayed. She had to phone husband Abdul, who attended the meeting with their 18-year-old son Awais, while she sat in the lobby of the college’s Northenden campus. Bosses at the college said that all students and visitors are asked to keep their faces visible for ‘safety and security’ reasons.

[…]

[Reader comment by tommyrot on 24 June 2012 at 12:48.]

We should not be afraid of being intolerant to intolerance and ignorance. The niqab is an affront in so many ways, to so many people. High time it was banned at a national level too.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Sex Gang Ringleader Unmasked

London: The ringleader of a gang of Asian men who preyed on young white girls in Britain has been unmasked after he was found guilty of 30 child rape charges. Pakistani-origin Shabir Ahmed was the ringleader of a group of men who preyed on dozens of young girls in Rochdale, Greater Manchester, and then passed them around for sex. He was jailed last month, but can only now be identified, after he was convicted of 30 more horrific rapes in a separate trial, the Daily Mail reports.

Ahmed, known as ‘Daddy’, was one of nine Pakistani men jailed at Liverpool Crown Court for a total of 77 years last month for sex attacks on young British girls.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Why Gang Leader Could Not be Unmasked

Rapist Shabir Ahmed was the unnamed ringleader of the gang that shocked the country in the recent child sexual-exploitation case. Due to the separate rape trial having not started at the time, Rochdale Online was legally unable to identify the man so as not to prejudice the jury. Instead he became known as the 59-year-old ringleader. But with the case now over, Rochdale Online is allowed to identify the beast — and the horrific role he played in the Rochdale and Oldham child sex ring.

[…]

[Reader comment by disgruntled on 23 June 2012 at 16:19:45.]

I hope these vile people are being deported when they are released.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Arab Spring Provided New Breeding Ground for British Terrorists — Spy Chief

The Arab Spring has spawned a new generation of British-born terrorists after al-Qaeda lured dozens of would-be bombers abroad to train for possible attacks on the UK, the head of MI5 warned.

Jonathan Evans said the terror network has taken advantage of the unstable region, in the wake of last year’s revolutions, to spread its influence and create new bases for attacks.

British would-be jihadis are known to be receiving training in the likes of Libya and Egypt, mirroring what has already happened in the Yemen and Somalia.

And they could return to attack the UK in what is a “new and worrying development”, he said.

Mr Evans, the Director General of MI5, warned of the emerging threats in a rare speech, his first in almost two years.

In his talk, he also:…

           — Hat tip: LT [Return to headlines]



Egypt: A Muslim Brotherhood President Does Not Prove That We Are All ‘Chimps’

By Barry Rubin

Muhammad al-Mursi, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate, has become president of Egypt. But what does it mean to be president of Egypt? That’s the current question. Let me divide the discussion into two parts: What does this tell about “us” and what does this tell about Egypt and its future?

First, what does it tell about the West? The answer is that there are things that can be learned and understood, leading to some predictive power, but unfortunately the current hegemonic elite and its worldview refuse to learn.

What could be more revealing of that fact than the words off Jacqueline Stevens in the New York Times: “Chimps randomly throwing darts at the possible outcomes would have done almost as well as the experts”? Well, it depends on which experts. Martin Kramer, one of those who was right all along about Egypt, has a choice selection of quotes from a certain kind of Middle East expert who was dead wrong. A near-infinite number of such quotes can be gathered from the pages of America’s most august newspapers.

These people all share the current left-wing ideology; the refusal to understand the menace of revolutionary Islamism; the general belief that President Barack Obama is doing a great job; and the tendency to blame either Israel or America for the region’s problems. So if a big mistake has been made, it is that approach that has proven to be in the chimp category.

Having written about the Middle East for almost forty years, I’ve seen the power of the “chimps” that repeatedly make the same mistakes over and over again. Their power has waxed and waned, falling to the lowest points, for example, just after the 1991 Kuwait war and just after September 11, 2001. But they keep making comebacks and in the last two years their influence has been at an all-time high.

In early October 2010 I wrote an article based on actually reading what the Muslim Brotherhood leaders were saying. It was titled “The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood is Declaring Jihad on America; Will Anyone in America Notice?” And they were signaling a change in their traditionally cautious strategy to go for revolution. Why? They told us: President Husni Mubarak was on his last legs, the regime seemed uncertain, America was weak, and their assessment was that the revolutionary Islamist forces were advancing everywhere.

By the time the uprising broke out, in January 2011, numerous voices were raised in warning. If the mainstream were to be honest, it would have to admit that those voices included Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, and Glenn Beck.

[Incidentally, imagine the anger, the hatred, and the gnashing of teeth that will occur in response to the previous sentence. Yet aren’t people engaged in public debate—especially intellectuals, and that includes liberal intellectuals—supposed to acknowledge the truth? Who refuses to give credit for those, even opponents, who are right? Who refuses to learn from their own mistakes? Not real liberals or conservatives, but ideologically rigid radicals.]

None of these people were experts but they listened to the more accurate experts, at times went over the heads of the mass media to look at what the Brotherhood really said, and also had a basic sense of reality that guided them correctly on this issue. Equally accurate was every article written on the subject in PJ Media. To admit this, however, would require the hegemonic forces to accept that they might be right on other issues as well.

Meanwhile, the New York Times correspondent is still telling readers:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Egypt: A Liberal Challenge to Wahhabist Orthodoxy May be the Way Forward for Islam

by Judith Mendelsohn Rood

Ninety years after the abolition of the Ottoman Empire and the establishment of the League of Nations Mandate in Palestine in 1922, Hassan al-Banna and his political ally, Hajj Amin al-Hussayni, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, the founders of the Muslim Brotherhood, have won their greatest political victory: the presidency of Egypt. Despite the efforts of the opposition to keep Egypt from becoming Salafist, the authoritarian tyranny that was the Mubarak regime has been thoroughly repudiated by the Egyptian masses. As in Gaza, the Muslim Brotherhood’s moral standing has proven lethal to Arab nationalism. The consequences for Muslim conservatives, liberals, Christians and women there have already been felt in Gaza, where Hamas has used its popularity to wage jihad against Israel and those whose presence is not welcome in Salafi society.

There is a double tragedy here. I have met Muslim Egyptian expatriates, businessmen and professors, who were forced to leave Egypt because of their support for peace with Israel. These men found their lives threatened by the Brotherhood and their properties confiscated by the very regime whose policy toward Israel that they supported. As Muslims, these Egyptians agree with the ideas expressed by the Azhar trained Secretary-General of the Italian Muslim Association and Director of the Institute of the Italian Islamic Community, Imam Abdul-Hadi Palazzi, who has gone on the record to repudiate the Salafist ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood who has articulated the idea that the abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate left not only a political void, but an intellectual and cultural one as well.

[…]

As we watch the crowds in Tahrir Square, we can only hope that the Egyptians will not fall for the polemical Salafist foreign policy of the Muslim Brotherhood. Now that they have won the presidency, the real task of government is now before the Egyptian people. Will Egypt become Gaza? God forbid. As the home of both Al-Azhar and modern Arabic thought, Cairo is the only place that Muslims can turn to the great storehouses of Islamic wisdom to overcome the disastrous legacy of Salafism in our times.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Khairat Al Shater: The Brother Who Would Run Egypt

by Matthew Kaminski

The millionaire who leads the secretive, powerful Muslim Brotherhood talks about his strategy for taking power from the military.

A military power grab this week pushed Egypt into the most serious political crisis since Hosni Mubarak’s fall. As the Muslim Brotherhood was mobilizing the masses back into Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the ruling generals on Friday proclaimed their willingness to use “an iron first” to restore order. Perhaps more than anyone outside the military, Khairat Al Shater will shape the outcome of this showdown. The millionaire businessman is the boss, in a Chicago machine sort of way, of the Muslim Brotherhood. At Wednesday’s meeting of the Islamist group’s governing Guidance Council, Mr. Al Shater sits in the middle of a packed conference table at their new headquarters in the Mokattam Hills neighborhood above the turbulent streets of Cairo. He confesses to fatigue from lack of sleep “in these tough days”—and then exhibits little evident sign of it. At age 62, Mr. Al Shater is a tall, hulking man with a deep voice. He avoids the standard Muslim Brother costume of suit and tie and wears an open checkered shirt and blue blazer. He rarely appears in Egyptian media, but his authority goes unquestioned. If the Brotherhood came to power, Mr. Al Shater would be in charge.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Egypt Might Not Follow Radical Islam Path — Official

The Russian President’s point man for cooperation with African countries, Mikhail Margelov, says that the election of Mohammed Mursi as Egyptian President does not necessarily mean that Egypt will now follow a path of radical Islam.

Margelov has told reporters that Mursi, who has won the presidential runoff, has made perfectly secular pledges, although the idea of building an Islamic state underlies his election programme. But Margelov believes that Egypt is in for another period of instability due to the ongoing unrest. Both the supporters of the President-elect and those of former Prime Minister, Ahmad Shafiq, who lost to Mursi, keep holding their rallies. The Russian diplomat feels that President Mursi will also have to address economic problems.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Egypt’s Powerless New Head of State

Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohammed Morsi has won presidential elections in Egypt, but the country’s military stripped the office of its powers before his victory was even announced. Facing a deeply divided populace and a crippled economy, the new head of state faces an uphill battle.

The Muslim Brotherhood had been waiting for this moment for 84 years, but it was the final hour that would prove the longest. The head of Egypt’s election commission, Faruk Sultan, spent fully 60 minutes explaining just how he and his officials determined the results of the first free presidential election in the country. When he finally saw fit to announce the victor, Cairo’s Tahrir Square erupted in celebration. Thousands screamed for joy: Following eight decades during which the Islamist group was oppressed and persecuted, Muslim Brother Mohammed Morsi was elected as the country’s new leader.

Morsi’s victory is first and foremost an important milestone. The Muslim Brotherhood is the oldest Islamist organization in the world. The fact that the group has now won the presidency in the most populous country in the Arab world in free and fair elections will certainly make waves across the region.

Still, the election has revealed once again just how deep the rift in Egypt has become. It has been a year since authoritarian President Hosni Mubarak was toppled and the country still has not decided in which direction it wishes to go. Morsi’s vision of a departure from the Mubarak years was countered by his opponent Ahmed Shafiq, a long-time companion of the ousted president. The election campaign was one between the old Egypt and the new Egypt.

It is an uncertainty that was reflected in the week of confusion following the vote just over a week ago. For seven days, there were no official results and it looked briefly as though the ruling military council would not recognize the true victor and would install their man Shafiq in the presidential palace. Protests in the streets and Muslim Brotherhood threats to stage another revolution would appear to have changed the generals’ minds. It remains to be seen, however, what kind of a deal the Muslim Brotherhood might have struck with the military.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Brotherhood’s Bait and Switch

by Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.

Egypt’s newly elected president, Mohammed Morsi, says he will be a “leader for all Egyptians.” That sounds a lot like the sorts of lies his fellow Muslim Brothers have been telling for months, only to renege on them when they can. We ignore the true character and ambitions of the Brotherhood — in Egypt, elsewhere in the Mideast, in the wider world and here — at our extreme peril.

In fact, the Brothers’ bait-and-switch gambits are standard operating procedure for their secretive organization. After all, from the Muslim Brotherhood’s inception in Egypt in 1928, it has been a revolutionary organization committed to the imposition worldwide of a totalitarian, supremacist Islamic doctrine they call shariah.

The unattractiveness of that brutally repressive agenda to non-Muslims and even many Muslims, has forced the group to operate largely in the shadows. It wages a stealthy, pre-violent “civilization jihad” to advance its goals until circumstances are ripe for conquest via violent jihadism…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Tunisian Ministry of Relgious Affairs to Increase Control of Mosque Activities

Following the controversy accompanying the Printemps des Arts exhibition in the Palais Abdellia (located in Tunisia’s suburb of La Marsa), as well as the subsequent response from several Tunisian imams, the government has taken a stronger role in monitoring mosque activity to prevent further controversy. The interaction of public and religious spheres in the mosques is a remnant of the previous regime. Under former Tunisian President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, many imams were used as yet another source of government propaganda extolling the virtues of Ben Ali during Friday speeches.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Fatal Failure to Fight for Right

by Melanie Phillips

Travelling in America last week, I found American Jews shaking their heads in amazement at what they considered to be the supine attitude of the British Jewish leadership towards Israel demonisation and the inroads made by Islamic radicalism. I was particularly struck by one conversation. Why had Britain not experienced the American “culture wars” that have been raging in the US for more than four decades?

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Obama, His Rabbi and Political Islam

by Barry Rubin

Obama’s view of Judaism, Zionism and Israel was very much shaped by his liberal and left-wing Jewish contacts in Chicago.

President Barack Obama’s view of Judaism, Zionism and Israel was very much shaped by his liberal and left-wing Jewish contacts in Chicago, some of whom became key members of his entourage. Among these influential acquaintances was Rabbi Arnold Jacob Wolf. Wolf was of a type familiar in American Jewish circles. While in principle pro-Israel, he had certain views that made him highly critical. As what I would call a moral perfectionist, Wolf could not view Israel as good enough to live up to Jewish values that had been honed during a long exile during which Jews had no political responsibility and did not have to meet the real world demands of political power. At the same time, he was more attuned to Israel’s reputedly more idealistic era of Labor Party hegemony.

For Wolf, Israel was arrogant, not nice to the Palestinian Arabs, obsessed with the Holocaust, and thus simultaneously paranoid and over-confident. Not understanding the realities of Israel’s strategic situation, the compromises made necessary by statehood, the actual facts on the ground, and other factors, Wolf thought he and those who thought as he did knew better how to protect and morally improve Israel than did its voters and leaders. One can glimpse many of these themes in Obama’s thinking today.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Vladimir Putin Flies to Israel for Iran and Syria Talks

Russian President Vladimir Putin arrives in Israel on Monday for talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders against the backdrop of sustained violence in Syria and concern on Iran’s nuclear programme.

Putin will hold talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres on Monday, as well as unveil a Second World War memorial in the town of Netanya.

On Tuesday, Putin heads to the West Bank, and will meet with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, before travelling on to Jordan for talks with King Abdullah II. On the eve of the trip, Putin’s top foreign policy aide, Yury Ushakov, said it would highlight “the importance of this region for us and is designed to further strengthen Russia’s position here.” “Of course, the Syrian topic and the situation around Iran will be discussed in detail,” he said. Moscow and the West have been at loggerheads over the Syrian conflict, with the Kremlin refusing to support sanctions against its Soviet-era ally and resisting outside intervention.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Qatar: Forum Aims to Foster Bioethics Research

An international conference on ‘Islamic Bioethics: The Interplay of Islam and the West,’ opened at Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar yesterday with a call by acclaimed scholar Dr Tariq Ramadan for a holistic approach and better transnational communication. “This is a central field and there is a lot to be shared with people of other faith,” said the keynote speaker, a professor of contemporary Islamic studies at the University of Oxford, and a visiting professor at the Faculty of Islamic Studies, Qatar. The two-day conference, also sponsored by Qatar National Research Fund, Faculty of Islamic Studies, and Leiden University of the Netherlands, aims to create an opportunity for direct conversation between those working on bioethics in the West and in the Islamic world.

It is also intended to encourage and foster research in the field of bioethics by featuring the results of a research project, funded by the Qatar National Research Fund, which has brought together the writings of scholars and theorists in a multi-lingual searchable ‘Islamic Medical and Scientific Ethics’ database. A special workshop on how to use the database is included in the programme of the conference which is being attended by leading local and international thinkers, practitioners and experts on bioethics.

Dr Ramadan, a senior research fellow at Doshisha University (Kyoto, Japan) and director of the Research Centre of Islamic Legislation and Ethics in Qatar, has contributed to the debate on the issues of Muslims in the West and Islamic revival in the Muslim world. He is active at academic and grassroots levels, lecturing extensively throughout the world on theology, ethics, social justice, ecology and interfaith as well intercultural dialogue. He is president of the European think-tank, European Muslim Network, in Brussels.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



‘Syria’s Stonehenge’: Mysterious Ruins in Desert Could be 10,000 Years Old — But Scientists Can’t Get Near to Investigate

..A mysterious ancient building in Syria, described as a ‘landscape for the dead’ could be as old as 10,000 years ago — far older than the Great Pyramid.

But scientists have been unable to explore the ruins, unearthed in 2009, because of the conflict in the region.

The strange stone formations were uncovered in 2009, by archaeologist Robert Mason of the Royal Ontario Museum, who came across stone lines, circles, and tombs in a near-lifeless area of desert.

Mason talked about the finds at Harvard’s Semitic Museum, said that more investigation is required to understand the mysterious rock structures — and how old they are — but Mason is unsure whether he will ever be able to return to the ruins.

The strange formations were found around 50 miles north of Damascus. The area has been plagued by violence during the current unrest, including a massacre of 10 people in the village of Bakha north of the capital.

Research teams have been unable to return to the area since the discovery.

Mason thinks that the rock formations could date to the Neolithic period or early Bronze Age, 6,000 to 10,000 years ago.

The stones are arranged simply to stand out from the landscape — and are highly unusual because there are no signs of dwelling places anywhere.

‘What it looked like was a landscape for the dead and not for the living,’ Mason said. ‘It’s something that needs more work and I don’t know if that’s ever going to happen.’

The formations were found near a monastery, Deir Mar Musa, which was occupied until the 19th century, and home to spectacular Christian frescoes.

Mason thinks the monastery may have once been a Roman watchtower destroyed in an earthquake.

Mason was searching Roman watchtowers when he came across the stone lines, circles, and possible tombs.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

South Asia


India: Prophet Pic in School Book Irks Muslims

A month after an Ambedkar cartoon in NCERT books rubbed Dalits the wrong way, a picture of Prophet Mohammed in a primary school general knowledge book has angered Muslims in Manipur. They have sought a ban on the book besides an apology from the publishers and author S Babyla Jassal. The locally-published kindergarten book used across private schools in Manipur shows the Prophet with flowing beard and turban and holding a book-like object. He features on page 51 with five other ‘Indian deities’ — Ganesh, Vishnu, Saraswati, Jesus and Mother Mary.

Mohammed was against portraits of himself and not creating his picture has become kind of a rule since then. According to Islam, there is no picture or photo of the Prophet. How can he be depicted when no one in the world knows how he looks? This is against Islam,” Md Burhanuddin, advisor of Pangal Students’ Organisation, said. Manipuri Muslims are called Pangals. Members of PSO and other organisations such as Popular Front of India (PFI-Manipur unit) and Pangal Political Forum burnt copies of the contentious kindergarten book on Sunday. Some copies, collected from schools and shops were also burnt on Saturday.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Clashes Erupt in Indian Kashmir After Mosque Fire

A fire has destroyed a revered Muslim shrine in India’s portion of Kashmir, prompting anti-government protests by local residents angered over what they say was a slow response by firefighters. A police official says the cause of the fire Monday in the 200-year old shrine in the heart of Srinagar city was not immediately known. The official said the blaze started from the roof of the shrine and quickly engulfed the wooden structure. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Mumbai Attacks ‘Handler’ Abu Hamza ‘Arrested’

A key figure in the planning of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, Abu Hamza, has been arrested by police in India, according to reports.

Hamza, who is also known as Syed Zabiuddin, is in police custody, officers in Delhi told reporters. Indian authorities have described Hamza as the “handler” of the ten terrorists who stormed downtown Mumbai, carrying out attacks on a train station, bar and two five star hotels, leaving 166 people dead. He was reportedly arrested on June 21 after arriving in India from the Middle East. Hamza allegedly stayed in contact with the five two-man teams of terrorists by telephone as they carried out their attacks.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Threatwatch: Taliban Action Risks Polio Resurgence

Threatwatch is your early warning system for global dangers, from nuclear peril to deadly viral outbreaks. Debora MacKenzie highlights the threats to civilisation — and suggests solutions

If anything qualifies as a threat worth watching, it is the resurgence of polio, one of the most feared diseases of the twentieth century.

The long campaign to eradicate polio was threatened this week by the actions of Hafiz Gul Bahadur, a Taliban commander in the North Waziristan region of Pakistan. Bahadur banned a campaign to vaccinate 161,000 children against polio, until the US calls off drone strikes against suspected terrorists in the region.

“On the one hand, the US spends millions of dollars to eliminate polio, while on the other hand it kills hundreds” of people with the drones, he was reported as saying. The drones are “worse than polio”, he added.

The commander is bartering with a region that is key to the final push on polio. An independent review of the polio eradication drive published this week shows just how close we are to that target. So far this year “there have been fewer cases in fewer districts of fewer countries than at any previous time”. So why is a disease that is almost gone still a threat to be watched?

No immunity

The catch is that “almost”. As long as polio persists somewhere, it can come back — and the comeback would be appalling.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Soccer Fan Dies After Reportedly Staying Awake for 11 Days to Watch Euros

A Chinese soccer fan died at his home after going 11 nights without sleep as he watched every single Euro 2012 game from Poland and Ukraine. Jiang Xiaoshan died from exhaustion June 19 after reportedly staying up every night to watch the Euros with his friends.

After watching Italy defeat the Republic of Ireland, the 26-year-old fan went back to his home in Changsha, took a shower and fell asleep. Xiaoshan never woke up.

Sources claim that the combined effects of alcohol, tobacco and sleep deprivation were to blame for his untimely death. Xiaoshan’s friends were left shocked after learning of his death, stating that he lived a “relatively healthy life.”

It is not the first time fans have suffered health issues watching international tournaments from different time zones. Several people were admitted to hospitals during the World Cup tournaments in 2006 and 2010 due to exhaustion.

Because of the time difference, all the European Championship games are played in the middle of the night in China.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Ghana: Former Veep Asks Muslims to Shun Violence

Former Vice President Alhaji Aliu Mahama at the weekend advised Muslims to avoid various forms of lawlessness and indiscipline that could mar the upcoming general election. He expressed optimism that Muslims could do this if Zongo communities remained watchful and guard against politicians who might hire them to cause troubles as the elections drew nearer. Alhaji Mahama gave the advice when he addressed the 18th Annual National Ramadan Conference, underway in Sunyani on Saturday. The three-day conference being attended by Muslims leaders and Chief Imams is on the theme: “Consolidating democracy and good governance- the contributions of Muslims.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Ghana: Bawumia Causes Near Stampede at Madina Mosque

There was near stampede at the Madina Zongo Central Mosque where the Vice —presidential candidate of the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) observed his Friday prayers. The unannounced visit got men, women and children jostling to catch a glimpse of Dr Mahamudu Bawumia. After the prayers had been said, the Imam of the mosque, Sheikh Abdallah announced to the congregants that the NPP running mate had joined them for prayers and prayed their indulgence for a few words from their guest. His appeals for people to remain in their seats fell on deaf ears as everybody surged forward.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Kenya: Muslim Bodies Okay Anti-Terror Bill

Nairobi — The Association of Muslim Organisations in Kenya now says it fully supports the Prevention of Terrorism Bill 2012 which is due to be tabled in Parliament in the coming weeks. Chairman Sheikh Athman Mponda said the Bill fully recognises the rights of the Muslims and should not be seen as discriminatory. “We fully support the Bill, we have gone through it and it has catered for all the interests. It is not discriminatory to the Muslim community,” Mponda told a press conference in Nairobi. Mponda said the Muslim community does not, in any way, support terrorists and their activities, and he is terming those opposed to the Bill as people out to serve selfish interests.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Church Gift — ACN Wants Jonathan Impeached

The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has asked the National Assembly to commence impeachment proceedings against President Goodluck Jonathan for openly admitting that he solicited for a church built in his home town, Otuoke, from Gitto Construzioni Generali Nigeria Ltd (GCG). National publicity secretary of the party, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said in a statement yesterday in Abuja that commencing the impeachment proceedings will enable the National Assembly investigate the matter and also reach the appropriate conclusions, since the president, by his own admission and without any prompting, has thumbed his nose at the constitution.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: US Puts Three Boko Haram Leaders on Terror List

WASHINGTON — The United States designated three leaders of the Boko Haram Islamic militants as global terrorists Thursday in a bid to stem the violence in Nigeria, warning it may still blacklist the whole group. The three named by the State Department were Abubakar Shekau, widely believed to lead Boko Haram’s main Islamist cell, and Abubakar Adam Kambar and Khalid al-Barnawi, both said to have close ties to a regional Al-Qaeda group.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Uganda: Educate the Girl Child, UPC’s Otunnu Tips Muslims

Uganda Peoples’ Congress (UPC) party president has appealed to the Muslim community to embrace girl-child education. “Please don’t confine girls to the kitchen. We want them to be doctors, lawyers and professors,” Dr. Olara Otunnu said on Saturday. Otunnu was addressing Muslims at Muktar Mosque in Arua town during a fundraiser for Tawheed Islamic School where he was the chief guest. The event was organised by the West Nile Islamic Development Forum, a body initiated last year to locally mobilise funds for Islamic development projects and reduce dependence on the Arab world. A total of sh25.6m and 86 bags of cement were collected during the function. However, sh900m is needed to construct a two-storeyed building for the school.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Netherlands: Amsterdam’s Newcomers Thrive Even as Immigration Gets Tougher

AMSTERDAM—The El Tawheed Mosque, long held as a main outpost for radical Islam in the Netherlands, sits on a slender road called Jan Hanzenstraat, directly across from a well-patronized coffee shop called Millennium. Not to be confused with a café, this coffee shop is where you can buy and smoke marijuana legally. Mohammed Abou Zayd emerges from a class on the proper Arabic pronunciation of the Qur’an, in which the teacher and most students refused to be photographed for religious reasons. “I think that they must feel ashamed when they walk down this street and see the mosque,” he said, motioning to the coffee shop. The mosque’s members are warm and welcoming to visitors. Many also happen to think that women should wear burkas or niqabs, and that Muslims should not listen to music. They are Salafists, practitioners of an arch-conservative form of Islam.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Right Scandal

[…]

IN Afghanistan, British troops lay down their lives fighting the Taliban.

Here, a Taliban killer is welcomed — because of his human rights. Can there ever have been a more insulting ruling than the one involving Taliban illegal immigrant Zareen Ahmadzai? The Home Secretary tried to boot him out. But he played the human rights card and applied to a judicial body called the Upper Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber.

Who are these faceless judges who can defy an elected Home Secretary?

It is time we were told.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Australia: Muslim Imam Condemns Homosexuality as Salvos Apologise for Death-to-Gays Insult

UPDATE: ONE of Australia’s most senior Muslim clerics has entered the gay marriage debate by condemning homosexuality and claiming it would be rare to find a gay Muslim.

Sheikh Yahya Safi, head imam of the nation’s biggest Islamic congregation, said yesterday that gay people went against human nature. “In Islam we believe that it’s a major sin to have such relations between men and men, a sexual relation,” he said. Sheikh Safi, who presides at Lakemba mosque in Sydney’s west, said it would be rare to find a gay Muslim, and the gay marriage issue wasn’t discussed in the community. “In the Islamic community we don’t discuss this because it’s obvious and we have full agreement between all people about it,” he said. Sheikh Safi’s comments come after the Salvation Army apologised for comments by a leading church official that homosexuals deserved to die.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Extraterrestrial Mining Could Reap Riches & Spur Exploration

Mining the plentiful resources of the moon and near-Earth asteroids could alter the course of human history, adding trillions of dollars to the world economy and spurring our species’ spread out into the solar system, a new breed of space enterpreneur says.

A number of private companies — such as the billionaire-backed asteroid-mining firm Planetary Resources — aim to start making all of this happen. But it won’t be easy, as hitting extraterrestrial paydirt requires melding the know-how of the space and mining communities.

A Space Resources Roundtable meeting was held here June 4-7 to talk about the future of extraterrestrial resource extraction — its promise as well as the challenges involved.

By 2020, Shackleton hopes to become the world’s foremost space-based energy company, providing rocket propellant, life support, consumables and services in low Earth-orbit and on the moon to spacefarers. The firm’s plan calls for using a mix of astronauts and advanced robotic systems to provide an ongoing and reliable supply of rocket fuel to customers in space.

Shackleton wants to establish off-Earth fuel depots, which would allow spaceships to refill their tanks on the go. The company hopes to stock these depots by mining the water ice in permanently shadowed lunar craters. (Water can be broken down into its constituent hydrogen and oxygen, the chief components of rocket fuel.)

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Evils of the Muslim Brotherhood

Evidence Keeps Mounting

by Raymond Ibrahim

In short, the Muslim Brotherhood has not changed; only Western opinion of it has. As it was since its founding in 1928, the group is committed to empowering and spreading Sharia law—a law that preaches hate for non-Muslim “infidels,” especially Islam’s historic nemesis, Christianity, and allows anything, from lying to cheating, to make Islam supreme. Now that the Brotherhood has finally achieved power, the world can prepare to see such aspects on a grand scale.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120624

Financial Crisis
» $9 Billion in ‘Stimulus’ For Solar, Wind Projects Made 910 Final Jobs
» Can India Save Europe From Its Debt Crisis?
» The Scam Wall Street Learned From the Mafia
 
USA
» Analysts Say Microsoft is ‘Learning From Apple’
» Evidence Mounting Against Holder
» Obama’s Need for “Executive Privilege”
» Obama: Selling Off America to China
 
North Africa
» Mohamed Morsi of Muslim Brotherhood Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency
» Muslim Brotherhood Candidate Morsi Wins Egyptian Presidential Election
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israeli Police Arrest Social Reform Protesters
 
Middle East
» Turkey Calls in NATO Over Syrian Downing of Jet
 
Far East
» China Achieves First Manual Space Docking
» China’s Forgotten Famine
 
Latin America
» Christ Turns ‘Green’ At U.N. Earth Summit — Literally
 
Immigration
» Athens is the End of the Line for Many Afghan Refugees
 
General
» A Lawless Society
» Environmental Floundering at Failed Rio+20 Summit

Financial Crisis


$9 Billion in ‘Stimulus’ For Solar, Wind Projects Made 910 Final Jobs

The Obama administration distributed $9 billion in economic “stimulus” funds to solar and wind projects in 2009-11 that created, as the end result, 910 “direct” jobs — annual operation and maintenance positions — meaning that it cost about $9.8 million to establish each of those long-term jobs.

At the same time, those green energy projects also created, in the end, about 4,600 “indirect” jobs — positions indirectly supported by the annual operation and maintenance jobs — which means they cost about $1.9 million each ($9 billion divided by 4,600).

Combined (910 + 4,600 = 5,510), the direct and indirect jobs cost, on average, about $1.63 million each to produce.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Can India Save Europe From Its Debt Crisis?

At the G20 summit in Mexico, India has pledged $10 billion (8 billion euros) to the International Monetary Fund’s European rescue effort. But the emerging South Asian powerhouse itself is shaky.

A lot of people inside and outside of India, said an Indian TV presenter, are rubbing their eyes and wondering: Does India really have $10 billion to give away? Economic growth in India has slowed and the country has many troubles of its own to deal with, not the least of which are urgently needed reforms to combat poverty, improve healthcare and open the job market.

India is hoping that Europe recovers quickly from its debt crisis because it needs the continent’s markets to keep its own economy chugging along. Some 300 million people in India live on less than one dollar a day and any dip in economic growth sets back efforts to cope with the country’s problems, said the head of an employment referral agency in Mumbai.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Scam Wall Street Learned From the Mafia

How America’s biggest banks took part in a nationwide bid-rigging conspiracy — until they were caught on tape

The defendants in the case — Dominick Carollo, Steven Goldberg and Peter Grimm — worked for GE Capital, the finance arm of General Electric. Along with virtually every major bank and finance company on Wall Street — not just GE, but J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America, UBS, Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Wachovia and more — these three Wall Street wiseguys spent the past decade taking part in a breathtakingly broad scheme to skim billions of dollars from the coffers of cities and small towns across America. The banks achieved this gigantic rip-off by secretly colluding to rig the public bids on municipal bonds, a business worth $3.7 trillion.

By conspiring to lower the interest rates that towns earn on these investments, the banks systematically stole from schools, hospitals, libraries and nursing homes — from “virtually every state, district and territory in the United States,” according to one settlement. And they did it so cleverly that the victims never even knew they were being cheated. No thumbs were broken, and nobody ended up in a landfill in New Jersey, but money disappeared, lots and lots of it, and its manner of disappearance had a familiar name: organized crime.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Analysts Say Microsoft is ‘Learning From Apple’

Microsoft, one of the world’s leading makers of operating systems, has hinted at a strategic shift with the unveiling of its tablet computer, Surface. Analysts suggest it could be a make-or-break moment.

The Windows operating system designer, Microsoft, heralded a major shift in its product strategy by unveiling its line in tablet computers, incorporating both the software and the hardware.

Surface — as the tablet is called — is expected to hit the market later this year.

There will be two versions. The first aims to compete directly with Apple’s iPad and the second will be a lightweight laptop, or ultrabook. Both will feature an overhauled Windows operating system (Windows 8) and a touch-friendly interface called Metro.

Analysts have described the product as promising, with Rob Enderle of Silicon Valley saying Surface was a chance for Microsoft to show it has learned a lesson from its failed Zune mp3 player.

“OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers) are saying the PC doesn’t matter any more and the tablet really is the future,” Enderle said, “which is what (Microsoft co-founder) Bill Gates said in the early 2000s — it’s just been unfortunate that Apple has been proving him right on their platform.”

Apple’s strategy has always been to develop both the hardware and software for its products, whereas Microsoft had originally relied on computer makers to create the hardware for its software.

“(The Surface tablet) is a bold move by Microsoft,” said Michael Gartenberg of Gartner analysts, “and it shows just how concerned they are about Apple and the threat Apple is to their ecosystem right now.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Evidence Mounting Against Holder

The day before Holder was scheduled to appear before the House Judiciary Committee, U.S. White House logs show that Attorney General Eric Holder and DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano met with Barack Obama in the East Room of the White House on May 2, 2011. Omitted from the log is the nature and purpose of the visit.

The timing of the meeting is quite suspect based on Holder’s planned testimony the following day, the mounting pressure from Congressman Issa’s committee, and Holder’s stonewalling Issa’s request for documents related to Fast & Furious.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Need for “Executive Privilege”

Under the Obama administration, “Operation Fast and Furious” was launched in early 2009. By extension of Project Gunrunner, the BATFE commissioned gun shops along the southern U.S. border to sell weapons to known criminal suspects. Ostensibly, this operation was for interdiction purposes, but the agents involved were directly ordered not to interdict the weapons. What resulted was a mass amount of weapons that actually and genuinely originated in the U.S., with the knowledge and approval of the BATFE, being permitted to “walk” unmolested across the southern border (hence the satirical name “gunwalker”).

From early 2009 through December 2010, this process was repeated over and over in the southern U.S. despite the objections of numerous BATFE agents and gun shop owners. During this time, several agents began to notify congress and became “whistleblowers” about the stand-down orders.

Late on the night of December 14, 2010, the inevitable happened. U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was gunned down in Rio Rico, Arizona, by an AK-47 that was “walked” across the U.S. Mexican border with the knowledge and allowance of the BATFE. Two weapons that were allowed to “walk” across the border were found at the murder scene.

[…]

The real objective behind Fast & Furious?

After taking office, Barack Hussein Obama began a coordinated effort with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to control the purchases and ownership of guns in the United States. To justify the implementation of tougher gun control laws and in a direct assault on the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, this administration cited a statement made to Congress by William Hoover, Assistant Director for Field Operations for the BATFE on February 7, 2008. According to that report, 90 percent of the weapons used by the Mexican drug cartels were purchased from or originated in the U.S.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama: Selling Off America to China

Since President Obama’s tyrannical tendencies are evidenced nearly every day and his unconstitutional actions probably number in the dozens, keeping up with them becomes a dizzying effort. Obviously, his recent actions on the behalf of illegal immigrants from Mexico have raised concern among detractors, not only as blatant pandering to Latinos, but as a device by which he will secure millions of illegitimate votes in November.

[…]

There are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation. One is by the sword. The other is by debt.

— John Adams

On June 12, Reuters reported that investment giant Goldman Sachs’ new Asia Pacific office would be based in Beijing, the first global investment bank to place its regional headquarters in China’s capital. A year ago, General Electric, the world’s manufacturer of medical-imaging machines, moved the headquarters of its 115-year-old X-ray business to Beijing.

[…]

Obama has taken other, more overtly compromising steps, most notably in May of 2011, when he allowed a Chinese general and more than two dozen military aides to visit various U.S. military installations in violation of the 2000 Defense Authorization Act (which prohibits foreign military from visiting military bases containing advanced military technology). Some observers likened this to a real estate agent showing a home.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Mohamed Morsi of Muslim Brotherhood Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Election regulators named Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood the winner of Egypt’s first competitive presidential elections, handing the Islamist group a symbolic triumph and a new weapon in its struggle for power with the ruling military council.

His victory is an ambiguous milestone in Egypt’s promised transition to democracy after the ouster 16 months ago of President Hosni Mubarak. After an election that international monitors called credible, the military-led government has recognized an electoral victory by an opponent of military rule over a former air force general, Ahmed Shafik, who promised harmony with the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. A public ballot count after the polls closed last weekend had already shown Mr. Morsi the winner, pending certification by a commission of Mubarak-appointed judges.

[Return to headlines]



Muslim Brotherhood Candidate Morsi Wins Egyptian Presidential Election

Mohammed Morsi was declared Egypt’s first Islamist president on Sunday, chosen in the freest elections in history that left the nation deeply polarized between supporters of an old regime figure and those eager for democratic change.

It was the culmination of the tumultuous first phase of a transition launched 16 months ago with the uprising that ousted autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak, who was replaced by a ruling military council headed by Mubarak’s defense minister of 20 years. It is the start of a new struggle with the military to restore the powers that the ruling generals stripped from the presidency even before the victor was declared.

And it was not the outcome desired by most of the liberal and secular youth groups that drove the uprising.

“The revolution passed an important test,” said Yasser Ali, a spokesman for Morsi’s campaign. “But the road is still long.”

Morsi now has to calm public fears that he will push to remake Egypt as an Islamist state and show that he will represent a broader swath of the public beyond his own fundamentalist group, the Muslim Brotherhood. He will also have to try to urgently address the major problems facing Egypt, a sharp deterioration in security and a flailing economy.

Morsi narrowly defeated Mubarak’s last Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq with 51.7 percent of the vote versus 48.3, the election commission said. Turnout was 51 percent.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israeli Police Arrest Social Reform Protesters

Israeli police say they have arrested 85 people after violent demonstrations in Tel Aviv. The protests are the latest sign of a nationwide movement calling for social reform.

The arrests took place after scores of demonstrators clashed with police, vandalized banks and blocked main roads overnight in Israel’s commercial capital, Tel Aviv.

Hundreds of people gathered in the city late on Saturday to protest the arrest of 12 social activists a day earlier.

Some said they were angered after a protest leader said she had experienced police brutality when she was detained during another demonstration in Tel Aviv on Friday.

“Over 1,500 people demonstrated at various places in Tel Aviv until a point where the protests turned violent and there were disturbances. They blocked roads and smashed windows at five banks and until 3 a.m. (00:00 UCT), 85 people were arrested,” police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

He said the arrests were made to prevent looting.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Turkey Calls in NATO Over Syrian Downing of Jet

NATO says Turkey has called for alliance talks on Tuesday over Syria’s shooting down of a Turkish F4 Phantom jet over the Mediterranean. Turkish media say the wreckage has been located.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday dismissed Syria’s initial claim that it had not known the plane belonged to Turkey, saying the F4 was shot down inside international airspace while on an unarmed training flight to check radar systems.

“The Syrians knew full well that it was a Turkish military plane and the nature of its mission. Nobody should dare put Turkey’s capabilities to the test,” Davutoglu said.

He said the jet had briefly crossed into Syrian airspace 15 minutes before it was shot down, but that Syria had not warned the Turks.

Syria on Friday had said its air defenses downed an unidentified object, which had flown just one kilometer (0.6 miles) off Syria’s coastline near Latakia. The Syrian foreign ministry said the shooting was “no hostile act against Turkey.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Achieves First Manual Space Docking

A Chinese spacecraft has successfully completed the country’s first manual docking in orbit. The operation is a further step towards a planned space station.

The Shenzhou 9 capsule completed the maneuver with the Tiangong 1 orbiting lab module shortly before 0500 GMT on Sunday. The docking was shown live on national television.

The spacecraft had already conducted an automated docking, carried out by remote control from a ground base in China, with theTiangong 1 on June 18, a day after leaving earth.

The three Chinese astronauts on board have been living and working in the module for the past week. They returned to the capsule early on Sunday and disconnected in preparation for the manual re-docking.

The crew includes 33-year-old Liu Yang, China’s first female space traveler. Its mission, China’s fourth manned one, is expected to last at least 10 days

Risky procedure

The operation was an important test of the docking technique needed for building a space station, which China plans to do by 2020. Only the United States and Russia have so far sent independently maintained space stations into orbit.

Manual docking is a risky procedure, as the two vessels involved must come together very gently to avoid damage.

China’s planned space station is to be about one-sixth the size of the 16-nation International Space Station.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



China’s Forgotten Famine

The Chinese government does not like to talk about certain parts of its past — like the worst-ever famine caused by man. Yang Jisheng’s book, ‘Tombstone,’ which deals with the issue, has been published in German.

Between the years 1959 and 1961, 30 to 40 million people died as a result of Mao Zedong’s failed attempt at industrialization.

Yang Jisheng researched the catastrophe for years and documented his findings. His book, “Tombstone: the Great Chinese Famine” is blacklisted on the Chinese market. On June 21, it was published in German under the title “Grabstein.”

Yang Jisheng himself can remember the hunger. And the death. As a youth and an adamant supporter of founder of the People’s Republic of China, Mao Zedong, he experienced his father dying from hunger in 1959. Yang’s father was one of the early victims of the “Great Leap Forward” movement that began at the end of the 1950s. The campaign was an attempt by the Communist Party to rapidly industrialize the country.

“I was in school at the time and I remember writing on the chalkboard about the “Great Leap Forward.” Then children from the village came and told me my father was dying,” Yang recalls.

Yang was not able to save his father. He will never forget what he lived through during that time — how the people had to eat anything they could get their hands on. In some cases, they ate meat from dead bodies.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Christ Turns ‘Green’ At U.N. Earth Summit — Literally

Green guru James Lovelock was right. He warned last week that “the green religion is now taking over from the Christian religion.”

Now at the U.N. Earth Summit, even the image of Christ has been made a forcible convert to the eco-faith, as the city of Rio is bathing the iconic statue of Christ the Redeemer (Christo Redentor) in green light:

This comes on the heels of a Rio+20 side summit in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, where Naomi Tsur, Jerusalem’s deputy mayor for planning and environment, led a discussion about how holy sites around the world can be used to indoctrinate pilgrims visiting venerated places like Bethlehem, Calvary, and the burial site of King David.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Athens is the End of the Line for Many Afghan Refugees

Every year, thousands of Afghans try their luck getting to the EU. Many of those who make it get stuck in Greece, where there are few jobs and little state provision.

It was about midnight somewhere in the Aegean Sea between Turkey and Greece. Five young Afghans were sitting in a dinghy, paddling for their lives. The people smugglers had told them it would take about six hours and they would arrive in paradise — Greece, and the European Union.

However, when they reached the coast, the welcome was not what they had hoped for. “The border police arrested us and put us on a ship,” says Ahmad Karim (not his real name). “A bit later they threw us back in the water near a small uninhabited Turkish island.”

Karim, who was 23 years old at the time, said he and his companions were rescued by a Turkish fisherman. They were able to get to Istanbul and a few weeks later they tried to make their way to the West again.

Every year, thousands of Afghans such as Karim try to escape their war-torn country with its violence, insecurity and lack of prospects. They depend on people smugglers, who promise them a stable life in a European country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


A Lawless Society

Take for example the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, which includes dozens of new rights, such as the right of asylum, the right to environmental protection and consumer protection, and the right to social security, in addition to the more basic rights familiar to Americans, but it comes with a simple addendum.

“Any limitation on the exercise of the rights and freedoms recognised by this Charter must be provided for by law and respect the essence of those rights and freedoms. Subject to the principle of proportionality, limitations may be made only if they are necessary and genuinely meet objectives of general interest recognised by the Union or the need to protect the rights and freedoms of others.”

Which is to say there is freedom of speech, only until a compelling argument can be made why banning someone’s freedom of speech will help protect the general interests of the European Union or the rights of others to have environmental protection and social security.

That is the essence of a lawless society, which is to say that there are oodles and oodles of law, but it’s merely a complicated way for those in power to enforce their will on others. If you want to force people to do something, all you need to do is study enough clauses, lay out your reasoning and it’s done.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Environmental Floundering at Failed Rio+20 Summit

Rothbard and Driessen said that environmentalists make dire predictions based on “extrapolations from the island extinction rates fed into virtual-reality computer models that assume rising carbon dioxide levels will raise planetary temperatures so high that plants and animals will be exterminated. That is nonsense.”

Dr. Klaus L. E. Kaiser clearly explained that modelers ignore water vapor impact on climate because it is too difficult to include in computer models that are “preordained to show CO2 as the determinant factor.” Even massive releases of CO2 during numerous volcanic eruptions throughout history are used up by the “insatiable appetite of the oceans for CO2,” measuring a “steady state” of 250 ppm. (Convenient Myths, 2010, p. 97 and p. 101)

Why are environmentalists going after CO2 and not water vapor? CO2 can be sequestered and taxed. California is auctioning off carbon credits on November 14 this year in spite of citizen protests.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120623

USA
» A Top Conservative Think Tank Embraces Islamophobia
» American Muslims: New Kids on the Block
» Grand Forks Church Selling Building to Muslim Group
» Man Jailed for Threatening South Park Writers
» President Barack Obama Must Do More Than Manage America’s Decline
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Najat Vallaud-Belkacem — the New Face of France
» Italian Beekeepers Battle Virus-Spreading Mites
» UK: ‘My Only Crime Was to be a Muslim’
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Music Mogul Russell Simmons Urges Peace in Israel
» Vilnai: Israel Cannot Remain Silent in Face of Escalation
 
Middle East
» Ankara Warns of Response After Syria Downs Turkish Jet
» Chaldean Catholic Bishop of Aleppo: Syria Has Always Been an Example of Conviviality
» Iraq: Baghdad Bombs Kill 17 Mostly Shia Muslims, Wound Over 100
» Saudi Arabia Plans to Fund Syria Rebel Army
» Syria: Turkey Promises ‘Decisive’ Action After Syria Shoots Down Its Fighter Jet
 
South Asia
» Help Pakistanis Help Themselves, And the War on Terror Will Fight Itself
» India: CBI Not Probing Gopalgarh Riot Fairly, Victims Hopeless: Muslim Forum
» Long-Serving Royal Anglian Soldiers Remember Comrades Lost in Afghanistan
» Pakistan: America’s First Lady of Islamabad
» Pakistan: Debenhams Among British Invasion of Karachi’s High Street
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Kenya: New Muslim Party Opposed
» Nigeria: Police Avert Explosion in Kano Mosque
» South Africa: Farm Attack Victim Fighting for Her Life
 
Immigration
» EU Should ‘Undermine National Homogeneity’ Says UN Migration Chief
» UK: Ed Miliband is Right to Tackle the Toxic Immigration Debate
» UK: Ed Owns Up
» UK: How London’s Latin Americans Are Fighting Back
» UK: Labour Knew Immigration Was Out of Control Seven Years Ago, Says Former Minister
 
General
» Jihadists’ Twitter Presence Becomes More Sophisticated

USA


A Top Conservative Think Tank Embraces Islamophobia

by Nathan Lean

The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) is one of the nation’s oldest and most influential conservative think tanks. It is a bastion of Republican values and has, since its founding in 1943, had its finger on the pulse of mainstream issues that have united the GOP. A number of U.S. presidents and presidential candidates have relied on the work of its scholars, and its board reads like a Who’s Who of red-state leaders.

But recently the AEI took a broad step to the right and firmly planted its feet on the other side of the line that divides the sensible Republican Party from fringe extremists. It announced that its resident scholar Michael Rubin would join blogger Robert Spencer, who is a vitriolic critic of Islam, and writer Claire Berlinski to lead a 10-day tour of Turkey. The excursion (whose participants must cough up more than $4,500 each) is being organized by the David Horowitz Freedom Center, a right-wing activist group named for its founder, who in addition to being Spencer’s sugar daddy (Horowitz funds Spencer’s blog Jihad Watch and publishes his articles on FrontPage Magazine) has led campaigns against the Muslim Student Association and said such things as Islam is a religion of hate and Palestinians are “morally sick.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



American Muslims: New Kids on the Block

Glenview Patch is talking to local religious leaders and involved community members throughout June. Here, meet Glenview resident and Pakistani-American Musilim K. Rizwan Kadir.

During the month of June, Patch will be chatting with religious leaders and community members. This week, we caught up with K. Rizwan Kadir, a Pakistani-American Muslim who worships at the Muslim Community Center in Morton Grove and was recently appointed chairman of MCC’s full-time school board. In addition to his involvement with the local community, Kadir is also President of Pakistan Club at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business and serves on the board of several Islamic organizations in the U.S. A senior consultant to Fortune 100 firms, Kadir specializes in strategic planning, governance, and financial management.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Grand Forks Church Selling Building to Muslim Group

Grand Forks’ most liberal Protestant Christian church, the United Church of Christ, is selling its building to a local Muslim group and will continue to share the space on alternate days. It’s an historic move: Grand Forks has never had an Islamic center with its own building.

Local Muslims, most of them connected to UND, have met for decades for Friday prayers in UND’s Memorial Union and in the Lotus Meditation Center, a private nonprofit group on campus. Now, a group of Muslims that has been renting the UCC space for the past year for Friday prayers is planning to buy the space, according to UCC Council Chairman Don Medal.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Man Jailed for Threatening South Park Writers

Jesse Curtis Morton and another man encouraged attacks on show’s writers over episode depicting Muhammad in a bear suit

A Muslim convert from New York has been sentenced to 11 and a half years in prison after admitting threatening the writers of South Park over their depiction of the prophet Muhammad. Jesse Curtis Morton, 33, alias Younus Abdullah Muhammed, ran a website that encouraged Muslims to engage in violence against perceived enemies of Islam.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



President Barack Obama Must Do More Than Manage America’s Decline

by Charles Moore

In the face of Obama’s timid foreign policy towards Russia and the Arab world, Republican challenger Mitt Romney is offering real hope

Why was Barack Obama so popular globally when he ran for the US presidency four years ago? Because people believed that an eloquent and charismatic first (half-) black president of the United States could do good in the world. The retro-chic poster with a picture of Mr Obama and the single word “HOPE” on it conveyed the entire message. Four years on, Mr Obama remains eloquent, charismatic and (obviously) 50-per-cent black. He still has considerable global prestige, but his career exhibits a contradiction which, over time, tells against him. He has used that prestige to tell us, in effect, that the president of the United States cannot do all that much good in the world. His message is that American power has lessened, that America is not a special place.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


France: Najat Vallaud-Belkacem — the New Face of France

Minister for women’s rights — who has brief to tackle sexism and harassment post-DSK — speaks to Angelique Chrisafis

Under the chandeliers of a historic mansion on Paris’s left bank, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem closes the double-doors to her gilded office to lessen the sound of power-drills. Workmen are turning the building into a new ministry headquarters. In the corridors, talk is of the election results: after Socialist François Hollande’s presidential win, his party secured an absolute majority in parliament. The left now has the biggest concentration of power in recent French history: both houses of parliament, most regions and big cities. Now it faces the massive task of trying to drag France, and Europe, out of dire economic crisis, resisting the one-size-fits-all austerity mantra, while promising to mend France’s social, class and race divide. “We musn’t disappoint,” says Vallaud-Belkacem.

[…]

[JP note: Soft jihad.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italian Beekeepers Battle Virus-Spreading Mites

Beekeepers in Italy are joining forces in the fight against varroa mites. The mite is blamed for spreading a virus that has decimated hives around the world.

Bees are essential to our ecosystems. Through pollination, they sustain 84 percent of all plant life. Over the past decade, Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) has decimated bee populations worldwide. A colony usually collapses when its adult bees disappear, destroying the perfectly balanced structure of the hive and leaving the young bees to die.

Causes of CCD include pesticide exposure, lack of food caused by monoculture farming and climate change. But, researches are now concerned about the presence of parasites, in particular the varroa mite.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘My Only Crime Was to be a Muslim’

DESPITE being warned by trial judge Mushtaq Khokhar not to reveal his previous convictions to the jury, Shabir Ahmed ignored the advice. Throughout the trial Ahmed ranted at jurors that his convictions in the child sex scandal had been a “conspiracy by the police, English Defence League (EDL), British National Party (BNP) and social services” and added that he had instructed his barrister, Simon Nichol, to appeal the sentence. Ahmed said: “I will never accept that verdict here or tomorrow. Myself along with my countrymen were convicted — this was conspiracy by the police. It had nothing to do with justice. Let’s pick on the weakest segment of the community — the Asian community. We were all innocent. This was the Rochdale grooming case. The girls were already selling their bodies. No Pakistani went knocking on the doors in Heywood saying ‘have you got any young girls, can we have sex with them?’“

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Music Mogul Russell Simmons Urges Peace in Israel

To hip hop and fashion mogul Russell Simmons, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is like “a rap beef” that can be resolved through dialogue and understanding. “A little trust, and it’s over,” he said. The cofounder of the pioneering Def Jam Recordings record label, which has represented such artists like the Beastie Boys, Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez, LL Cool J and Kanye West, is in Israel on the invitation of Israeli President Shimon Peres.

[…]

[JP note: One a minute.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Vilnai: Israel Cannot Remain Silent in Face of Escalation

50-year-old Sderot resident suffers moderate-to-severe injuries; other civilians suffer shock; 20 rockets fired into southern Israel; Home Front defense minister: We hold Hamas fully responsible.

Israel cannot remain silent in the face of continued rocket fire from the Gaza Strip, Home Front Defense Minister Matan Vilna’i said Saturday morning. Vilnai visited the afflicted areas of Sderot and Sha’ar HaNegev Regional Council, as rockets continued to rain down in the region leaving one man moderately-to-severely injured Saturday morning in the Sderot area. Two other residents suffered shock in the Palestinian attack, and a factory sustained some damage.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Ankara Warns of Response After Syria Downs Turkish Jet

Ankara has warned it will respond decisively to the shooting down of one of its warplanes by Syria. Damascus has said the plane was flying low over Syrian territorial waters.

“Turkey will present its final stance after the incident has been fully brought to light and decisively take the necessary steps,” the office of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said late on Friday.

The statement, read on Turkish state news channel TRT Haber, said that joint efforts were underway between Syria and Turkey to locate the wreckage of the F-4 Phantom jet and two missing pilots.

It came after a two-hour emergency meeting between prime minister and top defense and intelligence officials.

Meanwhile the state-run Syrian news agency SANA quoted a Syrian military spokesman as saying that “an unidentified aerial target violated Syrian airspace, coming from the west at a very low altitude and at high speed over territorial waters.”

“Syrian anti-air defenses counteracted with anti-aircraft artillery, hitting it directly as it was one kilometer away from land, causing it to crash into Syrian territorial waters west of Om al-Tuyour village in Lattakia province.”

This latest crisis will likely inflame relations already strained over Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s outspoken condemnation of Damascus and its handling of the Syrian uprising.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chaldean Catholic Bishop of Aleppo: Syria Has Always Been an Example of Conviviality

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — Chaldean Catholic Bishop of Aleppo Monsignor Antoine Audo affirmed that Syria has always been an example of conviviality, and that western media must be more careful and discerning when dealing with the Syrian issue. In statements to the Vatican news service Agenzia Fides, Audo said that Syria has always been an example of conviviality and today must find its peaceful face of Arab, Christian and Muslim land, adding “Urgency for us is national reconciliation. The situation is serious, it is necessary to re-establish dialogue.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Iraq: Baghdad Bombs Kill 17 Mostly Shia Muslims, Wound Over 100

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — At least 17 people, including three policemen, have been killed and more than 100 others injured in separate attacks across the Iraqi capital Baghdad. On Friday morning, a twin bombing left 14 people dead and 106 others injured in an open-air market in the mostly Shia neighborhood of the al-Husseiniyah neighborhood of northeast Baghdad, the Associated Press reported. On the same day, gunmen opened fire on a police checkpoint in the Bayaa district of western Baghdad, killing three policemen.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia Plans to Fund Syria Rebel Army

Exclusive: Command centre in Turkey organising weapon supply to opposition

Saudi officials are preparing to pay the salaries of the Free Syria Army as a means of encouraging mass defections from the military and increasing pressure on the Assad regime, the Guardian has learned. The move, which has been discussed between Riyadh and senior officials in the US and Arab world, is believed to be gaining momentum as a recent flush of weapons sent to rebel forces by Saudi Arabia and Qatar starts to make an impact on battlefields in Syria.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Syria: Turkey Promises ‘Decisive’ Action After Syria Shoots Down Its Fighter Jet

Turkey threatened to take “decisive” action last night after Syria shot down one of its fighter jets, sparking fears that Nato could be drawn into a major confrontation with the Assad regime.

The loss of one of the Turkish Air Force’s F-4 Phantom marked the most dangerous development yet in Syria’s 15-month uprising and left Western powers scrambling over how to respond. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, flew home from Brazil to hold an emergency briefing with his intelligence and military chiefs after radio and radar contact was lost with the aircraft as it conducted a mission close to the Syrian coast.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Help Pakistanis Help Themselves, And the War on Terror Will Fight Itself

Pakistani schemes which enlist the local populations are ending poverty — and reducing radicalisation, writes Muddassar Ahmed.

What does Rory Stewart’s superfast broadband initiative in Penrith have in common with rural development in Pakistan? Both are models of community organising, focused on shifting power away from the Government and towards local communities. Stewart, the Conservative MP in Penrith, has been championing an unusual approach in his constituency to acquire the high speed internet broadband that much of rural England lacks. Faced with the reluctance of telecommunications companies to invest in the region because of doubts about broadband uptake, the local community in Penrith began investing their own resources and ‘sweat equity’ to meet them halfway.

[…]

[Reader comment by oneaminute on 22 June 2012 at 08:39 PM.]

Pakistan’s problem is Islam, the religion/legal-political system of ignorance, poverty and blaming others for it. It needs to be banished from Europe before being rolled back throughout the rest of the world for the benefit of humanity as a whole.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: CBI Not Probing Gopalgarh Riot Fairly, Victims Hopeless: Muslim Forum

Jaipur: A joint delegation of leaders of prominent Muslim organizations of Rajasthan under the banner of Rajasthan Muslim Forum (RMF) recently visited Gopalgarh again after nine months of the tragic massacre of 10 Muslims in a joint operation by police and the rioters. RMF leaders made the visit following the continuous request of the families of the victims complaining the ‘prejudiced’ role of CBI and the state government.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Long-Serving Royal Anglian Soldiers Remember Comrades Lost in Afghanistan

The war in Afghanistan has taken a painful toll on the East Anglian regiments who have fought for the freedom of the country. In the final part of a week-long series, CHRIS HILL talks to experienced soldiers about the legacy of those sacrifices.

Last Friday, 37-year-old Cpl Alex Guy became the 16th Royal Anglian soldier to be killed in action since the beginning of the conflict in Afghanistan. His sacrifice underlines the painful cost borne by this region’s regiments for the progress which they have undoubtedly made in securing freedom and safety for the population in large parts of battle-scarred Helmand province.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: America’s First Lady of Islamabad

by Rob Crilly

It can’t be easy for a successful career woman to give it all up for a life standing in the shadow of her husband, passing around the Ferrero Rocher. It is even more difficult when your husband happens to be the US ambassador to Pakistan, one of the toughest jobs on the planet. Not only is the country famed for its rabid band of hardline clerics with a hatred of all things American, the difficult security conditions mean the embassy does not allow husbands or wives to accompany diplomats to Islamabad.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Debenhams Among British Invasion of Karachi’s High Street

British high street stores are flocking to the sprawling, chaotic megacity of Karachi eager to cash in on a growing middle class with money to spend, according to ministers and business leaders.

Debenhams is the latest household name to enter the market and will become Pakistan’s first international department store when it opens next month. It means braving a city notorious for corruption, power cuts, strikes, extortion rackets and repeated bouts of bitter ethnic violence. The rewards more than make up for the risks, according to Yasin Paracha, the man behind Team A Ventures, which is the franchisee for five British stores which have already opened their doors.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Kenya: New Muslim Party Opposed

THE Kenya Muslim National Advisory Council has opposed the creation of the Unity Party of Kenya as a Muslim political party. Kemnac chairman Sheikh Juma Ngao said the creation of such a party will divide Muslims. Sheikh Ngao said the party is the creation of two Coast MPs who want to use it as a vehicle to retain power. “There are Muslims in all other political parties including ODM, PNU, URP, DP and others. There is no need to create another party for Muslims,” he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Police Avert Explosion in Kano Mosque

… arrest three

The prompt intervention of the anti-bomb squad drafted from Bompai Police headquarters averted what could have been the most deadly attack in the ancient city of Kano as police arrested three suspected terrorists for planting explosives inside a mosque on Friday. The suspected terrorists had concealed the high volume Improvised Explosive Device (IED) in a plastic bag and neatly planted it inside the Fagge Mosque which has a capacity of about 15, 000 worshipers. Speaking on the incident on phone, Kano State Commissioner of Police, Ibrahim K. Idris, confirmed that three people suspected to be terrorists were arrested within the mosque premises.

[Reader comment by Anesmore on 22 June 2012 at about 9 pm.]

The story has no substance. It is a fake one

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



South Africa: Farm Attack Victim Fighting for Her Life

Johannesburg — A 65-year-old woman who was shot three times in a farm attack in which her husband was killed, is fighting for her life in a Polokwane hospital. Beeld reported that doctors said Gloudien van Rensburg would probably be paralysed if she survived. She was shot as she lay sleeping next to her husband, Johan van Rensburg, 77, on their game farm Cosmopolite near the Botswana border. Her husband was shot dead by the four men who cut the electric fence and bent back burglar bars in the bathroom to get into the house. The couple were attacked early on Wednesday morning. American tourists, who had come to hunt on the farm, were woken up by the shots and raised the alarm. The Americans were apparently too shocked to talk to reporters. Firearms were stolen from the house but the couple’s cellphones had not been taken. They celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary in January.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


EU Should ‘Undermine National Homogeneity’ Says UN Migration Chief

The EU should “do its best to undermine” the “homogeneity” of its member states, the UN’s special representative for migration has said. Peter Sutherland told peers the future prosperity of many EU states depended on them becoming multicultural.

He also suggested the UK government’s immigration policy had no basis in international law. He was being quizzed by the Lords EU home affairs sub-committee which is investigating global migration.

Mr Sutherland, who is non-executive chairman of Goldman Sachs International and a former chairman of oil giant BP, heads the Global Forum on Migration and Development, which brings together representatives of 160 nations to share policy ideas.

He told the House of Lords committee migration was a “crucial dynamic for economic growth” in some EU nations “however difficult it may be to explain this to the citizens of those states”.

An ageing or declining native population in countries like Germany or southern EU states was the “key argument and, I hesitate to the use word because people have attacked it, for the development of multicultural states”, he added.

“It’s impossible to consider that the degree of homogeneity which is implied by the other argument can survive because states have to become more open states, in terms of the people who inhabit them. Just as the United Kingdom has demonstrated.”

The UN special representative on migration was also quizzed about what the EU should do about evidence from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) that employment rates among migrants were higher in the US and Australia than EU countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Ed Miliband is Right to Tackle the Toxic Immigration Debate

by Jonathan Freedland

It is possible to get a consensus on immigration. With proper borders and worker protections, Britain can keep its door open

Perhaps no topic in British politics is more poisonous. Just ask Gordon Brown, who saw Labour’s 2010 election campaign crumble as the nation heard him brand Gillian Duffy a “bigoted woman” after she had collared him to ask why her native Rochdale was now home to so many eastern Europeans. The emotive power of the subject was clear againtoday, as Ed Miliband discovered that a speech by the leader of the opposition can, after all, gain serious media attention — just so long as it’s about immigration.

Part of that power lies in the polarised nature of the debate. In one corner stand the likes of Migration Watch, Ukip and the Daily Express, trenchantly arguing that there are too many foreigners here and it’s time we closed the borders. Opposite stand what one expert calls “Guardian liberals”, who recoil from any such talk, hearing in it an ugly xenophobia.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ed Owns Up

As apologies go, it rings pretty hollow.

Ed Miliband says he’s sorry Labour got it wrong on immigration. Yet he was in Government while his party dismantled our borders and invited the world to come and stay. Won’t voters think the Labour leader is only saying sorry because he knows the nation continues to see immigration as a crucial election issue? If Mr Miliband really does have regrets, good. But his half-baked new ideas, such as restrictions on foreign workers hired by agencies, look unworkable.

Foreign workers themselves aren’t the problem. They tend to be enthusiastic and conscientious, and the economy would be in trouble without them. But the vast number brought in by Labour has distorted the jobs market and lowered wages. Mr Miliband was right about one thing. It is not racist — or bigoted, as Gordon Brown infamously said of pensioner Gillian Duffy — for the nation to debate immigration.

The central issue is the sheer scale of Labour’s influx, which has overwhelmed public services. Labour’s policy, which Ed Miliband has taken nearly two years to disown, was to abandon controls in favour of a free-for-all that has changed Britain for ever.

So why would anyone trust Labour on immigration again?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: How London’s Latin Americans Are Fighting Back

As one of London’s most invisible communities, Latin Americans say lack of official recognition as an ethnic minority prevents them from integrating further into mainstream society

Aleyda Aránzazu stopped practising law the night she returned to find her office had been ransacked by a former client who suspected he may have been too truthful with her about the extent of his criminal activities. But neither the mess nor her ex-former client’s reputation for kidnappings, robberies and violence worried her quite as much as what a policeman said to her as she left the office. “Doctora,” he began politely, “you should get out while you can. Otherwise your baby isn’t going to be born.”

Aleyda, who was then eight months pregnant, knew a bought official and a serious threat when she heard one, so she and her husband borrowed the dollars they needed to get out of Colombia, risked the long flight and eventually arrived in London, via Paris, in April 1991.

Aránzazu is a member of one of London’s invisible communities — one of the tens of thousands of Latin American immigrants who have come to the UK in the hope of picking up lives that were interrupted by violence at home, or of building new ones in a more prosperous country.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Labour Knew Immigration Was Out of Control Seven Years Ago, Says Former Minister

Labour knew that immigrants were flooding into Britain in far higher numbers than anticipated by 2005, former home office minister John Denham admitted today.

Mr Denham, who is now permanent private secretary to Ed Miliband, the Labour Leader, said it was clear seven years ago that estimates for migrants were ‘vastly wrong.’ The Labour MP for Southampton said: “We were advised about 15,000 and about that came to Southampton alone in the first 18 months.” Asked when he was first aware of the problem he added: “I think for me in really 2005. It was then it became clear that the estimates we relied on were vastly wrong.

[…]

[Reader comment by tedsanityville on 23 June 2012 at 07:36 AM.]

I used to be English but now I’m just ‘a member of the white community’ in what I considered to be my country.

[Reader comment by LewisDuckworth on 22 June 2012 at 05:25 PM.]

“The aim of Labour’s immigration strategy was to ‘rub the Right’s nose in diversity and render their arguments out of date’ [Andrew Neather, former government adviser and speech writer to Tony Blair, Jack Straw and David Blunkett].

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Jihadists’ Twitter Presence Becomes More Sophisticated

By Murad Batal al-Shishani Islamic Groups Analyst, BBC Arabic

Jihadists and their sympathisers’ presence on Twitter is limited, rather sophisticated and increasing.

That’s what I found after spending more than a month-and-a-half following their tweets. The micro-blogging website Twitter, which attracts more than 100m users, allows people to create a list of Twitter users they follow. You can observe a stream of tweets for people in that list. I created a list for more than 35 accounts which explicitly affiliate themselves with jihadist movements. Some of these Twitter accounts have thousands of followers. By the end of May, Shabakat Ansar al-Mujahideen (Partisans of Mujahideens’ Network) had announced its presence on Twitter. The web forum is a famous site that disseminates jihadist propaganda and serves as a means of communication for jihadist sympathisers. Also the al-Midad Network of Yemen-based Ansar al-Sharia joined Twitter recently. But these were not the only official incidences of jihadists on Twitter; the Taliban in Afghanistan, and al-Shabab in Somalia also have a strong presence on the site.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120622

Financial Crisis
» ‘Crisis Could Change Germany More Than Reunification’
» Debt Crisis: Live
» European, Asian Stocks Fall on Growth Worries
» IMF Anti-Crisis Recipe Puts Pressure on Germany
» Merkel Under Pressure as Eurozone’s Big Four Meet in Rome
» Monti Ups the Stakes Ahead of EU Summit
» Moody’s Downgrades Banking Giants
» The IMF Helping the Euro is Feeding the Monster on Our Doorstep
 
USA
» A Fight to the Finish for Tennessee Mosque
» Archbishop’s Aide Guilty of Endangerment in Abuse Case
» Astoria Mosque Expansions OK’d
» Controverisal House Hearing on Islam Divide Democrats, Republicans
» Mosque Moves Ahead After Extension Denial
» Muslim Leaders Pursue Mosque Expansion
» Sandusky is Found Guilty on 45 of 48 Counts in Child Sexual Abuse Case
» US Attorney for Middle Tennessee Announces Indictment of Texas Man in Mosque Threat
 
Canada
» New Muslim Cemeteries to Give Urgent Last Rites
» Omar Khadr’s Lawyers Appeal to Ottawa for Gitmo Transfer
 
Europe and the EU
» European Court of Human Rights ‘Gets Out Begging Bowl’
» France: Mosque Bearing Moroccan King’s Name Opens in France
» Germany: Massive Gold Trove Sparks Archeological Dispute
» Netherlands: Case Against Haitham Al-Haddad Dropped
» Norway: Breivik Defence Urges ‘Mildest Possible Penalty’
» Norway: Prosecutors Say Breivik May Never Leave Asylum
» Norway: Breivik Trial Comes to an End
» UK: Gwent Men Spared Jail After Admitting Racist Posts on Facebook
» UK: Norwich Pub Bans English Defence League From Meeting as EDL Plans City March
 
North Africa
» Algerians Await New Government
» Protests Flaring Up in Egypt
» Radical Sheikh Calls for Tunisia Holy War
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» 5 Broken Cameras: A Palestinian Protest, Up Close
» BBC Apologises Over Itamar Massacres Coverage
» Church Scheme Only Shows One Side of Middle East Debate
» Stop the Hamas Rocket Assault on Israel
 
Middle East
» Iran ‘Producing Enriched Uranium at Faster Pace’
 
South Asia
» 26 Die as Afghan Forces Fight Taliban at Hotel Near Kabul
» Afghan Women in Shelters Are Prostitutes, Says Justice Minister
» Afghanistan: Eight Dead After Taliban Militants Launch Suicide Attack on Popular Restaurant
» Indian Government Upset Over Mulcair’s Golden Temple Remarks
» India: Two Children of the Red Mosque to Receive Tribeca Docu Funding
» Pakistan: Blasts in Quetta, Peshawar Kill 3, Injure 37
 
Australia — Pacific
» Islam Defies the Slow Loss of Faith
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Mali: Teenager Lashed 100 Times in Timbuktu for Having Child Out of Wedlock
» Radical Islam’s War Against Health
 
Latin America
» Uruguay Marijuana Sales to be Controlled by State
 
Immigration
» Denmark: New Asylum Centres Facing Resistance
» UK: Ed Miliband Apologises for Labour’s Immigration Shambles
 
General
» Accurate Muhammad Film Coming?

Financial Crisis


‘Crisis Could Change Germany More Than Reunification’

Germany’s Constitutional Court has asked the country’s president to delay the ratification of the permanent ESM euro bailout fund and the EU fiscal pact. German commentators accuse the chancellor of trying to push the legislation through parliament too quickly.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Debt Crisis: Live

Markets across Europe were braced for a sharp slide after Moody’s cut its ratings on Britain’s banks and eurozone leaders prepared to meet for a summit in Rome as they battle to find a route out of the crisis engulfing the single currency.

  • Moody’s slashes credit rating of Britain’s biggest banks
  • IMF unveils its blueprint to salvage the stricken euro
  • Spanish borrowing costs soar to fresh highs
  • US data blitz points to slowing economic momentum

09.50 George Osborne has arrived for the meeting of finance ministers in Luxembourg, where they will discuss plans for deeper integration of Europe’s banking sector. Here he is with Denmark’s economy minister, Margrethe Vestager:

09.14 Some bad news for Mrs Merkel as she prepares to meet other Eurozone leaders later. The latest index of German business sentiment fell in June to 105.3, its lowest level in over two years.

09.12 Ahead of the ‘Big Four’s meeting at midday, Reuters has rounded up what we can perhaps expect from the pow-wow.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



European, Asian Stocks Fall on Growth Worries

European and Asian stocks fell Friday after economic reports suggested growth will weaken in the world’s major economies. Downbeat data on Germany, China and the U.S. came on top of uncertainty over whether European leaders will make progress in tackling their debt crisis at key meetings.

Wall Street, however, bounced back from big losses the previous day, as investors sought out bargain stocks.

Earlier, Germany’s Ifo institute reported that business optimism fell for a second straight month in Europe’s largest economy, which has been growing more strongly than the 17-member eurozone as a whole. The survey index dipped to 105.3 from 106.9 in May.

That followed a U.S. Labor Department report from Thursday that the four-week average of applications for unemployment benefits jumped to the highest level in nine months. Appetite for financial assets such as stocks was also dented by the results of a monthly HSBC survey, which showed that manufacturing in China has continued to contract.

China’s growth has been a pillar of the global economy in recent years, so its slowdown has been of particular concern to investors.

Meanwhile, infighting over Europe’s heavy debt burden continued, leading IMF head Christine Lagarde to warn that the euro is under “acute stress” and to urge leaders of the 17 countries that use the currency to consider steps such as jointly issuing debt.

The leaders of Germany, France, Italy and Spain met in Rome on Friday to seek common ground ahead of an EU summit on June 28-29 in Brussels. They committed €130 billion to boost economic growth, but offered no new measures to boost confidence in some of the eurozone’s weaker members by, for example, sharing debt burdens.

Britain’s FTSE 100 closed 1 percent lower at 5,513.69, while the French CAC 40 shed 0.8 percent to 3,090.90 and the German DAX 30 blue chips index fell 1.3 percent to 6,263.25.

U.S. shares rose on the open, with the Dow up 0.5 percent and the Standard & Poor’s 500 0.4 percent higher. Banks stocks led the gains as investors deemed the previous’ day’s losses — triggered by a ratings downgrade — overdone.

In Europe, the chief piece of bad news was the Ifo report. It follows downbeat readings from the ZEW survey of investors and a poll of purchasing managers that also suggest the Germany economy is lagging.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



IMF Anti-Crisis Recipe Puts Pressure on Germany

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Thursday (21 June) outlined a series of measures it says should be taken if the eurozone crisis is to be overcome, including more cental bank intervention and allowing banks to be funded directly by bail-out funds — two ideas Germany opposes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Merkel Under Pressure as Eurozone’s Big Four Meet in Rome

The leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Spain were due to meet in Rome on Friday to thrash out possible solutions to the eurozone crisis. Chancellor Angela Merkel is under pressure to make some concessions.

At the meeting Merkel was expected to defend Berlin’s policy of promoting austerity and opposing joint liability among eurozone member states.

The mini-summit brings together the leaders of the eurozone’s largest four economies ahead of a full European summit on June 28 and 29.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti was expected to once again present himself as a mediator between Merkel and both French President Francois Hollande and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

This week, on the sidelines of the G20 summit, Monti proposed that eurozone members should look at using Europe’s 500 billion euro ($635 billion) emergency fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, and the European Stability Mechanism to buy government bonds.

While Paris and Madrid were open to the idea, Italy’s Foreign Ministry said on Thursday, Berlin remained unconvinced. There were also calls for Germany to change track by the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Christine Lagarde, on Thursday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Monti Ups the Stakes Ahead of EU Summit

Italy’s technocratic leader Mario Monti is warning of dramatic consequences should leaders at next week’s EU summit fail to find concrete solutions to save the euro and prevent contagion.

He told reporters in Rome on Thursday (21 June) that the doomsday scenario at the EU summit would invariably lead to higher borrowing costs on all EU countries.

“There would be progressively greater speculative attacks on individual countries, with harassment of the weaker countries,” he said.

An EU summit stalemate would risk turning Italians even more against the EU, he noted, with his government pushing through unpopular labour reforms, tax hikes and pension cuts.

Monti is also calling for a fuller banking union, a European deposit guarantee, and “new market-friendly policy mechanisms” to help struggling countries.

The mechanism would apply to countries who “respect the rules on public finance and structural reforms”. Monti did not disclose the full details of his plan but said he favours the purchase of bonds of countries under attack, reports the Guardian.

Italy, whose borrowing costs are soaring, had earlier floated the idea of using the €440bn eurozone bailout fund to buy bonds on the market. German Chancellor Angela Merkel had however quickly shot down the idea.

“There must be something wrong if a country that complies still has such high interest rates,” Monti told the Guardian.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Moody’s Downgrades Banking Giants

Some of the biggest names in finance have been dealt a humiliating blow by credit ratings agency Moody’s. Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs are among the institutions whose creditworthiness has been called into question.

The New York-based agency said late on Thursday that it was downgrading 15 of the world’s biggest financial institutions amid fears of exposure to eurozone debt.

Household banking names such as Barclays, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, HSBC JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley were also among those to have their ratings lowered.

“All of the banks affected by today’s actions have significant exposure to the volatility and risk of outsized losses inherent to capital markets activities,” said Moody’s global banking manager, Greg Bauer.

Four firms were downgraded by one notch and 10 firms by two notches. However, Credit Suisse faced the largest downgrade, with its rating slashed three levels from Aa1 to A1.

The downgrades were condemned by Citigroup. “Citi strongly disagrees with Moody’s analysis of the banking industry and firmly believes its downgrade of Citi is arbitrary and completely unwarranted,” said a statement from the group.

Moody’s began their bank review in February, and the move had been widely anticipated. The other banks affected were Bank of America, Royal Bank of Scotland, BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, Royal Bank of Canada, Societe Generale and UBS.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The IMF Helping the Euro is Feeding the Monster on Our Doorstep

by Jeremy Warner

IMF help would set the eurozone on the road to fiscal and political union — let’s not encourage it

Europe will “receive lessons from nobody” on democracy and the economy, José Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, angrily declared at the G20 meeting in Mexico this week. Whenever a politician petulantly resorts to use of this tired old cliché, you know he’s lost the plot. But, unconsciously, Mr Barroso was making an important point. Viewed collectively, the 17 nations that make up the eurozone are still one of the two richest regions in the world, and on many other measures of economic success — balance of trade, overall size of budget deficit and national debt relative to GDP — they beat the US by a country mile. A visitor from Mars, looking at the aggregate data, would declare the eurozone a model economy.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

USA


A Fight to the Finish for Tennessee Mosque

The first minarets in Murfreesboro, Tenn., are about to be placed atop a new mosque. But when construction is complete on the new Islamic Center of Murfreesboro, located about 30 miles southeast of Nashville, no one will get to move in. An ongoing court battle has stalled the project, one of several Islamic centers around the country that, like the so-called ground zero mosque, have encountered resistance from local communities. On Thursday, federal authorities charged a Texas man with threatening to bomb the mosque and violating the civil rights of mosque members.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Archbishop’s Aide Guilty of Endangerment in Abuse Case

A Philadelphia jury on Friday found Msgr. William J. Lynn guilty on one count of endangering the welfare of children in the first trial of a Roman Catholic official for covering up the sexual abuse of children by priests under his supervision. He was acquitted on two other counts.

[Return to headlines]



Astoria Mosque Expansions OK’d

Tuesday’s Community Board 1 meeting overflowed with supporters

The Community Board 1 meeting quickly became standing-room-only on Tuesday night with residents spilling out of the banquet room in a show of support for an application to expand a mosque at Astoria Islamic Center. The application was voted 7-3 in favor. During a presentation by Isabel Bucaram,an Astoria attorney representing the religious institution, she pointed out the large crowd in attendance, saying they are just a portion of those who worship at the center and that it’s vital to make room for all who want to attend. The enlargement of the 2,500-square-foot center at 22-21 33 St. would include additions to the first and second floors, an added third floor and slight changes to the yard. The mosque would also need to obtain parking waivers, which would allow the institution to expand over unused parking spaces.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Controverisal House Hearing on Islam Divide Democrats, Republicans

Washington — The Republican chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee said today during a hearing on Islamic radicalization that denying a link between Islam and terrorism “defies credulity,” while Democrats countered that the hearing itself was counterproductive in the fight against terror. Rep. Peter King (R-NY), the Long Island congressman who chairs the committee, cited an assessment by U.S. counterterrorism officials that the greatest threat to U.S. security was from supporters of al Qaeda, the radical Islamic group that launched the 9/11 attacks. No one was suggesting that all Muslims were terrorists, King said. But, he said, “To deny that there’s any correlation between the Muslim faith and the biggest threat to this country today defies credulity.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Mosque Moves Ahead After Extension Denial

Ground has been broken for the Islamic worship center in eastern DuPage County that last week fell short in its bid to have extra time for breaking ground. Just a day after a divided County Board declined to allow the center’s board 30 more days for delayed paperwork to come in so they would not miss their deadline to start construction, the needed clearances from Downers Grove Township and the county’s Storm Water and Public Works Departments came in. The last of the missing approvals were received at 5 p.m. June 13, zoning coordinator Paul Hoss said, clearing the way for issuance of the building permit. The end of last week saw heavy machinery digging the foundation for the mosque’s gymnasium, and the pouring of the concrete solidified the launch.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Leaders Pursue Mosque Expansion

EDMOND — Local Muslim leaders are planning to expand the mosque in Edmond located near the University of Central Oklahoma. An item on the agenda for the June 19 Planning Commission meeting regarded a public hearing and consideration of specific use permit to include a site plan for a mosque to be located south of Wayne, west of University. The item was continued to the July 17 Planning Commission meeting at the request of the applicant, the Islamic Society of Edmond.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Sandusky is Found Guilty on 45 of 48 Counts in Child Sexual Abuse Case

Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football coach, was convicted Friday of sexually abusing nine young boys, completing the downfall of a onetime local hero in a pedophilia scandal that seized national attention.

The jury in Centre County Court returned its verdict on its second day of deliberation.

[Return to headlines]



US Attorney for Middle Tennessee Announces Indictment of Texas Man in Mosque Threat

At today’s news conference US Attorney for Middle Tennessee, Jerry Martin was flanked by both FBI and ATF special agents, as well as Rutherford County Sheriff Robert Arnold. Martin announced the handing down of two federal grand jury indictments against Javier Alan Correa, aged 24 of Corpus Christi, a Texas man . He was accused “with threatening to bomb [the ICM construction site] on the 10th anniversary of 9/11.” A Channel 5 TV News report noted: U.S. Attorney Jerry E. Martin said in a news conference Correa called the Islamic Center on September 4, 2011, and left a profanity-laced threat with hate speech. He allegedly said “On September 11, 2011, there’s going to be a bomb in the building.” “Today’s indictment should send a message loud and clear: The Department of Justice will not tolerate violence or threat of violence against the Muslim community here in Murfreesboro,” Martin said. “If you engage in this type of illegal conduct, we will come after you.” Correa has not been arrested, but Martin said they have reached out to his lawyer to ask him to surrender. He faces one count of intentionally obstructing the free exercise of religion by threat of force and one count of using an instrument of interstate commerce to threaten to destroy a building by means of an explosive device. Correa faces a maximum penalty of 20 years for count one of the indictment and 10 years for the second count, as well as a fine of up to $250,000 for each offense.Today’s press conference pleased local Muslims in Murfreesboro. It was further evidence of the commitment by US Assistant Attorney General Thomas Perez that the USDOJ has the back of Muslims in Murfreesboro and across America. Martin’s strong statement in today’s press conference reflects that commitment. We wonder whether Martin held a similar press conference when evidence arose that home grown terrorist and Muslim convert Carlos Bledsoe or Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad attempted to firebomb the home of orthodox Rabbi Saul Strassberg in Nashville in 2009. That was just before Muhammad’s murderous attack at the Little Rock recruiting station that killed Army Private William “Andy” Long. According to Strassberg federal agents told the rabbi to remain quiet while they continued their investigations. Watch this news video on that attempt. After all anti-Semitic hate crime incidents reported by the FBI tower over those for American Muslims. Yet how much public outcry has been raised by the USDOJ over anti-Semitic incidents like the one in Nashville? Jews are still the number one target of hate crimes in the US.

           — Hat tip: Jerry Gordon [Return to headlines]

Canada


New Muslim Cemeteries to Give Urgent Last Rites

Soon after Suleiman Gardee’s mother died, as he and his relatives grieved, the family tried to arrange a burial for the 92-year-old. “In Muslim tradition, you bury within 24 hours max,” he said. “Otherwise, it’s not a good thing.” There was already a plot arranged when the family doctor’s mother died in 2010, beside where his father was buried in a multi-faith Ottawa cemetery. But she died on the Saturday of Labour Day weekend, when the cemetery was closed. “We phoned them up and said, ‘Listen, this is important, we’d be glad to pay for the people to come and open the grave for her,’“ said Dr. Gardee, a 70-year-old South Africa native. “They wouldn’t listen to me. … I called just about everybody I could think of and said, ‘Please help us,’ to no avail.” Dr. Gardee ultimately managed to have his mother buried within 24 hours, but only because he found another cemetery, in Montreal, willing to help.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Omar Khadr’s Lawyers Appeal to Ottawa for Gitmo Transfer

The United States is growing frustrated at Canada’s reluctance to follow through on a plea bargain deal and ask for convicted war criminal Omar Khadr to be brought back to Canada, a U.S. military defence lawyer says.

Lt.-Col. Jon Jackson, Mr. Khadr’s lead U.S. military lawyer, described the frustration of American officials that he’s spoken with over why Canada has not formally requested that Mr. Khadr be transferred to Canada from his U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Lt.-Col. Jackson was one of four lawyers for Mr. Khadr — one of two to wear U.S. military uniforms — who made an impassioned plea for the return of the last Western national to held at the much-maligned U.S. military prison. So far, their request continues to fall on deaf ears in Ottawa, which has yet to formally ask the U.S. for Mr. Khadr’s return. Mr. Khadr poses no threat to Canada, his lawyers argued. He has not been ground down by his decade of incarceration and has resisted the lure of Islamic fundamentalism.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


European Court of Human Rights ‘Gets Out Begging Bowl’

Britain may give more millions more pounds to the controversial European Court of Human Rights, despite the Government’s promise to rein it in.

The Strasbourg court is asking countries to give it extra money in an attempt to deal with a backlog of 150,000 cases. Britain already pays £20million a year to the Council of Europe, which is responsible for the court, but is considering increasing this sum. In an unusual move, the ECHR is even telling states that they can stipulate that they want their funds to be spent specifically on cases against them.

[…]

[Reader comment by stgeorgina on 22 June 2012 at about 9.30 am.]

NO.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Mosque Bearing Moroccan King’s Name Opens in France

A new mosque bearing the name of Moroccan King Mohamed VI is now open in France amid praise of the cooperation of the French authorities. President of the French Council of the Muslim Faith (Conseil Français du Culte Musulman- CFCM) Mohammed Moussaoui inaugurated the Mohamed VI Mosque in the southwestern French city of Saint-Étienne. The mosque, built on an area of 10,000 square meters, boosts a 14-meter high minaret and accommodates more than 1,000 worshippers. The mosque bears the name of Moroccan king Mohamed VI who donated five million Euros of the total eight million of the construction cost. The inauguration was attended by Moussaoui, mosque manager al-Arabi Marchich, Moroccan Minister of Endowments Ahmed Tawfik, and representatives of Saint-Étienne’s municipal authorities. The mosque includes a cultural center which is intended to act like a branch of the famous Paris-based Arab World Institute, according to Marchich. The construction of the mosque, said Moussaoui, offered a proof of the cooperation of French authorities with the Muslim community in France to promote freedom of worship.

[…]

[JP note: I bet it does.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germany: Massive Gold Trove Sparks Archeological Dispute

A 3,300-year-old treasure trove of gold found in northern Germany has stumped German archeologists. One theory suggests that traders transported it thousands of miles from a mine in Central Asia, but other experts are skeptical.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Case Against Haitham Al-Haddad Dropped

British Islamic scholar and community leader Haitham al-Haddad will not be prosecuted for statements he made in Amsterdam. The case against him has been dropped.

Politician Ehsan Jami had accused Al-Haddad of issuing threats and inciting hatred and discrimination. Jami was offended by comments Al-Haddad made while speaking at a debate center in Amsterdam in February. Al-Haddad said that people who abandon Islam should be put to death, if they live in an Islamic country and the death sentence is handed down by a Sharia court. Ehsan Jami is an ex-Muslim. Prosecutors have concluded that Al-Haddad did not commit a crime in issuing that statement, because it included a number of preconditions that needed to be met before a person should be executed for leaving the religion.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Defence Urges ‘Mildest Possible Penalty’

Defence lawyers on Friday asked that Anders Behring Breivik be acquitted or be found sane and sent to prison as the trial of the man who killed 77 people in Norway last year wrapped up.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Prosecutors Say Breivik May Never Leave Asylum

Prosecutors said on Thursday that Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway last July, may never be free again if the court follows their request and sends him to a closed psychiatric ward.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Trial Comes to an End

Survivors and relatives of 77 people killed in bombing and shooting attacks in Norway left the court room as the killer, Anders Behring Breivik, made his final remarks. The trial has focused on Breivik’s mental health.

More than 30 people staged a walkout at the Oslo district court when the judge announced that Breivik was about to speak at the end of his trial.

“He has a right to talk. We have no duty to listen,” Christian Bjelland, the vice chair of the support group for survivors of the July 22 attacks and victims’s families told the NTB news agency.

Breivik told the court his twin bombing and shooting attacks were “barbaric,” and argued that he was sane, as he has throughout the trial.

He asked the court to acquit him, saying his actions had been aimed at protecting Norway from becoming a “multiculturalist hell.”

Prior to Breivik’s closing speech, two survivors of the attacks and three bereaved gave their testimony. Their words were often received with applause.

Breivik’s defense earlier also argued that Breivik was sane and driven by his extreme political views. His actions were “based on extremism,” not psychotic delusions or an uncontrollable urge to violence, Geir Lippestad, Breivik’s primary attorney, insisted.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Gwent Men Spared Jail After Admitting Racist Posts on Facebook

TWO Gwent men escaped a jail sentence yesterday after they admitted writing offensive comments on Facebook. Cwmbran Magistrates’ Court heard labourer James Rogers, of Deepweir, Caldicot, wrote on his Facebook account on March 25: “What the ****? Just at Magor Services and there was a Muslim rag head praying on a mat. Makes me sick.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Norwich Pub Bans English Defence League From Meeting as EDL Plans City March

Meetings of the controversial English Defence League have been banned at a Norwich pub after a string of complaints.

About 45 members of the group, which is associated with violent demonstrations, have met at the Marlpit pub in Hellesdon Road. No trouble was reported and another meeting was booked for last weekend. But after complaints about the meetings from an anti-EDL group, the pub’s owners, Enterprise Inns, banned the EDL and the meeting was cancelled.

A spokesman for Enterprise said the licensee had been “reminded of their obligations”. She said: “We have spoken to the publican, who we understand has instructed pub staff to ensure no further meetings of the English Defence League are hosted at the Marlpit pub.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algerians Await New Government

More than a month after the legislative elections, Algerians are still waiting for a new government to be formed. All the signs indicate that the suspense will go on at least until the festivities commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of Algeria’s independence begin on July 5th. The government headed by Ahmed Ouyahia will hold its first meeting on Wednesday (June 20th) to deal with current affairs and postpone important decisions. The cabinet will then take its annual fifteen-day holiday just after July 5th.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Protests Flaring Up in Egypt

Tens of thousands of Egyptians have gathered on Tahrir Square in Cairo to protest the ruling military council’s power grab — and the delay in publishing the results of Sunday’s presidential election.

Members and supporters of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood gathered in the square for the protest, which was joined by several secular movements.

Egyptians are still waiting for the results of Sunday’s runoff election.

The Muslim Brotherhood insists that its candidate, Mohamed Morsi, has won the election, a claim that has been rejected by his opponent, Ahmed Shafiq, a premier under former President Hosni Mubarak.

The race has polarized the country between those who want to keep religion out of politics and fear the Brotherhood would stifle personal freedoms, and others who fear a return to the old regime under Shafiq’s leadership.

The delay in the publication of results, which had been announced for Thursday, has raised suspicion in Egypt that the result was being negotiated rather than counted.

The ruling military council, which had promised to hand over power to civilians by July 1, dissolved the parliament on the eve of the election and then issued a decree as polls closed on Sunday, setting strict limits on the powers of whoever would be elected president.

The ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces assumed legislative powers after a court ordered the Islamist-led parliament dissolved and issued decrees giving the army powers of arrest and a broad say in government policy, curbing the powers of the president.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Radical Sheikh Calls for Tunisia Holy War

A recent video from a self-avowed al-Qaeda member called for holy war against the Tunisian government, raising fears among citizens that extremist violence could escalate.

The June 11th message from 30-year-old Salim Abou Ahmed Ayoub, purportedly the second in command of al-Qaeda in Tunisia, called on citizens to wage a holy war against the government in order to establish an Islamic state and wipe out unbelievers. The online video also directly attacked President Moncef Marzouki, calling for him to be overthrown.

The tape came just a day after al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri issued his own message threatening Tunisia, and after a discovery by Iraqi intelligence services of invitations to al-Qaeda leaders to go to Tunisia and expand their military operations, in order to establish an Islamic caliphate.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


5 Broken Cameras: A Palestinian Protest, Up Close

Both a moving first-person essay and an artful exercise in political advocacy, 5 Broken Cameras is about the experience of West Bank protests from the inside. Amateur filmmaker Emad Burmat had five cameras smashed or shot by Israeli Defence Forces between 2005 to 2011 as he videotaped weekly demonstrations against the building of an Israeli settlement and a security wall (which was removed by court order in 2011). Co-directed and edited by Israeli filmmaker Guy Davidi, 5 Broken Cameras is also a video diary of Burmat’s friends and growing family in a world defined by angry confrontations, arrests, tear gas and death. During the course of the film, the filmmaker is evicted from his home, is arrested and suffers life-threatening injuries while struggling to maintain his philosophical equanimity.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



BBC Apologises Over Itamar Massacres Coverage

The BBC “got it wrong” by not giving prominence to the massacre of the Fogel family by Palestinians in the West Bank settlement of Itamar, the outgoing director-general has admitted. Mark Thompson was quizzed by Conservative MP Louise Mensch, who made various complaints to the BBC about the coverage, at a Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee hearing on Tuesday. Mrs Mensch said the BBC’s decision not to include the story as part of its rolling news coverage generated “the most reaction I have ever had in all my time in politics.” She said: “The BBC ran the story on Radio 4 and a lead item on the website but they never subsequently touched it in broadcast or on the 24-hour rolling news programme on BBC News 24. I only found out, after the event, from an American blog, called “Dead Jews is no news” and the more I went into it, the more shocked I was.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Church Scheme Only Shows One Side of Middle East Debate

by Jon Benjamin

It’s a wet night in February. The local parish church is hosting a speaker, and as the clink of cups and saucers subsides and the last Hobnob is dunked, the audience is taken of a tour of the Holy Land. What they won’t be seeing is a slide-show of the sights and wonders of Israel, the places of pilgrimage visited by thousands of Christians every year or even the images of the culturally and religiously diverse country that we all know Israel to be. What they will instead get is a crash course in the brutality of Israelis, the suffering of the Palestinians and no context or deeper explanation of why things are as they are. The speaker is, after all, from the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme for Palestine and Israel, or EAPPI, a pressure group with a particular agenda to focus on all the perceived iniquities of Israel.

Next month in York sees the last meeting of the General Synod of the Church of England under the current Archbishop of Canterbury. With the world in economic crisis, the murder of thousands still unchecked in Syria and the continuing issues of gay marriage and women bishops occupying the Anglican church in this country, there is no shortage of topics for debate — but that hasn’t stopped one member of Synod, Dr John Dinnen, tabling a Private Member’s Motion in support of the EAPPI programme.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Stop the Hamas Rocket Assault on Israel

A million Israelis live in constant fear of rocket attacks. It is time for Britain to condemn the Hamas violence which is prolonging conflict in the Middle East, write Haim Yellin, Alon Shuster and Yair Farjun.

Another week and another volley of deadly rockets have landed on our communities. As heads of the three Israeli regional councils which skirt the border with Gaza, the 130 rockets that were fired on our region over the last few days constitute a sad but all too familiar scenario. Imagine, rockets were falling on your family, your home, your community? Protecting our children from daily Hamas terror has sadly become our top priority.

[…]

[Reader comment by Neil Turner on 21 June 2012 at 10:14 PM.]

As far as the BBC and Sky are concerned it isn’t news until Israel shoots back. This one-sided coverage causes the average member of the public to treat Israel as the aggressor.

For this bias we have to pay the BBC a Licence Fee. At least with Sky, we have a choice. Signal your feelings by signing the ePetition that asks the Government for a referendum with the question “Do you want to keep the Licence Fee: yes or no ?” at http://epetitions.direct.gov.u…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran ‘Producing Enriched Uranium at Faster Pace’

Iran’s uranium enrichment effort has picked up speed and Tehran could produce enough fissile material needed for a nuclear weapon within four months, experts told US politicians on Wednesday.

The rate of Iran’s uranium enrichment has accelerated despite cyber sabotage from the Stuxnet virus in 2009, the experts said. Based on the findings of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), “it’s clear that Iran could produce a nuclear weapon very quickly should it wish to do so,” said Stephen Rademaker of the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington. Iran has produced 3,345 kilos of uranium enriched to 3.5 per cent, according to the IAEA, which if it was enriched further would provide enough uranium for at least two atom bombs, Rademaker told the House Armed Services Committee. If the Iran leadership decided to go forward, “it would take them 35 to 106 days to actually have the fissile material for a weapon,” he said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


26 Die as Afghan Forces Fight Taliban at Hotel Near Kabul

QARGHA LAKE, Afghanistan — At least 15 civilians were killed when seven Taliban militants shot their way into a much-visited lakeside resort here and took scores of hostages during an 11-hour siege, Afghan officials said on Friday. The seven attackers, a police officer and three private guards also died as Afghan security forces fought their way into the compound. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, saying that Afghans drank alcohol there and that there was prostitution and dancing. “These acts are illegal and strictly prohibited in Islam,” said Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman. He added that: “Women dancers were sexually misused there.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghan Women in Shelters Are Prostitutes, Says Justice Minister

Afghanistan’s justice minister Habibullah Ghaleb has claimed women in shelters for domestic violence victims are prostitutes.

His comments at a conference organised by the Afghan parliament’s Women’s Affairs Committee provoked outrage among human rights campaigners and demands for President Hamid Karzai to sack him. Mr Ghaleb told delegates that 250 women living in 12 foreign-funded shelters were being encouraged to disobey their parents. “Mostly they were encouraging girls, saying, ‘If your father says anything bad to you don’t listen to him, if your mother says anything to you don’t listen to them. There are safe houses for you where you can stay.’ What safe houses? What sort of immorality and prostitution was not happening at those places?” he said. Baroness Ashton, the EU foreign minister, said she was “deeply troubled” by his comments which sabotaged efforts to protect women from violence and sexual abuse. “Too many Afghan women have experienced violence, gender based and sexual, often on a repeated basis,” she said in a statement. “Women forced to resort to shelters are amongst the bravest Afghans we know.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Eight Dead After Taliban Militants Launch Suicide Attack on Popular Restaurant

Taliban suicide attackers took hostages and killed at least eight people after storming a lakeside restaurant at a popular Kabul beauty spot.

Militants armed with explosive vests, assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades attacked the Spozhmai hotel near Qarga Lake, late on Thursday night. The assault, claimed by the Taliban, killed at least one policeman and there were unconfirmed reports of four civilians and three guards killed. Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the insurgent movement, told reporters the attack had been against foreigners drinking alcohol at the hotel and breaking the rules of Islam.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indian Government Upset Over Mulcair’s Golden Temple Remarks

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair has drawn the Indian government’s ire for comments aimed at Canada’s Sikh community that New Delhi says distort the facts behind an infamous 1984 military raid.

Earlier this month, Mr. Mulcair released a statement commemorating the 28th anniversary of what he called the “invasion” of the Golden Temple, a traumatic event in Indian history that took place at a holy Sikh shrine. “The tragic events that unfolded over the course of those sweltering days in June, and the subsequent killings in November, have deeply hurt the Sikh community, both in India and abroad,” Mr. Mulcair said June 4 in a release entitled “Remembering 1984.” “When innocent lives are lost with no accountability or explanation by the government, we have an obligation, as one democratic nation to another, to ask why and seek honest answers on behalf of our citizens.”

Nearly 30 years ago this month, Indian troops stormed the Golden Temple on prime minister Indira Gandhi’s order to dislodge armed Sikh extremists. New Delhi accused them of directing a violent campaign for more autonomy in Punjab province. The result was a bloodbath. Ms. Gandhi was assassinated in retaliation more than four months later by Sikh bodyguards. That triggered a wave of anti-Sikh riots in November, 1984, which left thousands of Sikhs dead. Upset by Mr. Mulcair’s statement, India’s High Commissioner to Canada Shashishekhar Gavai wrote the NDP Leader to complain, copying members of the Conservative government caucus, including Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird. Both the NDP and Conservative vie for the political support of Indo-Canadians across Canada, including in British Columbia.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Two Children of the Red Mosque to Receive Tribeca Docu Funding

MUMBAI: Hemal Trivedi’s Two Children of the Red Mosque is among the five projects that will collectively receive $100,000 funding from the 2012 Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund.

The documentary will be co-directed by Mohammad Naqvi and produced by Whitney Dow and Jonathan Goodman Levitt. The film is all about 12-year-olds Zarina and Talha, who after attending Pakistan’s most notorious madrassa, pursue different dreams. While Zarina attends school trying to avoid marriage; Talha remains a madrassa student preparing for Jihad. Their stories personalise Pakistanis’ ideological war.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Blasts in Quetta, Peshawar Kill 3, Injure 37

PESHAWAR/QUETTA At least three people were killed on Thursday in two explosions; one outside a shrine in Peshawar, and another inside one in Quetta. According to police officials, the bomb in Peshawar was planted on a donkey cart when it exploded in the Hazar Khwani area. Rescue officials confirmed the number of dead as two. At least 21 other people, including seven children and several women, were also injured in the blast, said the rescue officials.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Islam Defies the Slow Loss of Faith

AUSTRALIANS are losing their faith with religion, census figures reveal, with close to 4.8 million people saying they have no affiliation.

For those who do believe, the greatest growth is among followers of Islam, with the number of Muslims up 40 per cent since the 2006 census. The figures confirm the long-term trend in declining religious affiliation and the fall in Christian faiths. In 1911, 96 per cent of people identified themselves as Christian. In 1976, 89 per cent did so. Thirty-five years later, that figure has fallen to 61 per cent.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Mali: Teenager Lashed 100 Times in Timbuktu for Having Child Out of Wedlock

An 18-year-old pregnant woman and her boyfriend were both lashed 100 times by Islamists in Timbuktu in Mali as punishment for “having a child out of wedlock”.

The sentence was carried out on the orders of Ansar Dine, a militant Muslim organisation that has seized territory in the desert north of the West African country. “People were watching it was like a show,” said Mohamed Ould Babby, a local official. “I was there, I saw the youths arriving at the square, I saw them being whipped, it is the first time I have seen something like that.” The woman, who was three months pregnant, has another child with her partner but the couple is not married. According to Ansar Dine’s strict interpretation of Islamic laws, that means the pair have committed the crime of “fornication”, which is punishable with 100 lashes. An Islamic police official in the town said six other women who had had children outside of marriage would soon be “punished by Islamic law”. People living in Timbuktu, the ancient city in Mali’s southern Sahara desert, have reported that the Islamists have ordered women to wear full veils, whipped smokers and destroyed shopkeepers’ stocks of cigarettes. Ansar Dine took control of northern Mali, with help from Tuareg rebels, when army officers mutinied in the capital, Bamako, and ousted the democratically-elected government.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Radical Islam’s War Against Health

by Dale McFeatters

At the start of the new millennium, the United Nations’ health organizations, WHO and UNICEF, were reasonably confident that polio could be eradicated by the end of 2004.

Then came radical Islam, with its suspicions about — if not downright hatred of — the United States. Muslim leaders in northern Nigeria announced that they were blocking UN immunizations of children because, they believed, the vaccines were laced with HIV and sterilization chemicals: It was all part of a sinister U.S. plot to reduce the Muslim population.

Whether the villagers believed this nonsense or not was immaterial because the Islamic radicals were prepared to stop the immunizations by force.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Uruguay Marijuana Sales to be Controlled by State

Uruguay is planning a radical approach to the legalisation of marijuana by proposing the sale of the drug be controlled by the state.

In a world first, the government said it would control the production, distribution and commercialisation of marijuana. Under the proposed plans, the state would sell marijuana to citizens, who would have to register on a database. It would also impose a maximum of ‘marijuana cigarettes’ that can be consumed — reported to be 40 per month. Those who exceed that consumption level will be sent to rehabilitation centres, to be financed by the government with taxes from marijuana sales. Defending criticism of the announcement, José Mujica, the Uruguayan president, told a Brazilian newspaper: “Uruguay is not proposing a legalisation that allows anybody to go to a shop and buy the amount of marijuana that he likes. The state will control quality, quantity and price. And if somebody buys 20 marijuana cigarettes, he will have to smoke them. He won’t be able to sell them.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Denmark: New Asylum Centres Facing Resistance

Local residents and opposition MPs reject Red Cross claims that new asylum centres will not lead to an increase in crime

Immigration authorities plan to build three new refugee centres and expand several existing ones in order to accommodate an increasing refugee population in Denmark.

About 100 new applicants for asylum are arriving each month. And while that is down from previous years, the overall number of asylum seekers has risen, due to a halt on forced repatriation to three countries that are either too dangerous to return asylum failed seekers to — Somalia and Syria — or where Denmark does not have an agreement in place for repatriation — Iran.

Problems with formally identifying asylum seekers from Afghanistan, the largest single group of refugees in Denmark, has also contributed to the increase.

As a result, new asylum centres have been planned in the Zealand towns of Ringsted and Hillerød, and in the island of Lolland, while existing centres in the towns of Auderød and Sigerslev will be expanded to be able to accommodate an additional 50 and 80 people, respectively.

Local opposition, however, has led to several other proposed centres to be cancelled — a development that saddened Anne la Cour, head of asylum at the Red Cross in Denmark. “It’s a trend that is unfortunately on the increase,” la Cour told Jyllands-Posten newspaper.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Ed Miliband Apologises for Labour’s Immigration Shambles

by Harry Phibbs

During the General Election the defining moment for many in the Labour Party was when Gordon Brown was caught describing Gillian Duffy as “a bigoted woman” after she had raised concerns about immigration.They felt that it was the moment which showed Labour out of touch with many of its own supporters. The Labour leader Ed Miliband is trying to make up for it. He has given an interview for The Guardian and will follow it up with a speech today where he will apologise for the Labour Government’s record on immigration.

[…]

[Reader comment by Graham Swift on 22 June 2012 at about 8.30 am.]

Immigrants from the EU aren’t involved in grooming white girls for under age sex. They integrate with society. They learn or can already speak English. They don’t try to impose their beliefs and way of life. They don’t wear burkas. They don’t enforce halal meat on UK citizens. They don’t commit or prepare to commit acts of terrorism or support Al Qaeda. That is what UK citizens are concerned about.

[Reader comment by colliemum on 22 June 2012 at about 8.30 am.]

Nice but typical Labour obfuscation. Milliband knows full well that Blair&Brown’s immigration ‘policy’ was meant to gerrymander elections by increasing their client population from the subcontinent (google ‘Neather’). […]

[Reader comment by Octavian on 22 June 2012 at about 9.30 am.]

Does this mean that Ed Milliband now reckons that the last government imported enough Pakistani labour postal voters to ensure a Labour win at the next election?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Accurate Muhammad Film Coming?

A courageous ex-terrorist is committed to the dangerous project.

by Andrew G. Bostom

The remarkably courageous Ramallah-born Mosab Hassan Yousef, the eldest son of Hamas cofounder Sheikh Hassan Yousef and a former Hamas activist himself, served time on several occasions in Israeli prison. Yousef is also known as “the Green Prince,” his code name per the Shin Bet (Israeli security agency), with whom he later collaborated for a decade to thwart numerous terrorist attacks during the second intifada, sparing hundreds of Israeli lives.

Now living in the U.S., two years ago Yousef published the book Son of Hamas: A Gripping Account of Terror, Betrayal, Political Intrigue and Unthinkable Choices. The book elaborated his rejection of Hamas’ inherent jihadist violence, his personal forsaking of Islam and conversion to Christianity, and his decision to assist Israel clandestinely for approximately a decade starting in 1996.

Now Yousef is undertaking another profoundly dangerous task: producing an accurate film biography of Muhammad, the Jihad Model (as so designated by Muslim Brotherhood “Spiritual Leader” Yusuf Al-Qaradawi), based on the earliest, most complete pious Muslim biography of Islam’s prophet: The Life of Muhammad: A Translation of Ishaq’s Sirat Rasul Allah.

W.H.T. Gairdner, the great Arabic linguist and scholar of Islam, noted with understatement in 1915 what is readily apparent from Muhammad’s actual biography (as opposed to the treacly Muslim hagiography) based exclusively on the reverent Muslim sources:

As incidents in the life of an Arab conqueror, the tales of raiding, private assassinations and public executions, perpetual enlargements of the harem, and so forth, might be historically explicable and therefore pardonable but it is another matter that they should be taken as a setting forth of the moral ideal for all time.

In 1919, Gairdner wrote an essay titled “Muhammad Without Camouflage,” responding to a mendacious birthday tribute panegyric of Islam’s prophet written collaboratively by Muslims and non-Muslims. A particularly trenchant segment of Gairdner’s rebuttal discussed the slaughter of the vanquished Medinan Jewish tribe, Banu Qurayza, whose massacre became an important motif in jihad war jurisprudence. Relying exclusively upon Muslim sources, Gairdner highlighted without equivocation the pivotal role that Muhammad himself played in orchestrating the overall events:…

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]